Polska
Budynek królewski w Mafra – pałac, bazylika, klasztor, ogród Cerco i park myśliwski (Tapada)
Located 30 km northwest of Lisbon, the site was conceived by King João V in 1711 as a tangible representation of ...
Historyczne centrum Évory
This museum-city, whose roots go back to Roman times, reached its golden age in the 15th century, when it became the ...
Miasto graniczne Elvas i jego fortyfikacje
The site, extensively fortified from the 17th to 19th centuries, represents the largest bulwarked dry-ditch system in the world. Within its ...
Prehistoryczna sztuka naskalna w dolinie Côa i paleolityczna sztuka naskalna w Siega Verde
The two Prehistoric Rock Art Sites in the Côa Valley (Portugal) and Siega Verde (Spain) are located on the banks of ...
Alto Douro – region winny górnego Duero
Wine has been produced by traditional landholders in the Alto Douro region for some 2,000 years. Since the 18th century, its ...
Historyczne centrum Guimarães
The historic town of Guimarães is associated with the emergence of the Portuguese national identity in the 12th century. An exceptionally ...
Historyczne centrum Porto
The city of Oporto, built along the hillsides overlooking the mouth of the Douro river, is an outstanding urban landscape with ...
Uniwersytet w Coimbrze
Situated on a hill overlooking the city, the University of Coimbra with its colleges grew and evolved over more than seven ...
Klasztor Zakonu Chrystusa w Tomarze
Originally designed as a monument symbolizing the Reconquest, the Convent of the Knights Templar of Tomar (transferred in 1344 to the ...
Klasztor w Batalha
The Monastery of the Dominicans of Batalha was built to commemorate the victory of the Portuguese over the Castilians at the ...
Opactwo Cystersów w Alcobaça
The Monastery of Santa Maria d'Alcobaça, north of Lisbon, was founded in the 12th century by King Alfonso I. Its size, ...
Krajobraz kulturowy w Sintrze
In the 19th century Sintra became the first centre of European Romantic architecture. Ferdinand II turned a ruined monastery into a ...
