Houston Chronicle Sunday

Portugal’s imperial retreats offer visitors fantastica­l daytime side trips.

- Rick Steves (ricksteves. com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email: rick@ricksteves.com.

It’s a funny thing about aristocrac­ies. They always seem to get the best vacation properties: the French kings and queens had Versailles near Paris, the Habsburgs retreated to Vienna’s Schönbrunn Palace, and the British monarchs still have too many castles to count.

Less well known are Portugal’s imperial retreats. But within an hour or so from Lisbon are some fun side trips into the country’s royal and Moorish past. You’ll find fantasy castles set amid exotic tropical plants, a craggy hilltop dusted with Moorish ruins and a queen’s tiny medieval walled town.

Just 15 miles northwest of Lisbon, the plush and lush town of Sintra is a perfect day-trip destinatio­n (frequent trains get you there in 40 minutes). For centuries, Portugal’s aristocrac­y considered Sintra the perfect summer escape because of its proximity to Lisbon — and its higher and cooler elevation.

Those with money and a desire to be close to royalty soon followed, building a thicket of grand residences amid luxuriant hillside gardens. Lord Byron called this bundle of royal fancies and aristocrat­ic dreams a “glorious Eden.”

Portugal’s National Palace sits right in central Sintra. This oldest surviving royal palace in Portugal housed kings and queens for 500 years, and today’s republican government still uses it for official receptions. It’s a lavish showpiece, with rooms wallpapere­d with the colorful glazed tiles called azulejos. The ceilings alone are gorgeous and richly detailed with cavorting mermaids, rambunctio­us magpies (a royal rebuke against gossips) and proud coats-of-arms.

Sintra’s other main sights — a once-upon-atime Moorish castle and the idiosyncra­tic Pena Palace — are a long, uphill walk from the center. It’s easiest to ride up on the shuttle bus that loops them together, and then stroll down through the palace’s luxurious garden.

Visitors approach the thousand-year-old ruins of the Moorish castle along a forest path that’s alive with the winds of the past. Once you break out of the woodland to climb the top of the surviving ramparts, you’ll see why the Moors picked this spot for defensive purposes. Today its panoramic Atlantic views and cooling breezes are made to order for a picnic.

On a neighborin­g hilltop sits the Versailles of Portugal — the magical Pena Palace, more colorful than a box of Legos. In the mid-19th century, the flamboyant Prince Ferdinand built this fantasy, mixing architec- tural styles into a crazy Neo-fortified casserole of Gothic towers, Renaissanc­e domes, Moorish minarets and Disney playfulnes­s. The palace’s elegantly cluttered rooms are just as they were in 1910, when the king fled during a popular revolt.

Just beyond Sintra, the rugged and picturesqu­e Cabo da Roca is a pleasant side trip to your side trip. It’s perched high on a headland at the westernmos­t tip of Portugal — and Europe. There’s little more here than a little shop, a café and an endless ocean vista. Here’s your the chance to be the last person in Europe to see the sunset. A tiny tourist office sells a “proof of being here” certificat­e (take a picture instead).

If you turn north from Lisbon, you can’t miss postcard-perfect Óbidos (buses leave Lisbon hourly for the 1¼-hour ride). This little jewel of a town sits atop a hill, its 14th-century wall corralling a bouquet of narrow lanes and flower-bedecked whitewashe­d houses. It’s said that a young Portuguese queen became so enamored with the village that her new husband, King Dinis, gave it to her as a wedding gift.

Now protected by the government from developmen­t, Óbidos is perfect for photograph­ers — and romantics. Stepping through the main gate, you’ll feel a bit like Dorothy entering a medieval Oz. Though there’s a castle here (it’s now a pricey hotel), the main sight is the town itself. Wander the geranium-scented streets, climb the town walls, and sample some ginjinha (cherry liqueur) in a chocolate cup (it’s sold in several shops along the main street). Then leave the ticky-tacky tourist shops behind to explore the cobbled side streets.

A 10-minute drive or taxi ride from Óbidos is Caldas da Rainha, famous for its therapeuti­c springs. Queen Leonor reputedly popularize­d this spot in the mid-15th century, when she stopped in for a soak in a smelly sulfurous pool. For centuries, the “Queen’s Baths” attracted royalty looking for rheumatism cures and anyone else wanting to make the scene. A venerable hospital now sits on the source of those curative waters. The charming old center is more workaday than Óbidos, but Caldas da Rainha provides a good glimpse of everyday Portugal, with the charm punched up just a notch.

Portugal’s kings and queens operated less opulently than other European royalty (they were perhaps too busy driving away the Moors and the Spanish). But these bonus sights closely associated with them offer a pleasant variety of scene and pace.

 ?? Rich Earl ?? Everything about Pena Palace in Portugal is fantastica­l, starting with its ersatz moat and drawbridge.
Rich Earl Everything about Pena Palace in Portugal is fantastica­l, starting with its ersatz moat and drawbridge.
 ?? Dominic Arizona Bonuccelli ?? Pretty little Óbidos is a fun ramble for all ages.
Dominic Arizona Bonuccelli Pretty little Óbidos is a fun ramble for all ages.
 ??  ?? Rick Steves
Rick Steves

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