Why choose this tour?
Expert guide: Dive into Évora’s history and secrets with a passionate guide who will reveal details you won’t find in books.
What you’ll experience in Évora?
Walk through the cobbled streets, where every corner tells a story.
Discover the Silver Water Aqueduct, a 16th-century engineering marvel, and be amazed by the striking Chapel of Bones.
Let yourself be enchanted by the aromas of traditional cuisine and savor delights like açorda and porco preto, dishes that reflect the essence of the region’s gastronomy.
Who is this tour ideal for?
History and culture lovers: This tour is for you.
Travelers with limited time: Make the most of your visit with an optimized itinerary and no waiting.
Families and small groups: The private experience ensures personalized attention and a pace adapted to your needs.
If you're looking for an excursion that transports you through time in Portuguese culture, this tour is the perfect choice.
Hotel pick up and drop off. Optional pick up location: Hard Rock Cafe Lisboa Av. da Liberdade 2, 1250-144 Lisboa.
This is our starting point, where we will meet at the combined location for pickup and head directly to our destinations and our experience in Évora.
We'll visit the Roman Temple, built in the 1st century AD, in a hexastyle - peripteral style, with a Corinthian colonnade, made this place one of the most notable examples of classical architecture in Portugal.
This is one of the great heritage structures of Évora, built under the ancient Roman aqueduct and at the same time, a place to remember the celebration os a unique moment in the Kingdom of Portugal.
The Cathedral of Évora was for many years the architectural reflection of the medieval fabric. Began its construction in 1280 as a Cathedral. Marks the passage of time as a work of transition, a hybrid structure that from the shadow of the Romanesque and the celestial light of the Gothic, was consecrated in 1308 as one of the largest Cathedral in Portugal.
It is a resistant piece of a once magnificent palace complex, which at the entrance of the 16th century and by the Hand of D. Manuel, integrated the convent of São Francisco. In the Palace of Évora, started by D. João I at the end of the 14th century. It is one of the Manueline’s greatest works with Mudéjar influence, and a symbol of Évora, the political and cultural capital of the Portuguese Kingdom.
Located inside of the Church of São Francisco de Évora, we´ll visit one of the most extraordinary Christian temples in Portugal and the famous Bone Chapel as well, a place full of details and an increadable history.
The city’s Great Square is an urban space that perhaps has its origins as a public spacer in the late centuries of the city’s Muslim occupation. However, it was only from the 13th century onwards that it began to be structured as the center of Évora, when the fair began to be held, regulated by the Concordat of D. Dinis in 1286, and to establish itself as a commercial center. The old arcades stand out, as well as the Church of Santo Antão, built in 1577 by Alfonso Álvares, the same man who designed the Fountain that punctuates the space. A monumental work, which preserves praise to King Sebastián. In 1869, the square was given the name it still holds today: Giraldo square, in memory of the knight who reconquered the city from the Muslims in the 12th century.
The Convent of Graça is a royal work, designed by Chanterenne, projected by Miguel de Arruda, and supported by the erudition of the humanist and first Portuguese archaeologist André de Resende. Its forms already display principles of early mannerism. It is a full manifestation of Évora in the 1930s of the 16th centuries. On the frieze of the temple, D. João III marks his presence: JONNIS III PATRIS PATRIAE. Crowning the facade. The monumental sculptures are solemn Renaissance iconography, elevated to the status of urban myth by the romanticism of the centuries.
Sponsored by the farmer Ramalho Perdigão and designed with pen and paper, free of charge, by the Italian scenographer Giuseppe Cinatti, the Public Garden was a work of notable sociocultural dimension for the city in the second half of the 19th century and provided the note of lightness that the old medieval town needed to face contemporary times. After deconstructing what was left of the old royal gardens, Cinatti would take almost two decades to complete his work: a fenced boulevard, inspired by the new European trends in leisure spaces and he did so by finishing it with the fantasy of ‘‘fake ruins’’, in 1866.
The Christian temple of Nossa Senhora da Misericórdia is one of the last works of the Eborense Renaissance, announcing a severe baroque style. The first stone was laid in 1554, and the façade was altered in the second half of the 18th century, but it was the work carried out on the interior, during the time of D. João V (1689-1750), that gave in an unusual elegance and refinement. It is perhaps the most delicate set of gilded carvings and tiles in Évora, boasting simply remarkable quality and harmony. It is in the symbiosis and balance between these two registers that its simple beauty is defined, undoubtedly one of Évora’s greatest legacies to Portuguese art.
After visited all the places in this experience, we will head back to Lisbon to make the drop off at your Hotel.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
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You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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