Academic literature on the topic 'Palácio Portugal da Gama (Lisbon, Portugal)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Palácio Portugal da Gama (Lisbon, Portugal)"

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Finlay, Robert. "Portuguese and Chinese Maritime Imperialism: Camões'sLusiadsand Luo Maodeng'sVoyage of the San Bao Eunuch." Comparative Studies in Society and History 34, no. 2 (1992): 225–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417500017667.

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Shortly before Vasco da Gama returned to Lisbon in September 1499 from his great voyage to India, a Florentine merchant in the Portuguese capital reported troubling rumors that ‘certain vessels of white Christians’ had visited the port of Calicut on the Malabar coast only a couple of generations previously. If true, this would mean that some other European power had beaten Portugal in its long search for a maritime route to the Indies. After speculating that the mysterious mariners were Germans (although ‘it seems to me that we should have some notice about them’) or Russians (‘if they have a
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Salgueiro, Ângela. "Oceans, science, and universities: scientific study of the sea during the First Portuguese Republic." História, Ciências, Saúde-Manguinhos 28, no. 2 (2021): 473–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0104-59702021000200008.

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Abstract Knowledge of the scientific study of the sea in the early twentieth century is essential to understand the process through which marine biology was institutionalised in Portugal. The first national biological stations were set up during the First Republic: the Estação de Zoologia Marítima da Foz in Porto, and the Aquário Vasco da Gama in Lisbon. This paper is a case study on the Estação da Foz, which played an important role by assisting the Zoology Institute at the Universidade do Porto in achieving its strategic objectives, and provides an understanding of the institutionalisation p
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Sieber, R. Timothy. "Remembering Vasco da Gama: Contested histories and the cultural politics of contemporary nation‐building in Lisbon, Portugal." Identities 8, no. 4 (2001): 549–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1070289x.2001.9962708.

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Humble, Susannah. "Prestige, Ideology and Social Politics: The Place of the Portuguese Overseas Expansion in the Policies of Dom Manuel (1495–1521)." Itinerario 24, no. 1 (2000): 21–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0165115300008664.

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The search to understand the motives behind Portuguese overseas expansion has long preoccupied historians of the early modern period. Numerous articles, surveys and studies have addressed its economic incentives, achievements and legacies to the point where the historiography has obscured a holistic understanding of the forces at play in the early sixteenth century. Moreover, in this field of study overseas policy has been set apart from the domestic political and social climate, giving the impression that events taking place in Southeast Asia were foremost the concern of the policy makers in
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Fevereiro, Antonio Cota, and Sasha Assis Lima. "A Hidden Treasure at Palácio da Ajuda in Lisbon: The IDM Monogrammed Set of Chinese Porcelain of Princess Maria da Assunção." ARTis ON, no. 15 (March 16, 2025). https://doi.org/10.37935/iha.oan2024.016.

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In 1862 a set of silver and porcelain pieces was discovered at Palácio da Ajuda which was omitted from the inventories, during the preparations for the marriage of King Luís I of Portugal to Queen Maria Pia. Shortly afterwards it was disclosed that the porcelain services had belonged to Princess Maria da Assunção and were hidden because of her escape in 1833 to Santarém during the civil war. However, doubt persisted as the services could have belonged to her brother, Prince Miguel. The purpose of this article is to reinforce the fact that they belonged to Princess Maria da Assunção, through a
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Books on the topic "Palácio Portugal da Gama (Lisbon, Portugal)"

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Sampaio, Jorge Pereira. O Palácio da Independência: Sua história e evolução arquitectónica. Edição da Sociedade Histórica da Independência de Portugal, 1988.

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Vaz, Bárbara Massapina. Viveiros de Belém: Palácio de Belém. Museu da Presidência da República, 2012.

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3

Abecasis, Maria Isabel Braga. A real Barraca: A residência na Ajuda dos Reis de Portugal após o terramoto (1756-1794). Tribuna, 2009.

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Santa Casa da Misericórdia de Lisboa, ed. Mitra: Polo de economia social. Santa Casa Misericórdia de Lisboa, 2022.

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Barbosa, Luís. Palácio dos Condes d'Óbidos: Sede nacional da Cruz Vermelha Portuguesa : história e património = National headquarters of the Portuguese Red Cross : history and heritage. By the Book, 2015.

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Palácio Portugal da Gama: São Roque. Santa Casa Misericórdia de Lisboa, 2016.

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Procuradoria-Geral da República: Palácio Palmela. A Procuradoria-Geral, 1987.

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Rodrigues-Moura, Enrique, ed. Letras na América Portuguesa : autores – textos – leitores. University of Bamberg Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.20378/irb-50063.

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Os textos produzidos na denominada América Portuguesa (1500-1822) abrangem os mais variados campos das letras ocidentais – lírica, épica, dramaturgia, historiografia, epistolografia, parenética, lexicografia, etc. – e seguem um modelo retórico-poético e teológico-político comum, próprio das Letras do Ancien Régime. Manuscritos e impressos escritos em várias línguas (português, principalmente, mas também em latim, castelhano, francês, italiano, tupi-guarani, língua geral, etc.), por um número de autores considerável (Pero Vaz de Caminha, José de Anchieta, Antônio Vieira, Francisco Manuel de Mel
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Book chapters on the topic "Palácio Portugal da Gama (Lisbon, Portugal)"

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Silva, Inês, Marina Pinto, João Pinto, Sara da Cruz Ferreira, André Bargão, and Rodrigo Banha da Silva. "Os Cachimbos dos Séculos XVII e XVIII do Palácio Mesquitela e Convento dos Inglesinhos (Lisboa)." In Arqueologia em Portugal 2020 - Estado da Questão - Textos. Associação dos Arqueólogos Portugueses e CITCEM, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21747/978-989-8970-25-1/arqa131.

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Era-Arqueologia excavated in 2004 and 2009 two significant buildings in Bairro Alto quarter in Lisbon, due to urban rehabilitation projects. With approximate 17th century chronologies, they display very distinctive socioeconomic profiles: one, St. Peter’s and St. Paul’s Honourable Pontifical College (commonly known as the “Little English Convent”), and was devoted to catholic teaching to the British community living in Lisbon during Early Modern Age; the other, a noble mansion belonging to Mesquitela Earls. Despite archaeological limitations of contextual data, they display some contrast betwe
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Lopes, Martim, and Tomás Mesquita. "Faianças de dois contextos entre os finais do século XVI e XVIII do Palácio dos Condes de Penafiel, Lisboa." In Arqueologia em Portugal 2020 - Estado da Questão - Textos. Associação dos Arqueólogos Portugueses e CITCEM, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21747/978-989-8970-25-1/arqa129.

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The Palace of Condes de Penafiel, in Lisbon, was archaeological interventioned between 1992-1993, in which were recovered three contexts of historical archaeology, datable between the XVI century and the XVIII century, when is documented the collapse of the previous to the actual palace, during the 1755 earthquake. The authors analyse the European faience recovered from the two oldest contexts (XVI-XVII century), associated to the deactivation of a medieval drain and the primitive edification of the building (1st quarter of XVI century), which is destroyed in 1755, where were collected ceramic
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Pinto A., Pereira A., Cardoso D., and Sá J. "Ground improvement solutions at Sana Vasco da Gama Royal Hotel." In Proceedings of the 17th International Conference on Soil Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering. IOS Press, 2009. https://doi.org/10.3233/978-1-60750-031-5-2180.

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The aim of this paper is to present the main design and execution criteria related with ground improvement solutions, using jet grouting columns as foundation and cofferdam solutions, at the Sana Torre Vasco da Gama Royal Hotel, located next to the Vasco da Gama Tower, at the Tagus river right bank, in Lisbon, Portugal. The hotel building, with two underwater floors and twenty two upper floors, is located at the river, over alluvial soils with a thickness of about 17m, resting over Miocene soils. This complex scenario demanded the use of some unusual ground improvement solutions, related and i
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MASSING, JEAN MICHEL. "From Marco Polo to Manuel I of Portugal: The Image of the East African Coast in the Early Sixteenth Century." In Racism and Ethnic Relations in the Portuguese-Speaking World. British Academy, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197265246.003.0015.

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Less than twenty years after Vasco da Gama joined the commercial perimeter of the Indian Ocean (1497–8), European artists had developed a view of the newly discovered lands, ranging from highly exotic and sometimes quite fanciful renderings based on medieval sources (the ‘Tapestries of the Indies’) to careful ethnographic illustrations based on written and visual sources (Hans Burgkmair's large woodcut frieze, People of Africa and India, of 1508). These few years, in which the monstrance of Belém of 1506 (Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga, Lisbon) was produced with the gold of Kilwa, also saw an i
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Desmond, Ray. "The First European Settlements." In The European Discovery of the Indian Flora. Oxford University PressOxford, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198546849.003.0002.

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Abstract Upon the dissolution of the Roman Empire, the Indian Ocean was not penetrated again by Europeans until the Portuguese challenged the commercial supremacy of the Muslim world in Asia. During the fifteenth century Portuguese sailors cautiously extended their exploration of the Atlantic coastline of the African continent, reaching Sierra Leone by 1460. Under King John II Lisbon had become a centre for African commerce, laying the foundations of an administrative structure which would promote Portugal’s future trade with the East. In 1487 Pedro de Covilha left Portugal on a secret mission
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