Places

Palmela

Palmela, a town in the Setúbal district within the Arrábida mountain range, featuring a castle and convent of the Order of Santiago, Moscatel wines, and a…

Palmela
GualdimG, CC BY-SA 4.0 — Wikimedia Commons

Perched on a spur of the Arrábida mountain range at an altitude of about 240 meters, Palmela dominates the landscape of the Setúbal Peninsula with the silhouette of its castle, visible for dozens of kilometers. The town grew under the protection of the fortress, at a strategic crossroads between Lisbon, the Sado estuary, and the Atlantic coast, and retains a historic center of narrow streets and whitewashed houses that still reflect its long military and religious vocation.

From the Reconquista to the Headquarters of the Order of Santiago

The dominant position of Palmela explains the centuries-long struggle for the town during the Reconquista. Conquered by Afonso Henriques in 1147, lost and retaken more than once, it received its charter in 1185 and soon passed into the hands of the Order of Santiago, which established its headquarters here in Portuguese territory. The knights of Santiago made the fortress the center of a vast territorial administration that extended across much of the South, and it was under King João I, in the early 15th century, that the walls were expanded and the convent that still crowns the site was built.

Palmela’s fate is intertwined with that of the Order of Santiago: while the Order ruled from these walls, the town was the capital of a territory; with the dissolution of the military orders in 1834, the castle remained as a stone memory of that power.

The fortified complex, now classified as a National Monument, brings together testimonies from various eras: the Castle of Palmela itself, with its tower and cisterns, the Romanesque church of Santa Maria—ruined by an earthquake in the 18th century—and the Gothic church of Santiago, from the 15th century. The former convent of the Order was adapted into an inn, a practice that has allowed these buildings to be preserved and used without distorting their historical significance.

A Territory Between the Mountains and the Sea

The municipality of Palmela stretches from the wooded mountains to the vineyard plains and inland sands. A few kilometers away, the southern slope of Arrábida is home to the Convent of Arrábida, a 16th-century Franciscan retreat of extraordinary landscape, while nearby Setúbal concentrates the port, the canning industry, and monuments such as the Church of Jesus. To the west, the rugged coast of Sesimbra completes a heritage and natural arc that makes this region one of the most cohesive ensembles south of the Tagus.

Palmela’s identity is also rural and gastronomic. The sands and clays of the Setúbal Peninsula produce the famous Moscatel de Setúbal and the red and white wines of the Palmela denomination, alongside Azeitão cheese, with its buttery texture, and the riscadinha apple, a protected local variety. This agricultural vocation coexists with a scattered population in villages and the town of Pinhal Novo, which emerged around the railway in the 19th century and is now the largest settlement in the municipality.

Older Memories

Human occupation of these hills long predates the medieval town. Nearby, fortified settlements from prehistory and the Iron Age have been identified, such as the Castro of Chibanes, and it is from this region that the so-called Palmela Vase comes, a vessel associated with the transition to copper metallurgy that gave its name to a type of Chalcolithic arrowhead recognized throughout Western Europe. Roman, Islamic, and Christian layers make Palmela a palimpsest where every wall and every church records a layer of history—a reason why its bid to enhance the fortified complex continues to attract archaeological research and visitors.

Frequently asked questions

Where is Palmela located?
Palmela is a town and municipal seat in the Setúbal district, on the eastern slopes of the Arrábida mountain range, south of Lisbon, and part of the Lisbon Metropolitan Area.
What is Palmela's connection to the Order of Santiago?
Donated to the Order of Santiago in the last quarter of the 12th century, Palmela Castle became the Order's headquarters in Portugal, where it remained until the dissolution of the military orders in 1834.
What wines are produced in Palmela?
The region is renowned for Moscatel de Setúbal and the wines of the Palmela denomination, produced in the sands and clays of the Setúbal Peninsula.

Sources

  1. Palmela — Wikipédia
  2. Castelo de Palmela — Wikipédia
  3. História do concelho — Câmara Municipal de Palmela