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Combined Ticket - Monasteries I

Combined Ticket - Monasteries I
Schedule
São Martinho de Tibães Monastery

 

Open: Tuesday to Sunday 10 a.m-6 p.m

Closed: Monday; 1st January; Easter Sunday; Labour Day (1st May); 25th December; 24th June (municipal holiday)

Santa Maria de Pombeiro Monastery

 

Open: Wednesday to Sunday 10 a.m-6 p.m

Closed: Monday; Tuesday; 1st January; Easter Sunday; Labour Day (1st May); 25th December; 29th June (municipal holiday)

São Salvador de Vilar de Frades Convent

 

Open: Summer - Wednesday to Sunday 10 a.m-6 p.m | Winter - Friday to Sunday 10 a.m-6 p.m

Closed: Monday; Tuesday; Wednesday (Winter and Summer); Friday (Winter); 1st January; Easter Sunday; Labour Day (1st May); 25th December; 3rd May (municipal holiday)

Select your ticket(s)
Senior +65 3.50€
Subject to the presentation of a valid proof of entitlement.
General Admission 7.00€
Youth Card 3.50€
Subject to the presentation of a valid proof of entitlement.
Children 12 and under 0.00€
Can only be purchased with a paid ticket. Children 12 and under must be accompanied by an adult.
Student 3.50€
Subject to the presentation of a valid proof of entitlement.
Combined Tickets are valid for one year from the selected date.
Please note that on Sundays and public holidays, in the morning, access is free for citizens residing in Portugal (FAQ 7).
No refunds are allowed.
Please check our Frequently Asked Questions.
Guided visits.
Pelase, contact our cultural equipments.
Total: 0.00€
Contacts
São Martinho de Tibães Monastery
Rua do Mosteiro nº 59
4700-565 Mire de Tibães - Braga  
Santa Maria de Pombeiro Monastery
Lugar do Mosteiro
4610-038 Felgueiras  
São Salvador de Vilar de Frades Convent
About

São Martinho de Tibães Monsatery

Founded at the end of the 11th century, the São Martinho de Tibães Benedictine Monastery was granted a Charter in 1110 by Count D. Henrique and Count D. Teresa, the parents of D. Afonso Henriques, who would become the first king of Portugal.

Silence, obedience, poverty, prayer and work were part of the Benedictine Order followed by the monks. The Monastery grew in privileges and power until the 14th century and was chosen after the Council of Trent, in 1567, to be the house of Congregation of São Bento dos Reinos de Portugal.

It reached its maximum splendour in the 17th and 18th centuries, when it was transformed into one of the largest monastic collections of Portuguese Baroque.

The São Martinho de Tibães Monastery, consisting of the church, convent wings and the outer space enclosed by the cloistered enclosure, closed in 1834, the date that marked the extinction of Religious Orders in Portugal. With practically all the property and the building sold in public auction, in 1986 the Portuguese State began its study and restoration.

Today it is possible to see and feel the spaces and their history, in a “Monument-Museum" and in a Historical Garden that extends over some 40 hectares, right up to the fence. In this space, the Benedictine monks sought subsistence, but also a place for meditation, leisure and experimentation.

Come discover and enjoy this incredible space. We look forward to your visit!

 

 

S. Salvador de Vilar de Frades Convent 

Located in Barcelos, Braga, the Vilar de Frades Convent was founded in the 6th century by the bishop São Martinho de Dume. Its total ruin, following the Moorish invasions, led to its reconstruction five hundred years later, remaining Benedictine until 1425.

From the 16th century onwards, the Convent underwent various expansion and remodelling works that substantially changed the appearance of the old Romanesque monastery and all the convent fencing, with the construction of a second tower, the dormitories, refectory, kitchen, library and cloister. The high choir or the church organ, from the same period also deserve mention.

An excellent example of conventual architecture, the Convent of Vilar de Frades underwent a thorough restoration process in the 21st century, under the responsibility of the Regional Directorate of Northern Culture.

Besides the building and its exquisite church, the tile panels and the paintings in the sacristy by the painter Pedro Alexandrino also deserve mention.

Don’t miss it. See you soon!

 

 

Santa Maria de Pombeiro Monastery

Documented since 853, the Santa Maria de Pombeiro Monastery was moved and rebuilt in the 11th and 12th centuries, although little remains of the building endeavours undertaken by the Benedictine monks of the time.

In 1112, it received a Charter from D. Teresa and was sponsored by the important family of the Sousões de Ribavizela, who had accumulated vast land assets and political influence.

In the Modern Age, the monastery was greatly transformed, acquiring the essentials of its current appearance, with the main works showing heavy Baroque influences, as seen in the apse, the high choir, the organ and the gilded woodcarvings.

In the early 19th century, the cloister was remodelled according to neoclassical standards, a model unparalleled in the monastic spaces of northern Portugal.

In 1834, the extinction of the Religious Orders in Portugal led to the closure of the Santa Maria de Pombeiro Monastery, the complex was later restored in the 20th century, allowing it to be studied and opened to the public.

Come discover it!