Redoubt of Dois Paus

Redoubt of Dois Paus (Reduto dos Dois Paus)
Redoubt of Two Sticks/Clubs
Fort (Forto)
Official name: Reduto dos Dois Paus
Name origin: two sticks/clubs
Country  Portugal
Autonomous region  Azores
Group Central
Island Terceira
Municipality Angra do Heroísmo
Location
Architects Tommaso Benedetto
Styles Medieval, Fortification
Materials Basalt, Tuff
Origin 1543
 - Initiated 15th-16th century
For public Private
Management Portuguese Army
Operator Portuguese Army
Location of the fortification within the municipality of Angra do Heroísmo, island of Terceira

The Redoubt of Dois Paus (Portuguese: Reduto dos Dois Paus) is a fortification situated on the peninsula of Monte Brasil, in the civil parish of , in the municipality of Angra do Heroísmo, in the Porutguese archipelago of the Azores. It was part of the fortified defenses of the Fortress of São João Baptista.

History

A 1595 map of the fortress of Monte Brasil

Bartolomeu Ferraz first presented his recommendations to John III of Portugal in 1543 for the fortification of the Azores, then an important waypoint in trans-Atlantic commerce between the Indies and America.[1] On 5 March 1567, in his proposal to the Crown, Engineer Tommaso Benedetto elaborated a plan to protect the island's coastal defence, that included the construction of a fort on Monte Brasil.[1] Shortly following this proposal, the Portuguese Crown began the construction of the Fort of Dois Paus, in order to protect the port of Dois Paus-Portinho Novo.[1] It is unclear from where its name originated; the name "dois paus" is a literally translated as "the redoubt of the two sticks/clubs".

In the context of the Captaincy-General of the Azores, there was a reference to the structure, stating in 1767:

"...In the redoubt of Dois Paus there are three canon emplacements and two pieces...it needs one more with its support."[2]

Its remains continue to lie on the volcanic cone of Monte Brasil to this day, in ruins.

References

Notes
  1. 1 2 3 Dias, Sofia (2015). SIPA, ed. "Igreja de São João Baptista do Castelo, Fortaleza e Muralhas" (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. Retrieved 21 August 2015.
  2. Júdice (1981), p.416
Sources

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