Roman villa of Frielas
Roman Ruins of Frielas (Ruínas romanas de Frielas) | |
Archeological site of Frielas | |
Ruins (Ruinas) | |
Detail of the villa, showing a Roman column | |
Official name: Estação Arqueológica de Frielas | |
Named for: Frielas | |
Country | Portugal |
---|---|
Region | Greater Lisbon |
Subregion | Lisbon |
District | Lisbon |
Municipality | Loures |
Location | Santo António dos Cavaleiros e Frielas |
Architects | unknown |
Style | Roman |
Material | Granite |
Origin | 3rd century |
Owner | Portuguese Republic |
For public | Private |
Easiest access | Frielas |
Management | Instituto Gestão do Patrimonio Arquitectónico e Arqueológico |
Status | Site of Public Interest |
Listing | Dispatch 740-BD/2012, Diário da República, Série II, 248/24 December 2012 |
Wikimedia Commons: Sítio Arqueológico de Frielas | |
The Roman ruins of Frielas is a Portuguese archaeological site in the civil parish of Santo António dos Cavaleiros e Frielas, in the municipality of Loures.
History
Its founding resulted from the fertile lands and agricultural harvests in the area, influenced by the confluence of three watercourses that fed the Trancão River in the lowlands of Loures.[1] The settlement was founded sometime between the 3rd and 4th century, and remained occupied until the 7th century.[2][3][1]
Vestiges from the Middle Ages suggest that the site continued to have an important place in the agrarian community, even as it started to decline.[1] It has been interpreted that the segmentation of the property could have led to the founding of Frielas in the late Moorish occupation (sometime in the 12th century).[1] It is clear that the Roman buildings continued to be occupied in the Medieval era (from the appearance of clay pots and the reorientation of spaces within the compounds, including the construction of silos).[2][1][4] From the Moorish period a burial stone was discovered (in the 19th century) a short distance from the archaeological excavation. The Islamic community remained in this area as late as the Reconquista and vestiges until 1147, from this period that are groups of ceramics dating to the 9th and 10th century.[1]
Following the Reconquista, Frielas was transformed into the centre of the region, and the former Roman villa was destroyed by Castilian troops in 1383. This included an important tower, annex the main building, that guarded the road to Lisbon.[1][5] The residential building was never rebuilt, even after the Count of Ribeira Grande made an attempt in the 17th century.[1] The ruins scarred the property, and only the chapel of Santa Catarina remained, reflecting the archaeological importance.[1]
The first archaeological excavations began in 1997 and on 27 October the municipal council of Loures proposed the classification of the site.[2] Many of the artefacts located on site were collected and stored in the Municipal Museum of Loures.[2]
Yet, nothing ever developed from this proposal and a secondary petition was made on 21 March 2002.[2] On 12 October 2004 the process was opened by the Vice-President of the IPPAR Instituto Português do Património Arquitectónico), the national architectural heritage institute.[2] It was followed on 26 January 2012 by a proposal to classify the structures by the DRCLVTejo as a Sítio de Interesse Público (Site of Public Interest) and included in its respective zone of special protection. The proposal was approved on 29 February of the Cultural National Council.[2]
Architecture
Implanted alongside the ravine of Póvoa, the settlement was formed away from its banks, to escape flooding from the River Trancão, near Sacavém.[1][6] The Roman village was one of the more important archaeological sites in the municipality of Loures; it reflects the Roman organization and planning that persisted during the period of Imperial Rome until the early Middle Ages.[1]
The site has been explored systematically since 1997.[1] The terra sigillata soils were very settled in this region[7] and the excavated area did not permit a rigorous investigation. Artefacts discovered on the site include fragments of Roman mosaics, discovered in 1997 near the Chapel of Santa Catarina; unearthed and examined, the items dated to the 3rd century, suggesting a longer period of settlement.[1][8] It is unclear what purpose the place of its discovery was used; the mosaic was part of the principal pavement of one of the principal halls/rooms in the residential building.[1] More recent campaigns identified peristyles of various levels of destruction, and a triclinium, as well as other unidentified structures.[1] There are various walls of differing heights and orientations, making interpretation difficult.[1]
See also
References
- Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 GIF/IPPAR (ed.), Sítio Arqueológico de Frielas (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Direção-Geral de Património Cultural, retrieved 17 April 2015
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Gonçalves, Joaquim; Rodrigues, Helena (2005), SIPA, ed., Estação Arqueológica de Frielas (IPA.00021410/PT031107060102) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, retrieved 17 April 2015
- ↑ "Edição 43 - Loures e Odivelas". Jornal das Autarquias. Retrieved 2011-10-28.
- ↑ Silva and Barbosa (2003), p. 111
- ↑ Silva and Barbosa (2003), p. 113
- ↑ Mantas (1999), p.20
- ↑ Silva (1999), p.43
- ↑ Maria Teresa Caetano (1999), pp.107-108
- Sources
- Câmara Munincipal, ed. (2000), Carta Arqueológica do Munícipio de Loures (in Portuguese), Loures, Portugal: Câmara Municipal de Loures
- Silva, Ana Raquel (1999), "A terra sigillata", Da vida e da morte: os Romanos em Loures (in Portuguese), Loures, Portugal: Catálogo de exposição, pp. 49–55
- Silva, Ana Raquel; Barbosa, Pedro (2003), "Cerâmica de tradição muçulmana da Uilla romana de Frielas (Loures)", Arqueologia Medieval (in Portuguese) (8), Porto, Portugal, pp. 109–118
- Caetano, Maria Teresa (1999), "Mosaico romano de Frielas (concelho de Loures)", Da vida e da morte. Os romanos em Loures (in Portuguese), Loures, Portugal: Catálogo de Exposição, pp. 107–112