Escurquela

Escurquela

Location of Escurquela
Etymology: Escurquela, Portuguese derivative from Escurqnella

Location of the civil parish of Escurquela in Sernancelhe municipality
Coordinates: PT 41°00′23″N 7°31′15″W / 41.00639°N 7.52083°W / 41.00639; -7.52083Coordinates: PT 41°00′23″N 7°31′15″W / 41.00639°N 7.52083°W / 41.00639; -7.52083
Country Portugal
NUTS II Region Centro
NUTS III Subregion Douro
District Viseu
Settlement Prior to Reconquista
Elevation 630 m (2,070 ft)
Population (2011)
  Total 138
  Density 16.3/km2 (42/sq mi)
Time zone WET (UTC0)
  Summer (DST) WEST (UTC+1)
Postal Zone 3640-060 ESCURQUELA
Area Code & Prefix (+351) 254-XXX-XXX


Escurquela is a small town in the north of Portugal. Located in the municipality of Sernancelhe, Viseu district, with a population of 138 (2011) is small hamlet located near the river Távora downstream of the Barragem do Vilar reservoir.

Etymology

The name of Escurquela derives from the fact that it was a place of sentinel (esculca in Pre-Portuguese) to the castle of Sernancelhe. In 1767 already had the phonetic name of Escurquela, but written differently: "Escurquella".[1] Escurquella or Escurquela, as is written today, comes from the term Esculqnella. Esculqunella is a diminutive of esculca (that signifies a place of sentinel).[2]

History

On the outskirts of Escurquela, the big mount of rocks called "Penedo de São Tiago" (Rock of Saint James in English) was during long times a very important place of sentinel. During the times of the Roman conquest, the tribes of Viriatus used the place as a sentinel location, nevertheless its climax as a military outpost occurred only in the Reconquista period. Rescued from the hands of the moors in the XI century, during the time of the conquest of Paredes da Beira by the two brothers D. Thedou (Thedo or Thedon) and D.Rauzendo (or Rozendo) (descendants of the kings of León and originators of the house of the Távoras). On this epoch the place started to be a warning post for the castle of Sernancelhe and a place of shrine.

Population

Evolution of the population of Escurquela between 1767 and 2011
Census of the population of the parish of Escurquela[1][3]
1767 1864 1878 1890 1900 1911 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1981 1991 2001 2011
70 394 402 325 329 348 302 244 313 337 390 255 202 151 154 138
Population Distribution by Age Groups
Ano 0–14 years old 15–24 years old 25–64 years old > 65 years old 0–14 years old 15–24 years old 25–64 years old > 65 years old
2001 27 23 57 44 17,9% 15,2% 37,7% 29,1%
2011 14 19 62 43 10,1% 13,8% 44,9% 31,2%

Average of the country in the 2001 census: 0/14 years old-16,0%; 15/24 years old-14,3%; 25/64 years old-53,4%; 65 and above years old-16,4%

Average of the country in the 2011: 0/14 years old-14,9%; 15/24 years old-10,9%; 25/64 years old-55,2%; 65 and above years old-19,0%

Evolution of the number of dwellings.[4][5]
1757 1853 1873
60 86 110

Landmarks

Religious landmarks

In this town there is a parish church, two chapels, a cemetery and two stone cross. The parish belongs to the diocese of Lamego and till 1834 the Recto of Fonte Arcada presented the priest to the parish.[4]

Parish church of Escurquela

The parish church is located in the middle of the town from east to west. Made with only one nave, the church is dedicated to Saint Dominic having an altar mor and two side altars. It still has the wooden ceiling liner nicely painted and the high altar richly gilded, both made in 1713 by the craftsman Manuel de Afonseca, on that time inhabitant of Escurquela.[6] Unfortunately restorations done in the XXI century hide richly grave stone slabs that composed the floor of the church. Also with the changes driven by Paul VI, it was also added a middle altar in 1969.

Chapel of St. Bárbara in Escurquela

On highest parts of the village, near the cemetery, there is also a very old chapel: the Capela de Santa Bárbara (Saint Barbara Chapel).

Outside the town, on the foothill of Penedo de São Tiago exists the chapel Capela de São Tiago (Saint James Chapel) that, according to tradition, was the first mother church. In relation to this temple, tradition attributes its current dedication to Saint James because there he appeared miraculously on a horse during a battle in which the Christians were being slaughtered by their enemies. With his encouragement, the Christians regained strength and came out winners. The footprint miraculously left by the horse's hoof on the stone, can still be observed by those who rise to the top of the "Penedo de São Tiago" (Rock of Saint James in English).

Rock of Saint James and chapel near Escurquela

Other landmarks of reference

In this hamlet there is also a XVIII stone fountain, a small manor house, a primary school and a public laundry tank for washing clothes (see Washhouses).

Stone fountain
Manor house

References

  1. 1 2 DE NIZA, Paulo Dias - PORTUGAL SACRO-PROFANO (etc.) PADROEIROS DAS IGREJAS DESTE REINO, E DE TODAS AS QUE CADA HUM DELLES APRESENTA parte I [Online]. Lisboa: Oficinas de Miguel Manescal da Costa, 1767 pg. 215. Available in WWW:<URL:https://archive.org/details/portugalsacropro01carduoft>.
  2. FERREIRA, Pedro Augusto - TENTATIVA ETYMOLOGICO-TOPONYMICA de Investigação da etymologia ou proveniência dos nomes das nossas povoações, Segundo Volume [Online]. Porto: Typografia Mendonça, 1915 pg. 240. Available in WWW:<URL:https://archive.org/details/tentativaetymolo02ferr>.
  3. INE - Recenseamentos Gerais da População [online]. Lisboa: INE, 2011. Available in WWW:<URL:https://www.ine.pt/xportal/xmain?xpid=INE&xpgid=ine_publicacoes>.
  4. 1 2 MARQUES, Pedro José - DICCIONARIO GEOGRAPHICO Abbrevíado das oito províncias dos Reinos de PORTUGAL E ALGARVES com a designação dos concelhos, comarcas, etc. seguido de interessantes noticias corografica e historicas (etc.). [Online]. Porto: Typographia Commercial, 1853. Available in WWW:<URL:https://archive.org/details/diccionariogeog00marqgoog>.
  5. DE PINHO LEAL, Augusto Soares d'Azevedo Barbosa - PORTUGAL ANTIGO E MODERNO, DICCIONARIO GEOGRAPHICO, ESTATISTICO (etc.) DE TODAS AS CIDADES, VILLAS E FREGUEZIAS DE PORTUGAL Vol 3 [Online]. Lisboa: Livraria Editora de Mattos Moreira & Companhia, 1874 pg.57 Available in WWW:<URL:https://archive.org/details/gri_33125005925413>.
  6. FERREIRA-ALVES, Natália Marinho – DICIONÁRIO DE ARTISTAS E ARTÍFICES DO NORTE DE PORTUGAL [Online]. Porto: CEPESE, 2008 pg. 9. Available in WWW:<URL:https://archive.org/details/DicionrioDeArtistasEArtficesDoNorteDePortugal>.
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