Roman ruins of Quinta da Abicada


Abicada is the name of Roman ruins north of the municipality of Alvor, in Roman times the colony of Ipses, which was authorized to mint currency, and near Mexilhoeira Grande in the district of Portimão, Algarve, Portugal and where Pompeia Exoce looked after the burial of her grandson. Both were in the Roman province of Lusitania. Portimão, known as Portus Magnus, was an important Roman commercial port when the Villa was built.
The complex is located on a south-facing promontory spur located between Mexilhoeira Grande and Alvor. The spur lies about eight meters above sea level and is surrounded by the rivers Ribeira do Farelo and Ribeira de Senhora do Verde, which flow into the Ria de Alvor immediately south. The building, classified as a villa maritima, is characterized by its sophisticated architecture with two peristyles – one hexagonal and the other square-shaped. The villa contained well-preserved geometrically-shaped polychrome mosaics and is believed to date from the 4th century AD. The hill itself was inhabited from the 1st to the 5th century AD and has supplied Roman artefacts from the 1st century to the 2nd century.

The villa and its wealth

The protected site is that of a villa rustica or agricultural facility consisting of a large palatial residence the villa maritima or pars urbana, and a pars rustica or economic area.
This building had a Mediterranean-style rigorously geometric architecture that related to the landscape - the attached portico opened to a view of the lagoon and the sea- and also to the mild climate to create an environment of architectural quality for its inhabitants. Mosaics, with floral and geometric compositions of diverse colors, covered the floors of the rooms.
Since there was little agricultural area in the direct vicinity, the villa took its wealth from the nearby estuary. In 1938 the archaeologist José Formosinho Sanches found the remains of the pars rustica including large basins which were used to process offshore seafood twenty meters south of the villa. A pier and dock allowed navigable access to the estuary and the sea.
The high density of Post-Tartessos Iron Age sites in the area and the Copper age site of Alcalar indicates a settlement continuity of the indigenous population in the areas used in Roman times. The rich biodiversity of the estuary and lagoons explains this. Fish, shellfish, crabs, and once abundant birds sustained high human populations and in the 4th century allowed large scale commercial exploitation.

The mosaics

were found in almost all rooms in the areas A and B. On a layer of opus caementitium magnificent patterns were laid from tesserae. The mosaics are polychrome and show geometric and floral patterns. But also vessels are depicted. The tesserae of different types of stone are in grey, red, white and blue.

Artefacts

The finds excavated in the 1930s are in the Museum Municipal Dr José Formosinho in Lagos. They consist mainly of metal artefacts such as lead and bronze objects. Due to the lack of stratification, the finds unfortunately do not give a meaningful overview.
Later finds include tools of the fishing industry, cosmetics a glass plate with a collar edge and few pieces of utility ceramics and amphorae dating to the middle imperial period and coins from later settlement phases, including two from the Constantinian period and coinage from the Theodosian period. The findings also included fish sauce garum and fish salting basins bordered with opus caementitium. This allows conclusions to be drawn on the marketing of maritime resources and underpins the classification as villa maritima.

Protection

Villa Romana da Abicada is listed as a National Monument

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