Viseu

{{about|the Portuguese municipality}}

{{Infobox Portuguese subdivision

| type = municipality

|official_name =

|image_flag = Bandeira de Viseu.jpg

|flag_border = no

|image_shield = COA of Viseu.svg

| image_skyline = {{Photomontage

| photo1a = ViseuLandscape.jpg

| photo2a = Sé de Viseu IMG 20141226 155323-Pano (36162491774).jpg

| photo2b = Antiga rua da Cadeia (cropped).jpg

| photo3a = Pça. D. Duarte - Viseu - Portugal (169743505) (cropped) (cropped).jpg

| photo3b = Igreja da Misericórdia de Viseu (48759337787) (cropped).jpg

| spacing = 2

| position = center

| color_border = white

| color = white

| size = 280

| foot_montage = Clockwise: View of Viseu; historic center; Igreja da Misericórdia; Praça D. Duarte; Viseu Cathedral.

}}

|coordinates = {{coord|40|40|N|7|55|W|type:adm1st_region:PT_dim:100000|display=inline,title}}

|image_map = LocalViseu.svg

|region = Centro

|CIM = Viseu Dão Lafões

|district = Viseu

|parishes = 25

|leader_party = PSD

|leader_name = Fernando Ruas

|area_total_km2 = 507.10

|population_total = 100105

|population_as_of = 2022

|holiday = September 21

|website = {{url|http://www.cm-viseu.pt/}}

}}

Viseu ({{IPA|pt|viˈzew|-|Pt-pt Viseu FF.ogg}}) is a city and municipality in the Centro Region of Portugal and the capital of the district of the same name, with a population of 100,105 inhabitants{{cite web |access-date=2023-06-28 |title=Portal do INE |url=https://www.ine.pt/xportal/xmain?xpid=INE&xpgid=ine_indicadores&indOcorrCod=0008272&contexto=bd&selTab=tab2 |website=www.ine.pt}} in the entire municipality, and center of the Viseu Dão Lafões intermunipical community, with 267,633 inhabitants.

Settled during the period of the early Iberian Castro culture, the territory of Viseu was populated by a series of cultures including the Romans, Suebs, Visigoths and Moors. During the Roman occupation of Iberia, Viriathus, the rebel leader of the Lusitanians, is assumed to have lived for a time in the vicinity. During the Middle Ages, the city often served as a seat for Visigothic nobles (such as King Roderic), and is considered one of the probable birthplaces of Afonso Henriques, first King of Portugal.{{Citation needed|date=August 2018}}

Viseu is a regional economic hub with a strong wine industry and is the seat of the international conglomerate Visabeira. The city is also a cultural center, home to the nationally acclaimed Grão Vasco Museum, the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Viseu, and a center for higher learning institutions, namely the Catholic University of Portugal and the Polytechnic Institute of Viseu.

History

The origins of the city of Viseu date back to the pre-Roman period, with its name being reconstructed from the indigenous word 'Vissaîegobor' as *Vissaium, perhaps with a latinised suffix.Ruiz, J. Siles. "Sobre la inscripción lusitano-latina de Visseu". In: Nuevas interpretaciones del Mundo Antiguo: papers in honor of professor José Luis Melena on the occasion of his retirement / coord. por Elena Redondo Moyano, María José García Soler, 2016. pp. 347-356. {{ISBN|978-84-9082-481-8}}

With its Romanisation the settlement gained importance, being at the intersection of a series of Roman roads linking Mérida, Lisbon, and Galicia.

Viseu is associated with Viriathus, since it is thought{{By whom|date=September 2022}} that the Lusitanian hero may have been born in this region. After the Roman occupation of the peninsula, under the Visigoths, the settlement was elevated to the status of city and to the seat of a diocese by at least the 6th century.

=Middle Ages=

The origins of Viseu extend to proto-history, when migrating groups settled the territory, including the Celts and Lusitanians. Roman colonists settled in these territories during eras of prosperity and peace, leading eventually to Suebic, Gothic and Muslim cultures.{{citation |url=http://www.cm-viseu.pt/index.php/conhecer-viseu/historico/historia |title=História |location=Viseu, Portugal |language=pt |year=2015 |editor=Câmara Municipal |publisher=Câmara Municipal de Viseu |access-date=24 September 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150925111344/http://www.cm-viseu.pt/index.php/conhecer-viseu/historico/historia |archive-date=25 September 2015 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }} The Suebic peoples, by the middle of the 6th century, had already established a community, with a bishop that existed at the suffrage of Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Braga. With the arrival of North African Muslims, the Visigoths escaped the territory to the distant mountains of Asturias.

The lands of Viseu frequently switched hands between the Christians and Moors, who referred to Viseu as Bazu,{{Cite book|last=Ferreira |first=Manuel dos Santos da Cerveira Pinto |year=2004 |title=O Douro no Garb al-Ândalus: A região de Lamego durante a presença árabe |chapter=A cidade de Lamengo durante o domínio árabe/islâmico |chapter-url=https://repositorium.sdum.uminho.pt/bitstream/1822/3001/9/08.A%20cidade%20de%20Lamego%20durante%20o%20dom%C3%ADnio%20%C3%A1rabe.pdf |type=thesis |work=Universidade do Minho |language=pt |page=117 |access-date=2 August 2018}} and was definitely taken in 1058, due to the victory of Ferdinand I of León. But, his siege left such destruction that only in 1147–1148, during the Reconquista, that the Diocese of Viseu had the conditions to support a bishop. For many years it had been absorbed by the Bishopric of Coimbra, due to the intervention of the priors, including S. Teotónio. Viseu began recuperating its importance as an urban centre; "rapidly, [it] recuperated its lost transitory brilliance or worsened its activities and differentiation social". It was another three centuries of laborious peace that allowed Viseu to grow once more. It was following the death of King Ferdinand I, the Castilians sought to enforce (by force-of-arms), its rights to the lands/territories of the County of Portugal.

During Countship of Portugal, Viseu served as the seat of the Corte of Henry, Count of Portugal and Countess Teresa, who granted a foral to the city in 1123. Viseu is one of the possible birthplaces of their son Afonso Henriques in 1109. Following the successful defense of his hereditary rights, and supported by nobles and clergy, Afonso Henriques founded the kingdom of Portugal. Viseu was granted a new charter 1187, that was later reinforced by his grandson, King Afonso II of Portugal, in 1217.

During the 1383–85 Crisis, the city was besieged by the forces of Juan I of Castile, leading to King John I of Portugal starting construction on a series of defensive fortifications which would continue being built until the reign of King Afonso V of Portugal.

The city became part of a fiefdom, when Prince Henry the Navigator, son of King John I of Portugal, was made Duke of Viseu, in 1415.

In 1475, Vasco Fernandes, a famed artist of the Portuguese Renaissance, was born in the city,

In 1513, King Manuel I of Portugal renewed the charter of Viseu and a series of works were taken on throughout the city, with the opening of the first square of the city, the Rossio.

In the 19th century, a new Municipal Palace was built in the Rossio, significantly altering the flow of the city, moving it away from the medieval center to newer parts of the city.

Geography

File:Igreja da Misericórdia de Viseu.jpg

Viseu is approximately {{convert|50|km|0|abbr=on}} East of the Atlantic Ocean. Surrounded by a number of mountains – Leomil, Montemuro, Lapa, Arada, Estrela and Caramulo – the tops of which are covered with thick layers of snow in Winter time, the district is crossed by a network of rivers and streamlets.

The city of Viseu has an almost central position in relation to the District lying on the so-called Viseu Plateau (in Portuguese Planalto de Viseu). It is surrounded by a mountainous system constituted to the north by the Leonil, Montemuro, and Lapa hills, to the northeast by the Arado hills, to the south and southeast by the Serra da Estrela and the Lousã hills and to the west by the Caramulo hills.

The Municipality is characterized by an irregular surface with altitudes ranging between {{convert|400|and|700|m|abbr=off}}. With rough terrain, it has numerous water courses. These are found in three basins: the Vouga, the Dão and the Paiva.

=Climate=

Situated in a zone of transition, the concelho has several micro-climates. The Serra do Caramulo, located to the west of the city, plays an important role in climatic terms by lessening the influences of the western air masses (although the Mondego River's basin makes the penetration easier). Consequently, Viseu's climate is characterized by the existence of high temperature extremes, with cold and wet winters and hot and dry summers.

Viseu has a Mediterranean climate (Csb, bordering Csa),{{cite web|url=http://www.weatherbase.com/weather/weather-summary.php3?s=591895&cityname=Viseu%2C+Viseu%2C+Portugal&units=|title=Viseu, Portugal Climate Summary|publisher=Weatherbase|access-date=21 March 2015}} with the 1981–2010 averages indicating it just below the {{convert|22|C|F}} isotherm.{{cite web|url=http://www.ipma.pt/en/oclima/normais.clima/1981-2010/022/|title=Climate Normals for Viseu 1981-2010|publisher=IPMA|access-date=21 March 2015}} Its inland position and relative altitude contribute to cooler winters than in coastal areas of the country, with an average of 31 days with frost per year; as well as a relatively large diurnal temperature variation and lower averages than more low-lying inland cities in the central-north area of the country such as Castelo Branco. In spite of its inland position, the maritime influence is strong enough for there to be a seasonal lag resulting in September averaging similar temperatures as June for the 1981–2010 reference period. This also applies to October and May. However, temperatures drop sharply in November, resulting in a smaller lag for the winter season. July and August are the driest and hottest months, with daytime highs averaging {{convert|29.6|C|F}} for both months. Winters are much wetter with an average December precipitation of {{convert|203.4|mm|in|0}}.

{{Weather box

| location = Viseu, 1981-2010 normals and extremes, altitude: {{convert|443|m|abbr=on}}

| metric first = Yes

| single line = Yes

| Jan record high C = 20.7

| Feb record high C = 22.6

| Mar record high C = 27.6

| Apr record high C = 30.3

| May record high C = 33.0

| Jun record high C = 39.0

| Jul record high C = 40.5

| Aug record high C = 40.4

| Sep record high C = 39.6

| Oct record high C = 31.2

| Nov record high C = 27.3

| Dec record high C = 22.5

| year record high C = 40.5

| Jan high C = 11.9

| Feb high C = 13.8

| Mar high C = 16.9

| Apr high C = 17.6

| May high C = 20.6

| Jun high C = 26.2

| Jul high C = 29.6

| Aug high C = 29.6

| Sep high C = 26.1

| Oct high C = 20.1

| Nov high C = 15.1

| Dec high C = 12.7

| year high C =

| Jan mean C = 7.1

| Feb mean C = 8.6

| Mar mean C = 11.0

| Apr mean C = 11.9

| May mean C = 14.7

| Jun mean C = 19.0

| Jul mean C = 21.7

| Aug mean C = 21.6

| Sep mean C = 19.0

| Oct mean C = 14.7

| Nov mean C = 10.6

| Dec mean C = 8.5

| year mean C =

| Jan low C = 2.2

| Feb low C = 3.3

| Mar low C = 5.2

| Apr low C = 6.2

| May low C = 8.8

| Jun low C = 11.7

| Jul low C = 13.8

| Aug low C = 13.5

| Sep low C = 11.9

| Oct low C = 9.1

| Nov low C = 6.0

| Dec low C = 4.2

| year low C =

| Jan record low C = -6.6

| Feb record low C = -7.3

| Mar record low C = -5.4

| Apr record low C = -2.6

| May record low C = -0.5

| Jun record low C = 2.6

| Jul record low C = 5.3

| Aug record low C = 6.0

| Sep record low C = 3.0

| Oct record low C = 0.7

| Nov record low C = -3.5

| Dec record low C = -5.0

| year record low C =

| precipitation colour = green

| Jan precipitation mm = 153.2

| Feb precipitation mm = 105.6

| Mar precipitation mm = 79.0

| Apr precipitation mm = 113.6

| May precipitation mm = 103.0

| Jun precipitation mm = 35.2

| Jul precipitation mm = 19.2

| Aug precipitation mm = 17.8

| Sep precipitation mm = 66.0

| Oct precipitation mm = 147.0

| Nov precipitation mm = 155.5

| Dec precipitation mm = 203.4

| year precipitation mm =

| source 1 = Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera{{cite web |title=Plano Municipal de Defesa da Floresta Contra Incêndios |url=https://www.cm-mortagua.pt/docs/GTF/PMDFCI_2021_2030_MORTAGUA.pdf |publisher=Mortágua Municipality |access-date=27 September 2021}}

| source =

}}

{{Weather box|location = Viseu Airport, 1981-2010 normals and extremes, altitude: {{convert|644|m|abbr=on}}

|metric first = Yes

|single line = Yes

|Jan record high C = 19.5

|Feb record high C = 21.3

|Mar record high C = 25.8

|Apr record high C = 28.3

|May record high C = 33.2

|Jun record high C = 35.4

|Jul record high C = 39.4

|Aug record high C = 38.6

|Sep record high C = 37.0

|Oct record high C = 29.4

|Nov record high C = 23.4

|Dec record high C = 19.0

|year record high C =

|Jan high C = 10.4

|Feb high C = 12.3

|Mar high C = 15.5

|Apr high C = 16.4

|May high C = 19.4

|Jun high C = 24.4

|Jul high C = 27.6

|Aug high C = 28.0

|Sep high C = 23.8

|Oct high C = 18.4

|Nov high C = 13.3

|Dec high C = 10.7

|year high C =

|Jan mean C = 7.1

|Feb mean C = 8.4

|Mar mean C = 11.0

|Apr mean C = 11.8

|May mean C = 14.5

|Jun mean C = 18.7

|Jul mean C = 21.1

|Aug mean C = 21.6

|Sep mean C = 18.5

|Oct mean C = 14.5

|Nov mean C = 10.0

|Dec mean C = 7.7

|year mean C =

|Jan low C = 3.8

|Feb low C = 4.5

|Mar low C = 6.4

|Apr low C = 7.1

|May low C = 9.6

|Jun low C = 13.0

|Jul low C = 14.5

|Aug low C = 15.3

|Sep low C = 13.2

|Oct low C = 10.7

|Nov low C = 6.7

|Dec low C = 4.6

|year low C =

|Jan record low C = -4.2

|Feb record low C = -4.5

|Mar record low C = -6.8

|Apr record low C = -1.2

|May record low C = 1.8

|Jun record low C = 5.6

|Jul record low C = 7.3

|Aug record low C = 7.6

|Sep record low C = 5.8

|Oct record low C = 2.2

|Nov record low C = -0.9

|Dec record low C = -2.9

|year record low C =

|precipitation colour = green

|Jan precipitation mm = 183.2

|Feb precipitation mm = 103.5

|Mar precipitation mm = 98.2

|Apr precipitation mm = 118.7

|May precipitation mm = 98.2

|Jun precipitation mm = 37.6

|Jul precipitation mm = 19.5

|Aug precipitation mm = 28.5

|Sep precipitation mm = 60.4

|Oct precipitation mm = 173.7

|Nov precipitation mm = 161.8

|Dec precipitation mm = 201.0

|year precipitation mm =

|source 1 = Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera{{cite web |title=Normal Climatológica – Viseu 1981-2010 |url=https://www.ipma.pt/bin/file.data/climate-normal/cn_81-10_VISEU_CC.pdf |publisher=IPMA |access-date=17 February 2022}}

}}

{{Weather box|location = Viseu, 1971-2000 normals and extremes

|metric first = Yes

|single line = Yes

|collapsed = Y

|Jan record high C = 20.0

|Feb record high C = 22.5

|Mar record high C = 27.4

|Apr record high C = 30.3

|May record high C = 33.0

|Jun record high C = 39.0

|Jul record high C = 40.5

|Aug record high C = 40.4

|Sep record high C = 39.6

|Oct record high C = 31.2

|Nov record high C = 24.6

|Dec record high C = 22.5

|year record high C = 40.5

|Jan high C = 11.6

|Feb high C = 13.2

|Mar high C = 15.9

|Apr high C = 17.1

|May high C = 20.2

|Jun high C = 25.4

|Jul high C = 29.2

|Aug high C = 29.2

|Sep high C = 25.9

|Oct high C = 19.8

|Nov high C = 15.0

|Dec high C = 12.4

|year high C =

|Jan mean C = 6.9

|Feb mean C = 8.4

|Mar mean C = 10.3

|Apr mean C = 11.5

|May mean C = 14.3

|Jun mean C = 18.4

|Jul mean C = 21.4

|Aug mean C = 21.1

|Sep mean C = 18.8

|Oct mean C = 14.2

|Nov mean C = 10.2

|Dec mean C = 8.1

|year mean C =

|Jan low C = 2.2

|Feb low C = 3.5

|Mar low C = 4.6

|Apr low C = 6.0

|May low C = 8.5

|Jun low C = 11.5

|Jul low C = 13.5

|Aug low C = 13.0

|Sep low C = 11.7

|Oct low C = 8.5

|Nov low C = 5.3

|Dec low C = 3.8

|year low C =

|Jan record low C = -6.6

|Feb record low C = -7.3

|Mar record low C = -5.4

|Apr record low C = -3.8

|May record low C = -0.5

|Jun record low C = 2.0

|Jul record low C = 5.3

|Aug record low C = 6.0

|Sep record low C = 2.0

|Oct record low C = -2.8

|Nov record low C = -3.6

|Dec record low C = -5.0

|year record low C = -7.3

|precipitation colour = green

|Jan precipitation mm = 155.7

|Feb precipitation mm = 133.6

|Mar precipitation mm = 74.8

|Apr precipitation mm = 105.2

|May precipitation mm = 95.9

|Jun precipitation mm = 46.1

|Jul precipitation mm = 19.2

|Aug precipitation mm = 17.9

|Sep precipitation mm = 57.0

|Oct precipitation mm = 133.2

|Nov precipitation mm = 135.9

|Dec precipitation mm = 195.4

|year precipitation mm =

|source 1 = Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera{{cite web|url =https://www.ipma.pt/bin/file.data/climate-normal/cn_71-00_VISEU.pdf|title=Climate Normals - Viseu 1971-2000|publisher=Portuguese Institute of Meteorology|access-date = 29 August 2020}}

}}

=Human geography=

{{stack|

{{Historical populations

|title = Population of Viseu
(1801–2011)

|1801 |33699

|1849 |36049

|1900 |54047

|1930 |61140

|1960 |79890

|1981 |83261

|1991 |83601

|2001 |93501

|2011 |99274

}}

}}

Administratively, the municipality is divided into 25 civil parishes:{{cite web|title=Law nr. 11-A/2013, pages 552 141-142|url=http://dre.pt/pdf1sdip/2013/01/01901/0000200147.pdf |access-date=5 August 2014|author=Diário da República|author-link=Diário da República|language=pt}}

{{div col|colwidth=22em}}

  • Abraveses
  • Barreiros e Cepões
  • Boa Aldeia, Farminhão e Torredeita
  • Bodiosa
  • Calde
  • Campo
  • Cavernães
  • Cota
  • Couto de Baixo e Couto de Cima
  • Faíl e Vila Chã de Sá
  • Fragosela
  • Lordosa
  • Mundão
  • Orgens
  • Povolide
  • Ranhados
  • Repeses e São Salvador
  • Ribafeita
  • Rio de Loba
  • Santos Evos
  • São Cipriano e Vil de Souto
  • São João de Lourosa
  • São Pedro de France
  • Silgueiros
  • Viseu

{{div col end}}

Due to migration in the 1960s, Viseu suffered a great decline in its population. After the end of the Portuguese Colonial War (1961–1974), with the return of refugees from the Portuguese African colonies that achieved independence, and resulting economic and demographic growth, starting at the end of the 1970s, the municipality increased its population by about 10 percent, giving it an estimated population of 83,261 people. Afterwards, a stagnation set in, confirmed by the 1991 census which showed a population of 83,601.

International relations

{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Portugal}}

As of 2023, Viseu is twinned with:{{Cite web |last=Seara.com |title=Cidades Geminadas |url=https://www.cm-viseu.pt/pt/municipio/cidades-geminadas/ |access-date=2023-03-01 |website=Câmara Municipal de Viseu |language=pt}}

{{div col|colwidth=20em}}

{{div col end}}

Economy

The city and the region are famous for its wine (Dão Wine) and the Dão Wine Institute, the Solar do Vinho do Dão can be found in the city. There is also an annual fair, the Feira de São Mateus. Furthermore, Viseu is also known for local handicrafts which include black pottery, bobbin lace, embroidery, and copper and wrought iron articles. With the good connections to major industrial centers and to the ports of Aveiro and Leixões, several industries have been installed in Viseu. Visabeira, a Portugal-based international conglomerate with interests in telecommunications, construction, industry, tourism, real estate and diversified services is headquartered in the city. Viseu also hosts a central hospital (Hospital of São Teotónio), two shopping & cinema complexes (the Fórum (2005) and the Palácio do Gelo (2008)), and numerous hostels and hotels in all categories.

Transportation

The city of Viseu has a bus network – MUV – which operates several lines within the entire municipality and a recently installed funicular connecting the lower city with the upper city. The A25 motorway (formerly called IP5) connects Viseu to the seaport of Aveiro and Guarda and then on to Salamanca in Spain. The IP3 and A24, connecting Coimbra with Chaves on the Spanish border, cross Viseu from south to north. Until the nineteen eighties Viseu had railway connections with the coast, but these were closed.

Viseu is now one of the largest cities in Europe without a railway connection. Once it was connected to Aveiro (via the Vouga line, a narrow gauge railway), and Santa Comba Dão (on the Dão line, another narrow gauge railway), where it had a connection to the Linha da Beira Alta (broad gauge; international). The Dão line closed to passengers in 1988.

The municipality has an airfield – the Viseu Airport (code VSE) also known as Lobato, parish of Lordosa, Viseu – that offers scheduled commercial flights to some domestic destinations with Aero VIP.

Education

Viseu is the location of the state-run Instituto Politécnico de Viseu which has higher education polytechnic schools of education, technology and management, and agronomy. The city's political and civic groups have been pressuring the national government to upgrade this school into a university, but its desire was never achieved. However, there are 2 private university institutions, the Universidade Católica Portuguesa and the Instituto Piaget. Furthermore, since the Bologna process, the difference between universities and polytechnics is less relevant, with the exception of some degrees like medicine, economics or law, that are only awarded in universities.

There are three secondary education (the Portuguese equivalent of High School) establishments: the Escola Secundária de Viriato, Escola Secundária Alves Martins and Escola Secundária Emídio Navarro.

Gallery

File:Viseu - Sé 1.jpg|Cathedral of Viseu

File:SJTarouca.jpg|São João da Tarouca convent

File:Viseu - Teatro Viriato (2).jpg|Viriato Theatre, Portugal

File:Viseu - Camara.jpg|Town hall of Viseu

File:ViseuCathedral.jpg|Towers and façade of the Cathedral

File:SeViseuInterior.jpg|Interior of Viseu Cathedral

File:Viseu, Largo do Pintor Gata (5986880129).jpg|Viseu, Portugal

File:Nt-Viseu-Porta dos Cavaleiros.jpg|Remains of the city wall.

File:Inside Igreja da Misericórdia de Viseu.jpg|Altar of Igreja da Misericórdia.

File:Viseu-Vista.jpg|View of Viseu

File:Forum de Viseu.jpg|Viseu's Forum

File:Viseu - Palácio do Gelo - Etages intérieurs.JPG|Palácio do Gelo, Viseu

File:Viseu - Banco de Portugal (2).jpg|Bank of Portugal

File:Visecentro.JPG|Town centre of Viseu

Notable citizens

File:Batalha-Mosteiro de Santa Maria da Vitoria-346-Eduard von Aragon-2011-gje.jpg

= Sport =

File:Carlos Lopes2.jpg

References

{{Reflist|30em}}