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Since my early days in TE I have wanted to post something of this picturesque village located just 20 Km away from the town where I was born, but I failed to create the opportunity to get any photos until now. The few times I went there I was quite unlucky with the weather and I didn't even take the camera out of the bag. In one occasion I went there very late in a winter night as clear as cold, hoping to get fantastic dawn light, but I ended up awakening freezing to death in the car in the middle of the thickest fog. This time I hadn't much time, but I decided to try my luck.

This is a stitch of 10 horizontal shots (2 rows of 5) taken by hand from the North part of the city walls that surround the whole village.

The charm of Marvão comes from its location, perched on the top of a rocky scarp that climbs abruptly some hundred meters over the surrounding lower hills, like defying the nearby Castelo de Vide [1, 2], and from the sense of stopped in time created by the maze of white houses with red tile roofs surrounded by old city walls that make it look like the whole village is a formidable castle where the natural escarpments are the lower walls.

The Nobel laureate Portuguese writer José Saramago wrote "De Marvão ve-se a terra toda(...) Compreende-se que neste lugar do alto da torre de menagem do castelo de Marvão, o viajante murmure respeitosamente: Que grande é o mundo!" (from Marvão one sees the whole land... One understands that from the top of the keep of the castle of Marvão the traveller whispers respectfully: how great is the world!"

The name Marvão comes from the muladi (Muslim of Iberian origin) king Ibn Marwan, a follower of Sufism (a mystical current of Islam) who lived in the second half of the 9th century. He built the first castle of Marvão and ruled a kingdom with capital in Badajoz, which supposedly was also founded by him after rebelling against the emirs of Córdoba, the most powerful rulers of the Al-Andalus (the Muslim ruled Iberia).

No one knows if there was any settlement in the place when Ibn Marwan built the castle, but down the valley South of it there was a Roman town of Ammaia, which reached the status of Municipium (the second highest rank of Roman towns) in the time of the emperor Nero.

Link to other post of mine of the Marvão district: ***

Location of the POV (latitude, longitude): 39.39523,-7.37832

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Additional Photos by Jose Pires (stego) Gold Star Critiquer/Gold Star Workshop Editor/Gold Note Writer [C: 4492 W: 661 N: 7109] (22376)
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