'Cape St. Vincent' (, ), next to the
Sagres Point, on the so-called ''
Costa Vicentina'' (Vincentine Coast), is a cape in the
municipality of
Sagres, in the
Algarve, southern
Portugal.

In the background Cape St. Vincent with lighthouse

North shore of Cape St. Vincent as seen from the lighthouse.
Description
This cape is the southwesternmost point in Europe. It forms the southwestern end of the
E9 European Coastal Path, which runs for
5000 km (3125 miles) to
Narva-Jõesuu in
Estonia.
Approximately six kilometers from the village of Sagres, the cape is a landmark for a ship traveling to or from the
Mediterranean. The cliffs rise nearly vertically from the Atlantic to a height of 75 meters.
The cape is a site of exuberant marine life and a high concentration of birds nesting on the cliffs, such as the rare
Bonelli's eagle,
peregrine falcons,
kites,
rock thrushes,
rock pigeons,
storks and
herons.
History
Cape St. Vincent was already sacred ground in
Neolithic times, as standing
menhirs in the neighborhood attest. The
ancient Greeks called it
Ophiussa (Land of
Serpents), inhabited by the
Oestriminis and dedicated here a temple to
Heracles. The
Romans called it ''Promontorium Sacrum'' (or Holy Promontory). They considered it a magical place where the sunset was much larger than anywhere else. They believed the sun sank here hissing into the ocean, marking the edge of their world.
According to legend, the name of this cape is linked to the story of a fourth-century martyred Spanish priest
St. Vincent whose body was brought ashore here. A shrine was erected over his grave; according to the Arab
geographer Al-Idrisi, it was always guarded by
ravens. When the
Moors invaded Portugal, King
Afonso Henriques (
1139-
1185) had the body of the saint exhumed in
1173 and brought it by ship to
Lisbon, still accompanied by the ravens.
The area around the cape was plundered several times by pirates from France and Holland and, in
1587, by Sir
Francis Drake. All existing buildings, including the ''Vila do Infante'' of
Henry the Navigator fell into ruins because of the
Lisbon earthquake of 1755. The Franciscan monks stayed on until
1834, when all monasteries were disbanded in Portugal.
Several naval battles were fought in the vicinity of this cape:
★ The French Admiral
Anne Hilarion de Tourville defeated a small Anglo-Dutch naval fleet commanded by Sir
George Rooke escorting a convoy of between 400 and 500 English and Dutch merchant ships on 27 June
1693. The "Smyrna fleet" disaster, as it came to be known, saw ninety-four of the richly-laden merchant ships either captured or sunk; this event led to the dismissal of two English admirals whose convoy escort had turned back off
Ushant,
France.
★ In
1780, this cape was the site of the
Battle of Cape St. Vincent (between
Britain and
Spain).
★ Admiral
Jervis with Admiral
Nelson defeated the Spanish fleet in
1797 at a second
Battle of Cape St. Vincent.
Lighthouse
The present lighthouse was built over the ruins of a sixteenth-century
Franciscan convent in
1846. The statues of
St. Vincent and St.
Francis Xavier had been moved to the nearby church of
Nossa Senhora da Graça on Point Sagres. This lighthouse, guarding one of the world's busiest shipping lanes, is the second most powerful in Europe; its two 1000-watt lamps can be seen as far as 60 kilometers away.
2007 earthquake
In February 12, 2007, an
earthquake of magnitude 5.8 on the
Richter scale struck about 160 kilometers east of the cape.
[1]
Notes
1. ''Earthquake off coast of the Algarve''
References
★ The Rough Guide to Portugal - 11th ed., March 2005; ISBN 1-84353-438-X
★ Rentes de Carvalho J. - Portugal, um guia para amigos (in Dutch translation : Portugal); de Arbeiderspers, Amsterdam; 9th ed., August 1999; ISBN 90-295-3466-4
External links
★
Sagres
★
Photo of the Fortress of Sagres