Coimbra
Portugal
Coimbra, University of
Coimbra, city and concelho (municipality), west-central Portugal. It is located on the northern bank of the Mondego River.
A 4th-century Latin inscription identifies Coimbra with Aeminium, and Condeixa, 8 miles (13 km) southwest, was the ancient Conimbriga or Conimbrica. Aeminium was for more than a century a Moorish stronghold, but in 878 it was recaptured by Alfonso III of Asturias and Leon and peopled by Galicians from the north. When the see of Conimbriga was transferred there, the bishop kept the old name and Aeminium became known as Coimbra. It was captured by Ferdinand I of Castile in 1064, and for more than a century it served as a base for the reconquest of Portugal from the Moors.
From 1139 until 1260, when it was replaced by Lisbon, the city of Coimbra was the capital of Portugal. Six medieval kings—Sancho I and II, Afonso II and III, Pedro I, and Ferdinand I—were born there, as was the 16th-century poet Francisco de Sá de Miranda. Portugal’s oldest university, founded in 1290 in Lisbon, finally settled at Coimbra as the Universidade de Coimbra in 1537. Its chapel has a magnificently carved door (1517–22) and a richly decorated Baroque library (1716–23), which has 1,000,000 volumes and 3,000 manuscripts, among them a first edition of Luís de Camões’s epic Os Lusíadas (1572; “The Portuguese”). In the early 16th century the city was a centre for polyphonic music, which travelers carried to Ethiopia and to the Congo region.
Other notable landmarks in Coimbra include the Romanesque old cathedral (1170); the church of São Salvador (12th century); the new cathedral, begun in 1598; the Machado de Castro Museum in the old episcopal palace, restored in 1592; Santa Cruz church, built in the reign of Afonso I and rebuilt in 1520; the Aqueduct of São Sebastião (1568–70), rebuilt on Roman foundations; and the 12th-century Monastery of Celas, built by Beata Sancha, daughter of Sancho I. On the north side of the Mondego, linked to Coimbra by a stone bridge, is the suburb of Santa Clara; within that suburb are the old 13th- and new 17th-century convents of Santa Clara, where Inês de Castro, mistress of King Pedro I, was supposedly murdered.
Coimbra’s main industries are the making of pottery, fabrics, beer, wine, paper, and leather. A publishing house was established there in the 19th century. Coimbra lies along the electrified railroad and the highway between Porto and Lisbon. Another highway and railroad extend east from near Coimbra to Guarda and to Spain.
Agriculture (grain, olives, rice, and fruits) and fishing are the main occupations of the surrounding area. Small petroleum deposits have been found there but have not been commercially exploited. Dams on the Mondego and its tributary, the Alva, are an important source of hydroelectricity. Pop. (2001) city, 101,069; mun., 148,443; (2011 est.) city, 97,600; (2011) mun., 143,396.
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