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Rural Casa dos Viscondes da Varzea > Page 2
Hotel Rural Casa dos Viscondes da Várzea
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ABOVE: I stayed in the "General's Bedroom,"
which was a military officer's hideout during the Peninsular War in 1808. INSET
BELOW: A painted armoire in a guest room, and the French doors of the general's
quarters.
About the hotel:
The Hotel Rural Casa dos Viscondes da Várzea has 37 rooms in the
main house and several adjacent buildings that have been converted into rooms
and suites. One room has a king-size bed; the others have two double beds.
No
two rooms are furnished alike, and some have distinctive layouts: The "General's
Bedroom," where I stayed, has an internal flight of stairs leading down from the
doorway in the corridor above. Early in the Nineteenth Century, when Napoleon's
forces invaded Spain and Portugal, the room served as a general's hideout.
(Today, the room is less hidden; the bushes between the house and the garden
have been trimmed back, offering a view from the wood-and-glass doors in the
foundation walls.)
Upstairs, the Casa dos Viscondes da Várzea has large sitting
rooms with couches, overstuffed chairs, coffee-table books, and other amenities.
An arcaded veranda overlooks the garden, and during the warmer months, guests
can descend a stone staircase to café tables with umbrellas next to trees,
flower beds, and grapevines.
Although the manor house dates back to the 1600s, the building
is thoroughly up to date, with modern bathrooms and a Wi-Fi network for laptop
users. It also has a large, cheerful, attractively furnished room downstairs for
wedding receptions and other group events. (The room wasn't being used during my
visit, but I went inside to admire the ceramics collection.)
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