Guidebook for Silves

Patio 25
Guidebook for Silves

Food Scene

They have the best, always fresh seafood and great service.
72 yerel halk öneriyor
Marisqueira Rui
27 R. Comendador Vilarinho
72 yerel halk öneriyor
They have the best, always fresh seafood and great service.

Parks & Nature

One of a kind beach. Must see tourist attraction.
178 yerel halk öneriyor
Benagil
178 yerel halk öneriyor
One of a kind beach. Must see tourist attraction.
33 yerel halk öneriyor
Marinha Plajı
33 yerel halk öneriyor

Entertainment & Activities

19 yerel halk öneriyor
Silves Golf
Rua de Vila Fria
19 yerel halk öneriyor
Event happening between 11th e 20th of August
10 yerel halk öneriyor
Feira Medieval de Silves
10 yerel halk öneriyor
Event happening between 11th e 20th of August
Ideal for kids.
540 yerel halk öneriyor
Slide & Splash İstasyonu
125 Vale de Deus
540 yerel halk öneriyor
Ideal for kids.

Essentials

13 yerel halk öneriyor
Modelo Continente Silves
13 yerel halk öneriyor

Shopping

10 yerel halk öneriyor
Belediye Pazarı Silves
N124
10 yerel halk öneriyor

Arts & Culture

Learn about the history Silves and the history of the Algarve region: The Rio Arade was long an important route into the interior for the Phoenicians, Greeks and Carthaginians, who wanted the copper and iron action in the southwest of the country. With the Moorish invasion from the 8th century, the town gained prominence due to its strategic hilltop, riverside site. From the mid-11th to the mid-13th centuries, Shelb (or Xelb), as it was then known, rivalled Lisbon in prosperity and influence: according to the 12th-century Arab geographer Idrisi, it had a population of 30, 000, a port and shipyards, and ‘attractive buildings and well-furnished bazaars’.
18 yerel halk öneriyor
Municipal Archeology Museum Silves
18 yerel halk öneriyor
Learn about the history Silves and the history of the Algarve region: The Rio Arade was long an important route into the interior for the Phoenicians, Greeks and Carthaginians, who wanted the copper and iron action in the southwest of the country. With the Moorish invasion from the 8th century, the town gained prominence due to its strategic hilltop, riverside site. From the mid-11th to the mid-13th centuries, Shelb (or Xelb), as it was then known, rivalled Lisbon in prosperity and influence: according to the 12th-century Arab geographer Idrisi, it had a population of 30, 000, a port and shipyards, and ‘attractive buildings and well-furnished bazaars’.