Skip to main content
Main navigation
Home
Create
Organization
Project
Person
Cultural Heritage Object
Digital reconstruction
Navigate
Organizations
Projects
Persons
Cultural Heritage Objects
Digital reconstructions
User account menu
Log in
Breadcrumb
Home
View Triples for http://repository.covher.eu/content/6797e016831fa
Primary tabs
View
Triples
Toggle tabs as a menu
In-coming triples
Subject
Predicate
Object
Graph
Adapter
Out-going triples
Subject
Predicate
Object
Graph
Adapter
http://repository.covher.eu/content/6797e016831fa
http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type
https://www.ontscidoc3d.hs-mainz.de/ontology/osd_31a_Annotation
http://repository.covher.eu/content/
Covher Repository Backend
http://repository.covher.eu/content/6797e016831fa
http://www.cidoc-crm.org/cidoc-crm/P190_has_symbolic_content
"D. Lopo de Almeida Hospital (1601-1803) was the first general hospital in old Porto’s city centre during XVI until the transition for XIX century. Built in memory of the late XVI donor, D. Lopo de Almeida, the chaplain Filipe II of Spain and rich Portuguese nobleman, Santa Casa da Misericórdia do Porto (the largest religious care organisation, responsible for the healthcare of the city) decided to create a new hospital, accordingly to new health criteria. In the corner of Flores with Caldeireiros Street, the general hospital was built during a prolonged construction period until the beginning of the XVIII century by unknown authors, whose initial plans remain unknown. The original sources are descriptive texts – Tombos – regarding its location and dimension allowing the development of form studies by some investigators (Pina, Luís de 1957; Tasso de Sousa, N.; et all. 2024). Its composition has been debated between the presence of the cruciform structure, described by Manuel Pereira de Novais (1689), which had been denied by many of the historians Artur de Magalhães Basto (1964) and Ferrão Afonso (2004). Upon the study of Gonçalves e Souza survey (1857 ca.) cross the combined LiDAR and photogrammetric survey, realized by the author in 2022, we’ve been able to prove the remaining presence of the cruciform structure in 1857."@en
http://repository.covher.eu/content/
Covher Repository Backend