Solar Bandeira

Solar Bandeira is a former manor house in Salvador, Brazil. It was built by Pedro Rodrigues Bandeira (1768-1835), a wealthy merchant and financier of Bahian forces during the Brazilian War of Independence. Solar Bandeira is located on the slope in the Soledade neighborhood, formerly a suburb of Salvador that included plantation and the Convent Our Lady of Solitude. The garden, which had rich mosaic work and a view of the Bay of All Saints, was called the "marvel and pride of Bahia" in the 18th and 19th century. Solar Bandeira, despite its protected status, is in an advanced state of ruin and may not be visited.[1][2][3][4]

Solar Bandeira
Solar Bandeira
Solar Bandeira, Soledade, Salvador, Bahia
Solar Bandeira
Location of Solar Bandeira in Brazil
General information
AddressLadeira da Soledade, no. 126
Town or citySalvador, Bahia
CountryBrazil
Coordinates12.959003°S 38.500493°W / -12.959003; -38.500493
Named forPedro Rodrigues Bandeira (1768-1835)
Technical details
Floor count2

History

Solar Bandeira dates to the second half of the 18th century, and belonged to Pedro Rodrigues Bandeira. Pedro Rodrigues Bandeira was born in Bahia in 1768. He became the largest exporter of tobacco and brandy in Colonial Brazil, exporting his goods from warehouses in Cachoeira, in the interior of the Recôncavo, to Africa, India, and Portugal. Bandeira was reputedly one of the richest men in Salvador; he financed Bahian forces against the Portuguese during the Brazilian War of Independence in the 1820s; Brazilian troops occupied Salvador on July 2, 1823 after the Battle of Itaparica.[2][4][3]

Solar Bandeira was one of many buildings own by Pedro Rodrigues Bandeira. An inventory of the building taken in 1835 states that a courtyard on the hill was used for the stables, coach house, and kitchen of the house; the attic was used for slaves quarters. Solar Bandeira appears in a watercolor by Julius Nacher in 1879.[2][4]

Structure

Sola Bandeira has two stories and an attic. Its exterior walls are of stone masonry and interior walls of brick. The first floor had a wide portal at its center with three large, barred windows at either side; the first-floor windows have been converted to doors. The seven windows of the second floor, corresponding to the doors of the first floor, of the house look out onto the Ladeira da Soledade and have balconets. The windows are framed in lioz stone imported from Portugal. The interior, notably door frames and windows, were of carved wood. The rear of the house has a broad, panoramic view of the Bay of All Saints.[3]

Solar Bandeira was noted for its rich mosaics of the type known as embrechado, shells, stones, crockery fragments, and other materials were utilized for the technique. The garden of Solar Bandeira had embrechado mosaic work of crockery of Moorish design; it decorated walls, seats, and flower beds of the garden.[2][4]

Protected status

Solar Bandeira was declared a classified property of Bahia by the Artistic and Cultural Institute of Bahia (IPAC) in 2010. It is additionally part of the Area of Contiguous Protection of Soledade (Área de Proteção Contígua--Soledade).[3]

Access

Solar Bandeira is in an advanced state of ruin and may not be visited.

References

  1. Almeida, Thaís Vaz Sampaio de; Santos Neta, Cidália de Jesus Ferreira dos (2012). Arte nas alturas: modos de fazer e ornar as torres sineiras das igrejas do Recôncavo. III Encontro Baiano de Estudos em Cultura (in Portuguese). Cachoeira, Bahia: Universidade Federal do Recôncavo da Bahia. p. 1.
  2. Lacerda, Ana Maria (2013). "Solar Bandeira". Lisbon, Portugal: Heritage of Portuguese Influence/Património de Influência Portuguesa. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
  3. "Salvador: Solar Bandeira será tombado pelo Estado da Bahia". Jornal Grande Bahia (in Portuguese). Salvador, Bahia. 2010-06-01. Retrieved 2018-11-14.
  4. Secretaria da Indústria, Comércio e Turismo (Bahia, Brazil) (1997). IPAC-BA: inventário de proteção do acervo cultural. 1 (3 ed.). Salvador, Brazil: Secretaria da Indústria e Comércio. pp. 265–266.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.