Events Calendar for Madeira and Portugal

Events Calendar for Madeira and Portugal

Home News Events Calendar for Madeira and Portugal
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February: Carnival

You will find Carnaval parades all over Portugal, with Lisbon and the towns of the Algarve throwing particularly spectacular celebrations. While it may seem to be all Rio-style feathers, spandex, and sequins, Carnaval festivals in Portugal date back centuries to when people held huge feasts to eat up all the meat, which was forbidden during Lent. Traditionally, it begins on the last Friday before Lent and ends on Shrove Tuesday.

ALWAYS CARNIVAL – MADEIRA

As a way to mark the 2021 Madeira Carnival, the event “Always Carnival – Madeira” was launched, comprising a set of eleven (11) promotional videos, with an approximate duration of 3 minutes, and also eleven photographs of troupers, in order to promote the 2021 Carnival Festivities.

March/April: Semana Santa

During Semana Santa, or Holy Week, there are processions all over Portugal. The most magnificent ones are in Braga, where locals decorate the entire city center with flowers and lights; São Brás de Alportel (the Festa das Tochas) in the Algarve comes in a close second when it comes to atmosphere. One of the largest processional festivals in Portugal is the Festa da Mãe Soberana in Loulé in the Algarve. Meanwhile, over in Tomar, those parts of the procession carry huge flower-covered crosses and destroy them at the end during a special ceremony.

FLOWER FESTIVAL

April 27th to May,21st

The Flower Festival is a cultural event associated the local traditions, whether through the performances of folk groups, or through the construction of the beautiful floral carpets, an event filled with lots of entertainment activities, such as music concerts and variety shows, to be held fromApril,27th to May,21st.​​

March-August: International Sand Sculpture Festival (FIESA)

FIESA, the International Sand Sculpture Festival held in Pera in the Algarve, has been running since 2003. Artists use some 40,000 tonnes of sand over an area of 15,000 square meters to create sand sculptures. These depict people, places, and things in incredible detail. Some sculptures even soar up to a height of 12 meters! By day, visitors can attend workshops, contests, and demonstrations. And at night, the festival organizers illuminate the magnificent sculptures.

13 May: Peregrinação de Fátima

Peregrinação de Fátima is Portugal’s most famous Christian pilgrimage. On 13 May 1917, three children saw a miraculous vision of the Virgin Mary in Fatima, now Leiria-Fatima. Later that same year, more apparitions appeared elsewhere. This was apparently witnessed by large numbers of visitors to the site. Massive numbers of pilgrims come here throughout the year, but 13 May is the most important date. The town hosts a candlelight procession on 12 May, which leads down to the sanctuary. The next day, tearful crowds wave white handkerchiefs as a congregation carries a statue of the Virgin Mary from the high altar to the Chapel of the Apparitions during the Adeus (farewell) procession. A second pilgrimage also occurs in October.

MADEIRA FLOWER CLASSIC AUTO PARADE

May,14th

The Madeira Flower Classic Auto Parade consists of a parade of classic vehicles integrated in the festivities of the Flower Festival 2023, an event to be held on Sunday, May,14th.

MADEIRA CLASSIC CAR REVIVAL

May,26th to 28th

This event, which takes place at Praça do Povo on the last weekend of May, between May, 26th to 28th and is organized by Clube de Automóveis Clássicos da Madeira with the purpose of showing and rewarding the best and most elegant vintage and classic vehicles in the Region.

June: Feast Day of Saint Anthony, Lisbon

During the Feast of Saint Anthony festival on 12 June, the Alfama district of Lisbon is decked with lights and streamers. The air is filled with the smell of sardines grilling on churrascos outside houses and restaurants. The tradition celebrates the story of how a fish rose out of the sea to listen to the 13th-century saint when the locals wouldn’t. Saint Anthony is also known as the matchmaker saint. Women fill their mouths with water until they hear a man’s name mentioned, while men offer women basil plants and love poems.

June: Rock in Rio-Lisboa, Lisbon

This is one of the largest music festivals in Portugal and is based on its famous Brazilian counterpart, Rock in Rio. Held in Lisbon’s Bela Vista Park, the four-day, two-weekend music festival attracts leading international musicians and DJs, as well as emerging talent to perform on the World Stage, Electronic Tent, and Hot Stage. The 2020 Rock in Rio-Lisboa takes place on 20-21 and 27-28 June.

June: Festa de São João, Porto

This festival, which pays tribute to Saint John the Baptist, has been held in Porto on 23 June for more than 600 years. It begins with street parties and music begin in the afternoon, and the party continues late into the night. Party-goers release sky lanterns and balloons and enjoy a midnight firework display. They continue celebrating until dawn. As part of the celebrations, people bash each other over the head with plastic hammers. Young men also throw garlic flowers at women who take their fancy.

ATLANTIC FESTIVAL

2nd to 25th June

The Madeira Atlantic Festival sets the beginning of the summer season in Madeira, and is one of the most recent tourist entertainment events, to be held on June, 2nd to 25th.

July: Festa dos Tabuleiros, Tomar

During the first two weeks of July, girls parade around the streets of Tomar with piles of bread on their heads as part of the ancient Festa dos Tabuleiros (Festival of the Trays). Also known as Festa do Divino Espirito Santo (Feast of the Holy Spirit), the event is Tomar’s biggest and most spectacular procession. However, it only takes place every four years. People walk in pairs with the girls wearing tabuleiros; these are headdresses made from bread stacked in rows, festooned with flowers and topped with a crown and dove or celestial sphere. There are other traditional processions alongside the main parade.

CLASSICS AT MAGNOLIA

July, 29th and 30th

Between July,29th to 30th, Quinta Magnolia’s gardens is the centre stage of another edition of the “Classics at Magnolia”, an event which showcases a unique heritage recognized across borders.

August/September: Feira de São Mateus, Viseu

Close to the Spanish border, the hilltop town of Viseu has one of the best-preserved fortifications in Europe. Viseu is also home to the longest festival procession in southern Portugal. The Feira de São Mateus is a series of celebrations in commemoration of Saint Matthew.

MADEIRA WINE FESTIVAL

August, 31st to September, 17th

The Madeira Wine Festival is one of the island´s main tourist attractions that pays tribute to this precious nectar and its undeniable socioeconomic significance, an event programmed from August, 31st to September, 17th.

COLUMBUS FESTIVAL

September, 21st to 24th

The Columbus Festival is based on a series of tourist entertainment initiatives that portray the time when this famous merchant resided on the island of Porto Santo, recalling his experiences in the Madeira Archipelago.

NATURE FESTIVAL

October,4th to 9th

The Madeira Nature Festival aims to promote nature tourism, encouraging the practice of activities that allow direct contact with the rich natural heritage of the archipelago of Madeira, an event to be held from October,4th to 9th.

November: Feira Nacional do Cavalo Golegã

Golegã is the horse capital of Portugal. This association has a lengthy history, dating back to when Portugal’s second king, Sancho I, owned a stud farm there during the 12th century. Traditionally, people came on Saint Martin’s Day (11 November). Today, thousands of visitors come to the two-week Feira Nacional do Cavalo (National Horse Fair) to celebrate the Portuguese Lusitano breed at what is easily one of the most prominent horse-related festivals in the country. There are competitions, food, and abundant amounts of wine.

11 November: São Martinho

Saint Martin’s Day is celebrated on 11 November. Saint Martin was a Roman soldier who cut his cloak in half to give it to a beggar to keep warm; after which the sun came out to warm him. As a result, warm winter days at the beginning of November are called Saint Martin’s Summer. This is when the chestnuts start ripening and the first wine of the season is ready to drink. The Portuguese celebrate this time – called Magusto – with bonfires and parties, plenty of chestnuts and chestnut dishes, as well as água-pé; a weak wine made from watered-down dregs. The most traditional Saint Martin’s Day festivals in Portugal are in northern Trás-os-Montes, Beira Baixa (especially Alcains), Golegã, and Penafiel.

CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR´S EVE FESTIVITIES

December 1st 2022 to January 8th 2023

The arrival of the decorative lights in the streets of the city centre of Funchal, during the month of December, sets the beginning of the Madeira Christmas and End of the Year Festivities programme.

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