My wife and I were here on a Gate1 tour, and visiting this Monastery was part of the guided tour.
It was the first building in Portugal to adopt the Gothic style and is the largest church in the country. It has a lot of unadorned 12th-century arches. Inside are the highly decorated tombs of King Pedro I and his lover Inês de Castro-it's a tragic love story that has been the source of 17 operas. In 1340, the young Inês de Castro met Pedro when she arrived at court in his wife's entourage. Inês and Pedro fell madly in love, and neither the disapproval of the king nor the machinations of Pedro's wife could keep the two of them apart. In an act of desperation, King Afonso IV, Pedro's father, finally had Inês murdered before her children's eyes. Pedro, heartbroken and enraged, rose up in open rebellion against his father, but ultimately failed in his quest for revenge and justice. Two years after Inês' death, Afonso died and Pedro became king. Legend holds that Pedro ordered Inês' body to be disinterred, her corpse dressed in finery and propped up in the throne room. Pedro then ordered his vassals to pledge their obedience and loyalty to this corpse he called his wife and queen, and further demanded that they kiss her dead hand. read more