Showing posts with label # Portugal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label # Portugal. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Bridges of Portugal



A registered post from Portugal 🇵🇹 with Europa 2018 bridges stamps 

Portugal issued three sets of Stamps and Minisheet for Europa 2018 - each one representing Portugal , Madeira and Azores respectively. 

Each Minisheet had two stamps - one of the stamps showing a recent bridge and the other one an old bridge . The envelope has three stamps - showing the new bridges from the three Minisheets. 



The Roman bridge of Trajan ( orange stamp ) is a stone construction that rises from the Tâmega river, in the centre of Chaves, formed with robust granite voussoirs that form 12 perfectly rounded arches. Built between the end of the rst century and the beginning of the second century AD, it served as access to the city until the 1950’s. Marcus Ulpius Trajanus, emperor of Rome, would thus inscribe his name into the history of Aqua Flaviae, at the time an important town endowed with a thermal complex and excellent road structures. This span, which is the oldest bridge in Portugal, ex-libris of the modern city of Chaves, still functions as a pedestrian crossing.

Inaugurated in 1998, the Vasco da Gama Bridge ( blue stamp ) is a symbol of contemporary Portugal and a milestone of civil engineering. It crosses the Tagus on a 12.3-kilometre- -long route, joining the south bank of the Tagus to the Parque das Nações at the easternmost part of Lisbon. Its length made it necessary to consider the curvature of the planet in order to avoid an 80 centimetres deviation at the extremities. Some of the foundations are 2.2 metres in diameter and are embedded 95 metres below mean sea level. It is robust and was built to withstand violent earthquakes and winds of 250 km/h. The deck is a mixed structure composed of concrete slabs laying on steel crossbeams. 62 thousand cars cross the bridge every day.



The Ribeira da Metade Bridge ( green ) is a stone masonry construction that connects two parishes of Santana municipality, in the north-east of the island of Madeira: Faial and São Roque do Faial, a small area located at the base of the central mountainous massif. In geographically rugged territories, the construction of bridges is historically associated with the improvement of the living conditions of the populations. Ensuring access from Funchal to the north of Madeira, the bridge over the Metade Stream dates back to the 1940s. It maintains the original design today.

High mountains, deep valleys and steep slopes mark the relief of the island of Madeira. The Socorridos Bridge ( red ) , in the municipality of Câmara de Lobos, is a modern and lofty structure designed to unite what nature so completely separated. Opened to the public in 1993, it was the rst cable-stayed bridge with axial suspension built in the country, a project signed by Armando Pereira and António Reis. The 120-metre- -high pillars stand out in the landscape of the picturesque shing village, a few kilometres from Funchal. The deck is a prestressed single-layer concrete box.


In Matriz parish in the municipality of Ribeira Grande, in the north of the island of São Miguel in the Azores, the Bridge of Eight Arches ( violet ) stands out in the landscape. Built between 1888 and 1895, it is an imposing structure of stone masonry that rises to 20 metres. At its highest point, broad views of the sea and the city centre can be enjoyed. True to its name, it was erected on eight fully-rounded arches. It is considered one of the greatest Azorean roadworks of the nineteenth century, under the responsibility of the military engineer António Augusto de Sousa e Silva. Inscribed on the coat of arms of that northern municipality, it is also known as the Ribeira Grande Bridge.

Designed to cross one of the most impressive valleys in the north-eastern zone of São Miguel, which is very deep and rugged, the Despe-te-que-suas Bridge is the longest and highest bridge in the Azores archipelago: it measures 385 metres and is 160 metres above the water line. The deck is structured on a continuous and monolithic box girder with the pillars. It owes its unique name, which translates to something akin to “take your clothes off, otherwise you will sweat” to the local stream, once so named for the redoubled effort required of those who travelled along the steep slope it now crosses.

Thanks Lalande Jorge for the cover !! Wonder if I will be able to get a cover with the older bridges stamps ;) 

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Armistice in Portugal



A cover from Portugal with a stamp honouring the soldiers of Ww1 on the centenary of Armistice ! 


  • 10.08.2018
  • Atelier Design&etc / Hélder Soares

Portugal remained neutral during the initial years of ww1. But there was growing hostility towards Germany , because Germany blocked ships going to UK by using its u- boats . UK was the major market for Portuguese products . So ultimately Portugal joined ww1 in March 1916 to safeguard its commercial interests and also its African colonies from German and British occupation . Portugal suffered heavy casualties in the war. The war cost Portugal 8,145 dead, 13,751 wounded and 12,318 prisoners or missing. At sea, 96 Portuguese ships were sunk (100,193 tons) and 5 Portuguese ships damaged (7,485 tons) by German submarines. Portugal heaved a sigh of relief when the war ended on 11-11-1918 .

The Past is brought to life on these stamps, forging a relationship with us, who contemplate it from the perspective of the Present. After all, this relationship marks the con uence of the Truth of what happened with theSense that time has given it. And it is this interweaving of what it has given us to Learn that we manage to retrieve elements for forging our Futureand rea rm it as a Project in progress.

It means honouring the memory of Portugal’s involvement in the Great War and doing justice to the tenacity and altruism of those who marchedbeneath our ag. It means going beyond a mere abstract commemoration of a particular day. It means giving weight and value to the Transmission of this memory, lest we lose ourselves altogether.

So listen to the lesson, perhaps the greatest lesson of all, that this Centenary has to teach us: nothing is a given; the limits of what makes us human are vulnerable; civilisation is a matter of uncertain, faltering triumphs; fragile in essence. And let us reassert the value of Responsibility.

Long reign a time of wine and bread and owers. A time when the earthis made fertile with Hope.”

- José Alberto de Azeredo Lopes 
   Ministry of National Defence