Botequim da Mouraria Part 2

We loved this place so much last night that we went back again tonight.  It was just as good, and I can only wish we were staying in Evora one more night.

To appease my good friend Snide Lee (see comments section of my previous Botequim post), tonight we had the Ham Pata Negra (very thing slices of black pig), the Roasted Cheese with Marjoram (OMG), and the Pork Lombinhos Grilled.  The pork came with a salad and house made chips.  Yum to the Nth degree!  If you ever find yourself in Evora, you must come here for dinner at least once!

It was pretty much Americans and Canadians.  Julie, our new friend from San Francisco that we met wine tasting today, joined us.  We met a couple from Canada, and another couple from Pittsburgh who are headed to the same hotel as us in the Algarve just one day behind us.  Everybody here is super friendly….must be the Portugese running off!

Megalithic sites near Evora

One of the items that the Alentejo is known for is megalithic sites, particularly around Evora.  About a 20 minute drive away is Almendres Megalithic settlement (also called a cromlech).  This circle of rocks is similar to Stonehenge, however, this site pre-dates Stonehenge by 2000 years.

Stonehenge is inundated with hundreds of tourists at once, and you have to stay about 100 yards away on a path.  We were the only ones here, and you can freely walk among the rocks (they just ask that you don’t climb them).

Here is a depiction of the layout as well as info on markings.  We could only find the markings on one of the stones, so the rest must have been picked up via some kind of spectography.

The next site we visited was a simple Menhir.  This stone aligned with the circle of stones to create an alignment with the summer solstice.  Not quite sure how they did this, as we could not see one site from the other.  Perhaps there were a lot fewer trees 7000 years ago?  Again, we were the only ones here.

This reminded me of the monolith from 2001, so here I am doing my best job at acting like prehistoric man, in awe of the monolith.

Our final stop was Anta Grande do Zambujerio, which is a megalithic funerary where the dead were placed with various belongings.  This, along with the original megalithic Almendres, were buried until their discovery in the the 1960’s.  Once again, all by ourselves at this site.

This is looking down into the funerary.

The artifacts that were found were given to the Evora Museum.

These are examples of schists.  I didn’t get a photo of those from the museum.  They apparently found hundreds of these in the funerary.  They are designed for specific people who were placed there.  The more ornate, the more important the person.