Funen, Denmark
Egeskov Castle
This floating castle appears to be from an enchanted fable, but in actuality it is Europe's best preserved Renaissance water castle.
AWA visted here
Lisbon, Portugal
When the catastrophic 1755 earthquake flattened most of Lisbon, killing tens of thousands and triggering fires that burned for five days, one neighborhood refused to fall. Alfama, perched on dense bedrock, absorbed the seismic shocks while the rest of the city crumbled. As Lisbon rebuilt itself on a tidy grid of straight boulevards, Alfama kept its tangled Moorish maze, narrow alleys designed centuries earlier to confuse invaders and provide shade. The fishermen’s wives kept singing in tiny taverns, their melancholic fado echoing through medieval streets that hadn’t changed since the 8th century.
The Marquis of Pombal, prime minister at the time, took one look at the ruined Baixa district and ordered it razed entirely, replacing centuries of organic sprawl with rectilinear avenues built to withstand the next quake. Alfama needed no such intervention. Its hillside position also kept it above the tsunami that followed forty minutes later, meaning the district weathered all three disasters in a single morning simply by being inconveniently located. European philosophers spent the following decades debating what the earthquake meant for divine providence, while Alfama’s residents mostly just kept living in the same houses they had before, which may or may not be the more sensible response to a crisis of faith.
38.7124976, -9.1303235
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