Frechas

Frechas
Civil Parish (Freguesia)
A glimpse of the pelourinho in the main square of Frechas
Coat of arms
Official name: Freguesia das Frechas
Name origin: freche Portuguese for arrows
Country  Portugal
Region Norte
Subregion Alto Trás-os-Montes
District Bragança
Municipality Mirandela
Localities Cachão, Frechas, Vale da Sancha
Center Frechas
 - elevation 382 m (1,253 ft)
 - coordinates
Length 6.41 km (4 mi), Northwest-Southeast
Width 5.0 km (3 mi), Southwest-Northeast
Area 18.54 km2 (7 sq mi)
Population 1,137 (2001)
Density 61.33 / km2 (159 / sq mi)
Settlement fl. 1500
 - Parish fl. 1513
 - Municipality 10 March 1513
 - Civil Parish c. 1836
LAU Freguesia/Junta Freguesia
 - location Rua Estação, Frechas, Mirandela
President Junta Maria da Piedade Trigo (PPD-PSD)
President Assembleia Jorge Miguel Rodrigues Vaz (PPD-PSD)
Timezone WET (UTC0)
 - summer (DST) WEST (UTC+1)
ISO 3166-2 code PT-
Postal Zone 5370-135 Frechas
Area Code & Prefix (+351) XXX XXX XXX
Patron Saint São Miguel
Parish Address Rua Estação
5370-135 Frechas
Location of the civil parish of Frechas in the municipality of Mirandela
Wikimedia Commons: Frechas (Mirandela)
Statistics: Instituto Nacional de Estatística[1]
Geographic detail from CAOP (2010)[2] produced by Instituto Geográfico Português (IGP)

Frechas is a Portuguese civil parish, located in the municipality of Mirandela, in the district of Bragança. In 2001 its population was 1137 inhabitants located in an area of approximately 18.54 km² (there were just over 61 inhabitants per square kilometres) in the Transmontanan community.

Contents

History

Its early settlement is still clouded in a lack of documented references; although archaeological remains are various, the earliest established settlement was the fortified colony of Fraga do Castelo in Vale da Sancha.[3]

Before 1258, Lourenço Soares received a foral for the settlement of Frechas; it remained in the hands of him and the sons of Nuno Martim of Chacim by 1285.[4] Frechas, at one time, was the municipal seat of its own municipality (which was extinguished in 1836). King Manuel I first issued a foral on 10 March 1513 to the unincorporated territory.[3] It included provisions for a civil governor, two municipal judges and councilmen (as well as associated staff, which were subordinate to the ombudsmen of Vila Flor). Their de juro and heretical donatorio, was the Master of the Casa de Vila Flor (House of Vila Flor), who was represented in Frechas by a notary, while a judge from Torre de Moncorvo administered the King's justice.[3] Ecclesiastically, the old parochia or vicary, was under the jurisdiction of the rector of São Lourenço de Libela, under the patron saint of São Miguel.[3]

By 1527, the municipality of Frechas included 82 residents, whose lands were under the seigneurial rights of Fernão Vaz de Sampaio.[4] From the tomb of the Commander of Rio Torto, the village church was annexed to the Military Order of São Lourenço de Lillela (Rio Torto), two-thirds of the tithes belong to the military order, while the remaining third was held by Manuel de Sampaio.[4] The parish priest received a stipend of 12$600 réis annually, in addition to 2$000 réis to support repairs on his residence, in addition to 20 alqueires of wheat; to the church factory, the Commander of Rio Torto paid 3$000 réis annually, for 3.5 almudes of olive oil, two alqueires for wheat for sacramental bread dand two almudes of wine for the cruet.[4]

In 1706, during the administration of donatorio Manuel de Sampaio e Melo of the House of Vila Flor (Portuguese: Casa de Vila Flor), the town included 100 homes, and the church was represented by the Rector of Rio Frio (in Chaves), who was a Commander in the Order of Christ, from the House of the Counts of São Lourenço.[4] By 1758,the municipality pertained to the Comarca of Torre de Moncorvo, under the dontario Francisco José de Sampaio (the parish with 150 homes and 277 residents).[4]

After the 1755 Lisbon earthquake, the Vicar-General of Torre de Moncorvo established a inquiry in 1755 to examine the state of parishes under his domain.[4] Even though there was little damage from this event, the investigations illuminated the condition of the parish and church: it was under the Rector of São Lourenço de Libela, Manuel António Silveira, and military command of the Count of São Vicente (who received 300$000 réis annually); the priest received an annual salary of 16$000 réis, 5$000 for his residence, and 34 alqueires of wheat, 30 alqueires of rye and 27 almudes of wine; the remaining clergy received 10.000 réis and 30 alqueires of rye; the parish factory was supported by 8$.000 réis and oil to illuminate the sacristy; at the time there parish included 150 residents, who paid the church an alqueire each of rye.[4]

By 1796, Freches included: 224 men and 203 women (of which were identified two were barbers, three clergy, one writer, three without occupation, two businessmen, one surgeon, 26 farmers, 24 day workers, 3 seamstresses, five shoemakers, five carpenters, one blacksmith, four millers, one barqueiro arrais, 12 shepherds and 19 servants).[3] In the last decade of the 18th century, the parochial church was in ruins, necessitating the construction of a new temple, which was initiated by José Ferreira da Costa, with the remodelling of the main chapel. The population of Frechas included 85 homes and 261 residents at this time.[4]

On 28 January 1875, the community opened their first primary teaching school, although by 1852 some level of teaching had already existed in the parish.[3]

By 1950, there were 823 habitants in the parish. A decade later, the parish was home to eight olive oil manufacturers, two olive oil warehouses, a Casa do Povo, four local shops/markets, two mines (responsible for arsenic, gold and silver mining) and one schoolteacher.[3]By 1981 there were approximately 1794, resulting from an influx of peoples associated with agro-industrial complex in Cachão, and numbers of returnees from the Colonial Wars (1974-75).[3] Yet, these numbers decreased a bit: by 1991 there were 1471 residents, and then approximately 1139, by 2001.[3]

Geography

Located along the left bank of the River Tua, Frechas is 10 kilometres south-southeast of the district capital of Mirandela. The parish, apart from its seat in Frechas, includes two other settlments: Cachão (sometimes referred to as Vila Nordeste) and Vale da Sancha.

Economy

Many of these inhabitants dedicated themselves to agriculture primarily, although activities in Cachão and Frechas were laterally important. Land along the Tua River are the most fertile.[3] There is a mixture of agricultural techniques: a mixture of mechanized production and older hand-tilling of the land Carriages, hoes and tractors are common, as are older barns and greenhouses.[3] The community produces olive oil, wine, many vegetables, fruits and cereal crops (largely subsistence agriculture).[3] While dairy and beef-cattle are common, most residents tend to graze sheep or goats.[3]

Architecture

Many of the two-storey homes in the parish are constructed regional schist with exterior staircases. There are some typical examples of this style in the tourist post or the Terreiro de Santa Ana (a nobleman's home with lateral chapel from 1768).[3] Other Transmontanan houses include the richly ornate Casa dos Araújos near the Chapel of São Sebastião dating from 1961, or others along the Rua de S. Sebastião (from 1957), are examples of the style.[3] At the Rua da Estação, the main road to the village, near the primary school and kindergarten is the main intersection, home to the local Junta de Freguesia (parish council) and the towns historical pelourinho (pillory): the area is the intersection of many of the villages roadways. From Rua de S. Miguel the axis of the community extends to the main church and the Bairro de Nossa Senhora de Lurdes, while in counterpoint, the Rua do Rio and Rua de Santa Ana follow the secondary accessways of the settlement. The pillory is the judicial and autonomic symbol of Frechas history, when it was a municipal seat (and municipality).[3]

Civic

Religious

References

Notes
  1. ^ INE, ed. (2010) (in Portuguese), Censos 2011 - Resultadas Preliminares [2011 Census - Preliminary Results], Lisbon, Portugal: Instituto Nacional de Estatística, http://www.ine.pt/xportal/xmain?xpid=INE&xpgid=ine_publicacoes&PUBLICACOESpub_boui=122114780&PUBLICACOESmodo=2, retrieved 1 July 2011 
  2. ^ IGP, ed. (2010) (in Portuguese), Carta Administrativa Oficial de Portugal, Lisbon, Portugal: Instituto Geográfico Português, http://www.igeo.pt/produtos/cadastro/caop/download/Areas_Freg_Mun_Dist_CAOP2010.zip, retrieved 1 July 2011 
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r António Pimenta de Castro (2002)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Igreja Matriz de Frechas/Igreja de São Miguel Arcanjo" (in Portuguese). SIPA Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2001-211. http://www.monumentos.pt/Site/APP_PagesUser/SIPA.aspx?id=19132. Retrieved 27 May 2011. 
  5. ^ a b "Fonte dos Engaranhados" (in Portuguese). SIPA Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2001-211. http://www.monumentos.pt/Site/APP_PagesUser/SIPA.aspx?id=24018. Retrieved 27 May 2011. 
  6. ^ a b c "Capela de Nossa Senhora do Aviso/Capela de Nossa Senhora do Viso" (in Portuguese). SIPA Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2001-211. http://www.monumentos.pt/Site/APP_PagesUser/SIPA.aspx?id=24017. Retrieved 27 May 2011. 
  7. ^ a b c "Cruzeiro de Vale da Sancha" (in Portuguese). SIPA Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2001-211. http://www.monumentos.pt/Site/APP_PagesUser/SIPA.aspx?id=19137. Retrieved 27 May 2011. 
Sources