Évora - Termas Romanas / Évora - Câmara Municipal

Baths - Roman Period (4195)
The archaeological work carried out inside Évora's City Hall, a former manor of the Sortelha counts, located in the Sertório Square, allowed vestiges of the thermal complex of the city of Liberalitas Iulia Ebora to be identified. This Roman thermal complex would have been built during the 2nd and 3rd-centuries AD and was one of the city's most imposing public buildings. In the excavated area of the thermal bathhouse, about 300m2, the steam hot bath room was identified (laconicum), which had a circular dome shape, about 9m in diameter, with a central tank (5m in diameter), formed by three steps covered in marble slabs, some of them with vegetable decorations and part of the hypocaustum, with the floor covered in brick, along with 48 brick columns that allowed the hot air to circulate. Some service spaces were also excavated, such as the praefurnium, consisting of four furnaces designed to heat the various thermal areas and the outdoor swimming pool (natatio), rectangular in shape, about 14m long and 1,30m deep, with traces of the access staircase. The baths were connected with a plumbing system, reservoirs and an aqueduct, which would guarantee the water supply, which has yet to be archaeologically identified.

Overview

Évora's Roman Baths are inside the Town Hall Building. Visiting circuit and information leaflet in digital format.

Visit conditions

Free entrance with information

Timetables

From Monday to Friday 09.00 to 17.30. Closed on weekends and holidays.

Documents

How to get there? Best practices

Best practices

Good practices when visiting archaeological sites

To visit an archaeological site is to connect with our origins, to understand our path and evolution as a species integrated in the environment, and to respect and safeguard our heritage so that future generations can also visit and enjoy it.

Walking the paths and enjoying the structures and archaeological pieces that survived over time, fosters the understanding of what is different, but also of what is common among different populations: basically, what identifies us as Homo Sapiens.

More than just vestiges and ruins of the past, archaeological sites showcase our capacity for creative thought, adaptation, interconnection, comprehension and resilience. Without these traits we would not have been successful as cultural beings participating in an ongoing evolutionary process. These sites also allow to consider choices made in the past thus contributing for decisions in the present to be made with greater awareness and knowledge.

Archaeological sites are unique and irreplaceable. These sites are fragile resources vulnerable to changes driven by human development. The information they keep, if destroyed, can never be recovered again.

As such, the Directorate-General for Cultural Heritage (DGPC) invites all visitors to enjoy the beauty and authenticity of these sites, while helping to preserve them for future generations by adopting the following set of good practices:

  • Respect all signs; 
  • Do not try to access fenced areas; 
  • Do not climb, sit or walk on archaeological structures and remains; 
  • Respect areas where archaeological excavations are being carried out, not disturbing them; 
  • Do not collect materials or sediments;
  • Do not write or make graffiti on archaeological structures; 
  • Put the garbage in appropriate containers. If none exist, take the garbage with you until you find a suitable container; 
  • Leave the archaeological site as you found it; 
  • Do not drive bicycles or motor vehicles over archaeological sites; 
  • Respect and protect the plants and animals that live in the areas surrounding archaeological sites;
  • Report signs of vandalism or destruction to DGPC or Regional Directorates of Culture (DRC);
  • Share the visiting experience and the archaeological sites, as a way of raising awareness to their preservation and making them better known;
  • Do not buy archaeological materials and report to public security authorities, DGPC or DRC, if you suspect that archaeological materials may be for sale.

Further information:

AIA / ATTA (2013) – Guide to best practices for archaeological tourism. 

Raposo, J. (2016) – Código de conduta para uma visita responsável a sítios arqueológicos. In Sítios arqueológicos portugueses revisitados: 500 arqueossítios ou conjuntos em condições de fruição pública responsável. Al-madan, 2ª série, p. 20 – 77. 

DGPC contacts

Phone: +351213614200 | Email: informacaoarqueologica@dgpc.pt

 


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