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'Discoveries' waxworks opens in Lagos

boaesperancacadizDespite Portugal’s insistence that it discovered much of the unknown world during the period called The Discoveries, it has puzzled many visitors to the Algarve that there is no appropriate museum, display or information centre to let the public know of these achievements.

At last an entrepreneur has taken it upon himself to fill the gap left by successive councils and ministries by setting up a series of waxwork displays to explain the important role that Portugal’s explorers, mercenaries and traders played in opening and maintaining trade links with Africa, India and the Far East.

The Museum of the Discoveries waxwork display portrays the historic voyages made by Portuguese navigators and now is open in the marina area of Lagos.

The display space depicts 16 scenes using 22 life-sized wax figures on the themes of the battle of Aljubarrota, the marriage of D. João I to Philippa of Lancaster, the conquests of North Africa, the hold of a ship, the cape of Good Hope and poet Luís Vaz de Camões, among others.

Nestor Guerrero is the man behind the project who saw that there was nowhere in the Algarve that told the of the Portuguese navigators, not even in Lagos which is a city strongly linked to the Discoveries. "

"After noting the huge cultural gap, I decided to move forward with this project through partnerships with various companies," said Guerrero, adding that "the total investment was around €50,000."

"Here is a demonstration that a little money can go a long way. We have managed to create a very interesting project that we think will attract many people to Lagos," said the local businessman.

The museum is not just for tourists, hopes Guerreiro, but also for school children so that in a fun and interactive way they can learn part of their history."

The 22 wax figures were purchased in the UK and then adapted and remodelled, "In the future, more figures will arrive to recreate further historical episodes so the display can expand and provide more cultural information to the thousands of tourists who choose Lagos and the Algarve for a holiday," said Guerreiro.

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Comments  

+1 #3 Dilys 2014-10-27 16:50
It is the highly limited selectiveness that stands out in any Portuguese history book. Chosing whatever appeals to them. Leaving out or distorting anything that doesn't.

So .. Roger's facts cannot be argued against !

Who except a Portuguese said anything about 1421? And who except a Portuguese limits Muslim expansion to just eastwards and southwards !!! How do you think the muslims got into Portugal and southern Europe ?

As Roger states from his reference - The Arabs were exploring and writing about their exploration centuries before Portugal !

And Marco Polo The Travels of Marco Polo c. 1300 .... introduced Europeans to Central Asia and China.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marco_Polo

Interestingly the Chinese actually teach their history students about Marco Polo - the first true European the Chinese met ! They make no mention of any Portuguese 'discoverers' coming centuries later !
+4 #2 Peter Booker 2014-10-27 08:36
From the many ideas put forward by Roger, I deduce that he thinks that Portuguese discoverers achieved little and should therefore not be commemorated.

Whatever the achievements of the Chinese explorers of 1421 and of Muslim expansion eastwards and southwards in the Indian Ocean, it cannot be denied that Portuguese opened the sea route via the Cape of Good Hope. For good or ill, it was Portuguese who began the irruption into the Indian Ocean by European nations.

This advance is one in which Portuguese should take pride, and congratulations to Nestor Guerreiro for demonstrating to tourists to the Algarve that there is more to Portugal than just the beach, and for giving historical value to Lagos.
0 #1 Roger. 2014-10-26 21:24
The Discoveries are yet more Portuguese historical twaddle that gets bundled into their school history books and just emphasises their ignorance. Somehow helping build this nonsensical notion that the Portuguese are somehow 'special'.

A country that should NOT have been given a 'British Ultimatum' to.

The golden period of Muslim geography, travels and explorations runs from the 9th to the 14th century A.D., in which a vast amount of travel and geographical literature was produced in the world of Islam, which ultimately paved the way for later explorations and discoveries by the Christian West.

http://www.aliomarermes.co.uk/2001/great-explorers-islam/

These travels included using a form of Chinese compass many centuries before the Portuguese.

So the Muslim world has its own pre Discovery great explorers like Ibn Battuta and Italy offers us MarcoPolo - again pre-dating the Portuguese.

And the UK has the Mappa Mundi in Hereford Cathedral ....the greatest extant thirteenth-century pictorial manuscript.'

http://www.herefordcathedral.org/visit-us/mappa-mundi-1

Game set and match. Clean bowled ...

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