Cemitério das Âncoras

E387821

Cemitério das Âncoras is an open-air “anchor graveyard” on Portugal’s Algarve coast, where rows of rusting ship anchors commemorate the region’s former tuna-fishing industry.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (2)

Label Occurrences
Cemetery of Anchors 1
Cemitério das Âncoras canonical 1

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf memorial
open-air museum
tourist attraction
accessibleFrom Tavira by boat
associatedWith almadrava fishing technique
tuna fishing
category Fishing industry memorial
Outdoor sculpture collection
Tourist attractions in the Algarve
commemorates Algarve fishing heritage
traditional tuna traps
tuna fishing industry
condition rusting
country Portugal
hasCollectionOf ship anchors
tuna-fishing anchors
hasFeature anchors arranged in lines
rows of anchors in sand dunes
hasViewOf sand dunes
sea
heritageType maritime heritage site
isPopularWith history enthusiasts
photographers
tourists
languageOfName Portuguese
locatedIn Algarve
Junta de Freguesia de Santa Luzia
surface form: Freguesia de Santa Luzia

Ria Formosa Natural Park
Tavira
locatedNear Ria Formosa Natural Park
surface form: Ria Formosa
locatedOn Tavira Island
surface form: Ilha de Tavira
material iron anchors
near Municipality of Tavira
surface form: Tavira municipality

village of Santa Luzia
overlooks Atlantic Ocean
Cacela Velha Beach
surface form: Tavira Island beach
region southern Portugal
setting open air
symbolizes end of local tuna fishing
maritime heritage
memory of fishermen
tourismType cultural tourism
industrial heritage tourism
translationOfName Anchor Graveyard
Cemitério das Âncoras self-linksurface differs
surface form: Cemetery of Anchors
usedToBelongTo tuna fishing boats
tuna trap systems

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Praia do Barril hasAttraction Cemitério das Âncoras
Cemitério das Âncoras translationOfName Cemitério das Âncoras self-linksurface differs
this entity surface form: Cemetery of Anchors