Henrique Rosa
Suisse Switzerland
Music Joe Satriani
João, Campeão Nacional de Box. Campeão Português
Jean, Champion National de Box. Champion Portugais de Box.
Les photographies et pages de journaux sont dans le album de souvenirs de Jean.
60 Spring 5
Sónia
Toyota
Saint George Castle
"Hallowed Be Thy Name"
I'm waiting in my cold cell, when the bell begins to chime Reflecting on my past life and it doesn't have much time 'Cause at 5 o'clock they take me to the Gallows Pole The sands of time for me are running low Running low When the priest comes to read me the last rites I take a look through the bars at the last sights Of a world that has gone very wrong for me Can it be that there's some sort of an error Hard to stop the surmounting terror Is it really the end, not some crazy dream? Somebody please tell me that I'm dreaming It's not easy to stop from screaming But words escape me when I try to speak Tears flow but why am I crying? After all I am not afraid of dying Don't I believe that there never is an end? As the guards march me out to the courtyard
The legend
According to legend, he was a knight who fought with heroism during the siege of Lisbon, alongside christian forces under the command of King Afonso Henriques (1112-1185).
Realizing the opening of a door in the Moorish Castle, he attacked her individually, sacrificing life by crossing her own body in the span of it, as a way to prevent her closing by the defenders.
This heroic gesture allowed to gain the necessary time on the arrival of his companions, who thus managed to penetrate the castle. In his honor, this access became known as Martim Moniz's Gate. With this gesture he became a glorious Christian martyr
EN
Legend has it that D. Afonso Henriques had laid siege to the city of Lisbon, helped by the many crusaders who passed there on their way to the Holy Land. In one of the attempted robberies of one of the city's gates, Martim Moniz confronted the Moors and managed to keep the door open. His body was crossed between the two stops and allowed christians to enter the city. Badly wounded, Martim Moniz entered the city with his companions and made some victims among the enemies, before falling dead. D. Afonso Henriques wanted to honor his bravery and sacrifice, so he ordered that that entrance should be named Martim Moniz. The people say that it was D. Afonso Henriques himself who ordered the hero's bust to be put in a stone niche, where it is still today, next to Martim Moniz Square. Facebook
FR
La légende raconte que D. Afonso Henriques avait assiégé la ville de Lisbonne, aidé par les nombreux croisés qui y passèrent en route vers la Terre Sainte. Dans l’une des tentatives de vol d’une des portes de la ville, Martim Moniz a affronté les Maures et a réussi à garder la porte ouverte. Son corps a été croisé entre les deux arrêts et a permis aux chrétiens d’entrer dans la ville. Grièvement blessé, Martim Moniz entra dans la ville avec ses compagnons et fait quelques victimes parmi les ennemis, avant de tomber mort. D. Afonso Henriques a voulu honorer sa bravoure et son sacrifice, alors il a ordonné que cette entrée soit nommée Martim Moniz. Les gens disent que c’est D. Afonso Henriques lui-même qui a ordonné que le buste du héros soit mis dans une niche en pierre, où il est encore aujourd’hui, à côté de la place Martim Moniz. Facebook
PT
A lenda conta que D. Afonso Henriques tinha posto cerco à cidade de Lisboa, ajudado pelos muitos cruzados que por ali passaram a caminho da Terra Santa. Numa das tentativas de assalto a uma das portas da cidade, Martim Moniz enfrentou os mouros e conseguiu manter a porta aberta. O seu corpo ficou atravessado entre os dois batentes e permitiu que os cristãos entrassem na cidade. Gravemente ferido, Martim Moniz entrou na cidade com os seus companheiros e fez ainda algumas vítimas entre os inimigos, antes de cair morto. D. Afonso Henriques quis honrar a sua valentia e sacrifício, pelo que ordenou que aquela entrada passasse a ter o nome de Martim Moniz. O povo diz que foi o próprio D. Afonso Henriques quem mandou colocar o busto do herói num nicho de pedra, onde ainda hoje se encontra, junto à Praça de Martim Moniz.
Somebody cries from a cell "God be with you" If there's a God then why has he let me go? As I walk all my life drifts before me And though the end is near I'm not sorry Catch my soul 'cause it's willing to fly away Mark my words believe my soul lives on Don't worry now that I have gone I've gone beyond to see the truth When you know that your time is close at hand Maybe then you'll begin to understand Life down here is just a strange illusion Yeah, yeah, yeah Hallowed be Thy name Yeah, yeah, yeah Hallowed be Thy name
"The Loneliness Of The Long Distance Runner"
The tough of the track With the wind And the rain that's beating down on Your back Your heart's beating loud And goes on getting louder And goes on even more 'til the Sound is ringing in your head With every step you tread And every breath you take Determination Makes you run never stop Got to win got to run 'til you drop Keep the pace hold the race Your mind is getting clearer You're over half way there But the miles they never seem to end As if you're in a dream Not getting anywhere It seems so futile [Chorus] Run on and on Run on and on The loneliness of the long distance runner I've got to keep running the course I've got to keep running and win at All costs I've got to keep going be strong Must be so determined and push myself on Run over stiles across fields Turn to look at who's on your heels Way ahead of the field The line is getting nearer but do You want the glory that goes You reach the final stretch Ideals are just a trace You feel like throwing the race It's all so futile
"Children Of The Damned"
He's walking like a small child But watch his eyes burn you away Black holes in his golden stare God knows he wants to go home Children of the Damned Children of the Damned Children of the Damned Children of the Damned He's walking like a dead man If he had lived he would crucified us all Now he's standing on his last step He thought "Oblivion? Well, it beckons us all" Children of the Damned Children of the Damned Children of the Damned Children of the Damned Now it's burning his hands, he's turning to laugh Smiles as the flame sears his flesh Melting his face, screaming in pain Peeling the skin from his eyes Watch him die according to plan He's dust on ground, what did we learn? Ooooooooo-o-o-o-o-ooh Ooooooooo-o-o-o-o-ooh You're children of the Damned Your back's against the wall You turn into the light You're burning in the night You're children of the Damned Like candles watch them burn Burning in the light You'll burn again tonight Children of the Damned
The Blue Globe
Henrique Aurora
The Infante Dom Henrique, Duke of Viseu (4 March 1394 – 13 November 1460) was a prince Portuguese and the most important figure of the early Age of Discoveries, also known in history as Infante de Sagres or Navigator.
The Infante Dom Henrique, Duke of Viseu (4 March 1394 – 13 November 1460) was a prince Portuguese and the most important figure of the early Age of Discoveries, also known in history as Infante de Sagres or Navigator. Infante D. Henrique was born in Porto, on an Ash Wednesday, a day that was considered unconducive to the birth of a child. He was the fifth son of King John I, founder of the Dynasty of Avis, and Dona Filipa of Lencastre.
The infant was baptized a few days after his birth, and his godfather was the Bishop of Viseu. His parents named him Henry possibly in honor of his maternal grandfather, Duke Henry of Lencastre.
Little is known about the infant's life until he was fourteen. The infant and his brothers (the so-called Inclita generation) had as a knight of the Order of Avis.
In 1414, he convinced his father to mount the campaign to conquer Ceuta, on the North African coast near the Strait of Gibraltar. The city was conquered in August 1415, ensuring the Kingdom of Portugal control of maritime trade routes between the Atlantic and levante.
In 1415, he was knighted and received the titles of Duke of Viseu and Lord of Covilhã.
On 18 February 1416, he was in charge of the Government of Ceuta. It was up to him to organize in the kingdom the maintenance of the Moroccan Square.
In 1418, he returned to Ceuta in the company of King John, his younger brother. The Infants commanded a relief expedition to the city, which suffered that year the first great siege, imposed jointly by the forces of the kings of Fez and Granada. The siege was overand Henry immediately tried to attack Gibraltar, but bad weather prevented him from disembarking: the Infante's temerity and anti-Muslim fervour manifested itself once again. On his return to Ceuta he received orders from King John I not to pursue such an undertaking, so he returned to the kingdom in the first months of 1419. He set up an armada of Corsicans at this time, which was acting in the area of the Strait of Gibraltar from Ceuta. He had one more source of income and many of his men thus got used to the sea. Some of them would later be diverted to other trips to new destinations.
In 1419–1420 some of its squires, João Gonçalves Zarco and Tristão Vaz Teixeira, then landed on the islands of the Madeiran archipelago, which had been visited by Portuguese navigators since the previous century. The islands proved to be of great importance producing large quantities of cereals, minimizing the scarcity that afflicted Portugal. The archipelago was given to D. Henrique by King D. Duarte, successor of D. João I, in 1433.
On 25 May 1420, D. Henrique was appointed leader of the Order of Christ, who succeeded the Order of the Templars, a position he would hold until the end of his life. With regard to his interest in the exploration of the Atlantic Ocean, the position in the Order was also important throughout the 1440s. This is due to the fact that the Order controls vast resources, which helped finance the exploitation, the prince's true passion.
The Cross of the Order of Christ, a symbol that adorned, among others, the Portuguese women during the discoveries.
In 1427, his navigators discovered the first islands of the Azores (possibly Gonçalo Velho). Also these uninhabited islands were then colonized by the Portuguese,
Until the time of Infante D. Henrique, Cape Bojador was for Europe the southernmost known point on the coast of Africa. Gil Eanes, who commanded one of the expeditions, was the first to pass it in 1434, eliminating the fears then prevailing about the unknown that beyond the Cape would be.
At the death of D. João I, his eldest son (and brother of D. Henrique), D. Duarte ascended the throne, and gave this one fifth of all commercial proceeds from the discovered zones as well as the right to explore beyond Cape Bojador.
D. Duarte's reign lasted only five years, after which D. Henrique supported his brother D. Pedro in the regency, during the underage of his nephew D. Afonso V, receiving in return the confirmation of his privilege. He also proceeded, during the regency, to the colonization of the Azores.
With a new vessel, the caravel, the expeditions suffered a great boost. Cabo Branco was reached in 1441 by Nuno Tristão and Antão Gonçalves. The Bay of Arguim in 1443, with consequent construction of a fort in 1448.
Dinis Dias arrives at the Senegal River and doubles Cape Verde in 1444. Guinea is visited. Thus, the southern boundaries of the great Sahara desert are overtaken. From then on, D. Henrique fulfills one of his objectives: to divert the trade routes of the Saharan And to access the riches in Southern Africa. In 1452 the arrival of gold was sufficient ly enough for the first golden crusaders to be minted.
Between 1444 and 1446, about forty vessels left Lagos. In the 1450s the Archipelago of Cape Verde was discovered. It dates from that time the commission of an old-world world map to Fra Mauro, a Venetian monk.
In 1460 the coast was already explored until what is now Sierra Leone.
However, D. Henrique was also busy with internal affairs of the Kingdom. It is thought to have sponsored the creation, at the University of Coimbra, of a chair of astronomy.
He was also one of the main organizers of the conquest of Tangier in 1437, which proved to be a great failure, since his younger brother, D. Fernando (the Infante Santo) was captured and imprisoned there for 11 years, until his death. His military reputation suffered a setback and his last years of life were devoted to politics and exploitation.
Henry The Navigator never sailed on the Seventh Seas. Always stay at home with
HR- Sagres II Ship
N.R.P._Sagres,_navio-escola._Forças_Armadas_Marinha_Portuguesa
N.R.P Sagres II School ship Portuguese Marine Army Forces
"Rime Of The Ancient Mariner" (Based on poem "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge)
Hear the rime of the Ancient Mariner See his eye as he stops one of three Mesmerises one of the wedding guests Stay here and listen to the nightmares of the Sea And the music plays on, as the bride passes by Caught by his spell and the Mariner tells his tale Driven south to the land of the snow and ice To a place where nobody's been Through the snow fog flies on the albatross Hailed in God's name, hoping good luck it brings And the ship sails on, back to the North Through the fog and ice and the albatross follows on The mariner kills the bird of good omen His shipmates cry against what he's done But when the fog clears, they justify him And make themselves a part of the crime Sailing on and on and North across the sea Sailing on and on and North 'til all is calm The albatross begins with its vengeance A terrible curse a thirst has begun His shipmates blame bad luck on the Mariner About his neck, the dead bird is hung And the curse goes on and on and on at sea And the thirst goes on and on for them and me "Day after day, day after day, we stuck nor breath nor motion As idle as a painted ship upon a painted ocean Water, water everywhere and all the boards did shrink Water, water everywhere nor any drop to drink" There, calls the mariner there comes a ship over the line But how can she sail with no wind in her sails and no tide See onward she comes Onwards she nears, out of the sun See she has no crew She has no life, wait but there's two Death and she Life in Death, they throw their dice for the crew She wins the Mariner and he belongs to her now Then crew one by one They drop down dead, two hundred men She she, Life in Death She lets him live, her chosen one "One after one by the star dogged moon, Too quick for groan or sigh Each turned his face with a ghastly pang And cursed me with his eye. Four times fifty living men (And I heard nor sigh nor groan), With heavy thump, a lifeless lump, They dropped down one by one." The curse it lives on in their eyes The Mariner he wished he'd die Along with the sea creatures But they lived on, so did he And by the light of the moon He prays for their beauty not doom With heart he blesses them God's creatures all of them too Then the spell starts to break The albatross falls from his neck Sinks down like lead into the Sea Then down in falls comes the rain Hear the groans of the long dead seamen See them stir and they start to rise Bodies lifted by good spirits None of them speak and they're lifeless in their eyes And revenge is still sought, penance starts again Cast into a trance and the nightmare carries on Now the curse is finally lifted And the Mariner sights his home Spirits go from the long dead bodies Form their own light and the Mariner's left alone And then a boat came sailing towards him It was a joy he could not believe The Pilot's boat, his son and the hermit Penance of life will fall onto him And the ship it sinks like lead into the sea And the hermit shrives the mariner of his sins The Mariner's bound to tell of his story To tell his tale wherever he goes To teach God's word by his own example That we must love all things that God made And the wedding guest's a sad and wiser man And the tale goes on and on and on and on
His remains are buried in the Monastery of Batalha.
Soldado Desconhecido Unknow Soldier
CAMARA MUNICIPAL DE LISBOA
VENDAA DE INFORMAÇÕES
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