Paderne (Albufeira) Explained

Type:parish
Official Name:Paderne
Region:Algarve
Cim:Algarve
District:Faro
Municipality:Albufeira
Coordinates:37.176°N -8.201°W
Area Total:52.56
Population As Of:2011
Population Total:3304
Patron:Nossa Senhora da Esperança
Area Code:289
Postal Code:8200
Website:https://www.freguesiadepaderne.pt/

Paderne is a village and civil parish in the municipality (concelho) of Albufeira, in the Portuguese region of Algarve. The population in 2011 was 3,304,[1] in an area of 52.56 km2.[2]

History

The name Paderne derives from the lower Latin word Paterni, which means estate of Paterno, used when the area was part of the Roman Empire. But Paderne, or as it was formerly called, Paderna, was also an old toponymy whose origins were in the Lusitanian culture, signifying rough, tough, hard and intractable. The Veiga archaeological crews discovered underground galleries in the settlement that they attributed to prehistoric peoples, although local storytellers indicated that these caverns were used by Moorish peoples as barns or granaries. These galleries were once used as copper mines, but later reused by the peoples that dominated the Algarve: the Phoenicians, Romans, Goths and Arabs. Around 2km (01miles) from these structures is the Castle of Paderne, constructed in the 13th century during the Almohad caliphate, a Moorish group from North Africa that dominated the area at the end of the 12th century. The fortification not only defended the settlement of Paderne, but also controlled passage into the Barrocal and coastal Algarve. Constructed from taipa, its entrance is defended by a tower and barbican. The castle was taken by Christian forces of King Sancho I of Portugal, but retaken by the Moors again, who kept it until 1248, when knights of the Order of St. James, under Paio Peres Correia, defeated the Islamic garrison. By regal charter, on 1 January 1305, King Denis donated the castle and clergy to the Master of Avis, Lourenço Anes; this Order of Avis also occupied Albufeira at the time. In 1575, the first reference to a parish seat in Paderne occurred, and records from the local authority show that the change from ecclesiastical seat to parish occurred around 1500. The new church continued to be a priory of the Order of Avis, even as the settlement declined in importance, a decline accelerated after the 1755 Lisbon earthquake when the fortress of Paderne was heavily damaged. The castle of Paderne was purchased in 1997 by the Instituto Português do Património Aqruitectónico, or IPPA, the forerunner of the National Registry IGESPAR.

Geography

The centre, and main settlement, of Paderne is located 7.4miles north of Albufeira, 23miles west of Faro and is 151miles from Lisbon.

The parish is accessible through the national roadway/highway network, along the junctions of the A2 motorway (from Lisbon) and the IP1 coastal motorway. Flights to the region are handled through the gateway at Faro, while rail services run through the CP byway of Albufeira. The railway station of Albufeira / Ferreiras is 5.5 miles / 8.8 km from Paderne. Local buses operate from Albufeira town to Paderne.

Architecture

Civic

Military

Religious

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Statistics Portugal. ine.pt. 28 January 2015.
  2. Web site: Áreas das freguesias, concelhos, distritos e país . 2018-11-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181105172426/http://www.dgterritorio.pt/cartografia_e_geodesia/cartografia/carta_administrativa_oficial_de_portugal_caop_/caop__download_/carta_administrativa_oficial_de_portugal___versao_2017__em_vigor_/ . 2018-11-05 . dead .
  3. Web site: Castelo de Paderne . IGESPAR . 27 February 2012 . 2011 . Lisbon, Portugal . IGESPAR-Instituto de Gestão do Património Arquitectónico e Arqueológico . Portuguese . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130705030047/http://www.igespar.pt/en/patrimonio/pesquisa/geral/patrimonioimovel/detail/74129/ . 5 July 2013 .