Serra do Bussaco
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Serra do Bussaco, (also Buçaco) is a mountain range on the frontiers of Portugal, formerly included in the province of Beira. The highest point in the range is the Ponta de Bussaco (1795 feet), which commands a magnificent view over the Serra da Estrela, the Mondego valley and the Atlantic Ocean.
The Serra includes the buildings of a secularized Carmelite monastery, founded in 1628. The convent woods have long been famous for their cypress, plane, evergreen oak, cork and other forest trees, many of which have stood for centuries and attained an immense size. A bull of Pope Gregory XV (1623), anathematizing trespassers and forbidding women to approach, is inscribed on a tablet at the main entrance; another bull, of Pope Urban VIII (1643), threatens with excommunication any person harming the trees.
Towards the close of the 19th century the Serra de Bussaco became one of the regular halting-places for foreign, and especially for British, tourists, on the overland route between Lisbon and Porto. The Palace Hotel of Bussaco, built between 1888 and 1905 in an exuberant Neo-Manueline style, is still a magnet for tourists.
In 1873 a monument was erected, on the southern slopes of the Serra, to commemorate the Battle of Buçaco, in which the French, under Marshal Masséna, were defeated by the British and Portuguese, under Lord Wellington, on 27 September 1810. This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

