Then, there are places like the Castelo de Guimarães, which was built in 1139, hasn't undergone much restoration and still looks perfectly, amazingly solid.  It's a fantastic small fortress, with an important place in Portuguese history and lots of interesting quirks.
 When count Henry of Portugal gained his kingdom independence from the Kingdom of León at the beginning of the 12th century, he chose Guimarães as his capital and the castle there as his fortified residence.  An earlier fort, built by countess Mumadona Dias about a hundred years prior, was in drastic need of repair.  Henry essentially destroyed what there was of the existing structure and rebuilt the castle on the same footprint, utilizing a hard granite outcropping as a foundation and quarried stone for the walls.  The local granite is excellent for castles, as it's very hard and can be cut into uniform pieces - one of the reasons the castle is still standing today.
When count Henry of Portugal gained his kingdom independence from the Kingdom of León at the beginning of the 12th century, he chose Guimarães as his capital and the castle there as his fortified residence.  An earlier fort, built by countess Mumadona Dias about a hundred years prior, was in drastic need of repair.  Henry essentially destroyed what there was of the existing structure and rebuilt the castle on the same footprint, utilizing a hard granite outcropping as a foundation and quarried stone for the walls.  The local granite is excellent for castles, as it's very hard and can be cut into uniform pieces - one of the reasons the castle is still standing today.
 The outer walls are extremely thick, with no ornamentation and almost no openings.  Many of the towers are actually just buttresses, without interiors, and were erected more as bulwarking and height advantages than as occupiable spaces.  The two entrances are especially well guarded, with narrow openings and massive, solid pillar-towers on either side.  Firm footing was also extremely valuable, as the stone floor allowed the walls to remain well supported and discouraged mining or tunneling.
The outer walls are extremely thick, with no ornamentation and almost no openings.  Many of the towers are actually just buttresses, without interiors, and were erected more as bulwarking and height advantages than as occupiable spaces.  The two entrances are especially well guarded, with narrow openings and massive, solid pillar-towers on either side.  Firm footing was also extremely valuable, as the stone floor allowed the walls to remain well supported and discouraged mining or tunneling.
 The walls are built around a central, square keep that is still as perfectly erect and right-angled as it was nine hundred years ago.  With virtually no openings in the walls - which are themselves over six feet thick - the structure would have been extremely hard to attack.  A single entrance was placed high up on the front wall, accessed by a bridge from the outer crenelations.  If the initial defenses were breached, the bridge could be destroyed, leaving no easy point of attack.
The walls are built around a central, square keep that is still as perfectly erect and right-angled as it was nine hundred years ago.  With virtually no openings in the walls - which are themselves over six feet thick - the structure would have been extremely hard to attack.  A single entrance was placed high up on the front wall, accessed by a bridge from the outer crenelations.  If the initial defenses were breached, the bridge could be destroyed, leaving no easy point of attack. Guimarães was built in the late stages of the “Reconquista,” when the Iberian peninsula was being reclaimed from the Moorish people who had previously occupied Spain and Portugal.  It’s primary goal was to protect the Portuguese counts from attack by the moors and from the Viking raiders who were active in the region at the time.  As Portugal grew, though, and expanded southward, cities along the coast and fortresses along the inland mountains became more important and Guimarães grew less vulnerable.
Guimarães was built in the late stages of the “Reconquista,” when the Iberian peninsula was being reclaimed from the Moorish people who had previously occupied Spain and Portugal.  It’s primary goal was to protect the Portuguese counts from attack by the moors and from the Viking raiders who were active in the region at the time.  As Portugal grew, though, and expanded southward, cities along the coast and fortresses along the inland mountains became more important and Guimarães grew less vulnerable. 
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