Palace of Ajuda, Lisbon

Right before we left for our trip I told a bunch of friends about this blog.  Our good friend Fred Daniels responded back that he had a contact in Lisbon that could give us a tour of the Palace of Ajuda.  We said “sure, set it up!”

So we show up at the palace yesterday and Cristina, Fred’s friend, meets us in the reception area.  Everybody in the place is treating her with the utmost in respect…..and that’s when we find out she is the curator of the palace, and has worked here for 30 years!

The history of this palace is pretty interesting.  After the earthquake of 1755, King Joseph, who survived, decided that brick buildings were not for him.  He built a huge wooden building so that if an earthquake struck he’d be impaled by shards of wood rather than buried under bricks and mortar.  Ok, maybe a bit of an exaggeration, but you get my drift.

So King Joseph, he of the fear of bricks (also known as being buried alive), had a closet case of taphephobia (you have google, look it up).  So King Joey dies in 1777 and his daughter Maria takes over and says “enough of this wooden house shit”.  She had apparently read the Three Little Pigs as a child.  So she starts building a real palace.

In the middle of building (1809 to be exact), a bunch of Frenchies under the direction of an imp named Napolean invade Portugal.  The Royal family says “I can run faster than you can”, and promptly moves everybody to Brazil.  The Frenchies find no royalty to force into submission, and head back to the land of heavily seasoned snails.  Even in the absence of the Royal family, the construction of the palace continues.  If only we had contractors like that today!

It wasn’t until 1862 that the latest Royals took up residence here.  The queen, Maria Pia, was responsible for most of the interiors in the palace.  Her husband, King Luis, gave her full control as long as he was allowed to smoke.  She took advantage of that and made the palace her own.

They are still restoring the palace to this day, as we couldn’t go up to certain sections of the 2nd floor, but Cristina took us everywhere she could, even some spaces that were closed to the public that day.  We saw one large crowd there taking a guided tour.  Otherwise the place was empty, so if you want to avoid the crowds, this is a pretty cool spot to check out, particularly if it’s raining!

Odd that the two thrones look identical.  You would think the Queen’s would be more demure?  Maybe Maria Pia wore the pants in this kingdom?

This is the ball room, right off of the throne room (you can see the thrones in the background).  Don’t ask me about the significance of Atlas holding up balls in the ballroom….I have no idea.

These are really cool pieces that I want!  If anybody sees them for sale somewhere let me know!  Particularly the moon sticking it’s tongue out!

I only got one photo of Cristina, and only from behind.  I need to do a much better job of identifying the hosts of these adventures!  This shot is of the winter room, where they would bring plants inside so they could enjoy them without freezing their butts off.  That is a bird cage in the background.

Thank you to Cristina!  Looking forward to your SF visit in February!

 

Wine dinner with Andre!

Another Airbnb experience….another rousing success!  Andre is a wine consultant in Portugal and very well versed in all of the different wine regions and varietals.  He’s also an excellent host and, typical of the Portugese, a total people person.

We had a group of 12 of us, and Andre quickly had everybodies name down pat, although I did get called Kim a few times…..and even worse Kim got called Chris…..doh!

Let’s see if I can rattle off the other 10:

Andre, Diego, Chanelle, Sally, Biljana, Michael, Shannon, Amanda, JP and Marguerite.

We haven’t heard from JP or Amanda since the dinner.  I hear Spring is an excellent time for a wedding!

We hadn’t been in the door more than 3 minutes and we had a full wine glass in our hands.  Perfect start!  There was plenty of cheese, bread, meat and olives to start with.  Andre gave us an overview of the wine regions, history, and types of wine to be expected from certain regions.  Then we were seated for a 3 course meal, more wine, and got to know each other a little.  Countries represented were Portugal, the US, Canada, England, France and Malta (I had to look up where Malta was on my phone).  It was great to hear about other places and events in the world besides US politics!

We ended the night at around 1:00 AM, despite the Airbnb description saying we would be out of there by 11:30.  The wine kept coming….just glad I wasn’t driving home!

This is a must do for anybody coming to Lisbon.  Here is a link to this excellent experience.

Andre’s super duper wine dinner!