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360° panorama by Santiago Ribas - 360portugal. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The name Amarante appears to come from the proper name Amarantus, but that would not necessarily be the Amaranth buried in S.Marcos. Amarantus was a relatively frequent personal name in the Roman occupation of the Iberian Peninsula. However, it is still admissible that it was this Roman governor who ordered the building / expansion of the city and then imposed his name on it. Others reject the thesis of the origin of the designation of Amarante coming from a proper name, and explain this designation of Amarante with its proximity to Serra do Mar~ao, as if it says "Ante Mar~ao" or "Mar~ao Ante", that is, "Behind the Mar~ao ". Amarante would be founded at the time of the Turdetanos, 360 BC, Araduca because it is located Ante Maranum, before or before Mar~ao. Another possibility is that Amarante changed to its current name, at the time of Emperor Augustus, when Seneciones, Roman general, took the pronouncement of Amaranto, when defeating the Lusitanians in this village, the battle being so bloody that it is still called the Ogar where she took Mort'orio.
360° panorama by Santiago Ribas - 360portugal. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The name Amarante appears to come from the proper name Amarantus, but that would not necessarily be the Amaranth buried in S.Marcos. Amarantus was a relatively frequent personal name in the Roman occupation of the Iberian Peninsula. However, it is still admissible that it was this Roman governor who ordered the building / expansion of the city and then imposed his name on it. Others reject the thesis of the origin of the designation of Amarante coming from a proper name, and explain this designation of Amarante with its proximity to Serra do Mar~ao, as if it says "Ante Mar~ao" or "Mar~ao Ante", that is, "Behind the Mar~ao ". Amarante would be founded at the time of the Turdetanos, 360 BC, Araduca because it is located Ante Maranum, before or before Mar~ao. Another possibility is that Amarante changed to its current name, at the time of Emperor Augustus, when Seneciones, Roman general, took the pronouncement of Amaranto, when defeating the Lusitanians in this village, the battle being so bloody that it is still called the Ogar where she took Mort'orio.
360° panorama by Ackermann Ralf. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The Benedictine monastery in Tauberbischofsheim was founded in 735 by St. Boniface. The successor buildings are still available. The courtyard, once designed as a square, is now surrounded by three buildings. The premises house the city administration as well as a cafe & bistro. The Lioba church with baroque furnishings adjoins the market square. Opposite is the town hall.
360° panorama by Ackermann Ralf. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The town church St. Jakobus in Lauda-K"onigshofen was built on the foundation walls of a burned down Gothic church. The three-aisled, flat-roofed basilica with a five-sided choir and tower adjoining to the north, built in 1694, still houses altars from the 14th to 15th centuries. The baroque high altar is impressive. Supported by four Corinthian columns and curved arches made of stucco marble arches a canopy, populated by nine angels.