If you're into maps, prints and other items from the past, stop in at this specialty shop for historians.
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If you're into maps, prints and other items from the past, stop in at this specialty shop for historians.
You're on the "right side of the tracks" when visiting this Lisbon neighborhood, which offers sumptuous mansions, rolling lawns and lush gardens.
Museum devoted to Fado and Portuguese guitar.
Located in Lisbon's Praca do Comercio at the waterfront, this imposing statue is of Don Jose, the Portuguese king at the time of the 1755 earthquake that devastated the city.
Statue commemorates one of the most famous doctors in Portugal during the 1800s.
Flowing 626 miles from central Spain, west across Portugal to the Atlantic Ocean, the Tagus River forms one of Europe's most important harbors at its mouth, Lisbon.
A visit to this popular nightclub takes you back to the 70s, while you dine on fine traditional Portuguese food and drink.
This popular Lisbon nightclub features Fado, the traditional music of Portugal.
The major venue where opera productions are staged during the September to June season, as well as classical concerts year round.
This was the site of the former Royal Palace until it was destroyed after the earthquake of 1755, and is today Lisbon's largest open square with government buildings lining its perimeter.
This nightspot is the place to go for its sophisticated crowd and wide variety of music: choose from three levels with different music on each.
Traditional restaurant/club where you can dine to the romantic sounds of fado.
Part of the World EXPO in Portugal is this rail station featuring a glass roof for panoramic views of EXPO grounds, and which consists of an inter-modal platform connecting metropolitan and regional trains with local taxis and buses.
