Not just part of Portugal’s history but part of the world’s history’

The rare Garrano is an endangered breed of pony within the Iberian horse family from northern Portugal mainly used as a pack horse, and for light farm work.

Members of this emblematic breed are usually dark chestnut in colour, with a straight facial profile and stand on average 1.35 metres. In the 1940s there were over 40,000 Garranos in Portugal. Current estimates put the total population at less than 2,000.

An exquisite, stocky species dating back to the Ancient Bronze Age and unchanged for thousands of years but in decline since the middle of the 20th century as farms were mechanised and horses replaced by tractors and cars.

‘A horse needs a function’, says Jose Leite, a vet and technical adviser of the Association of Garanno Horse Breeders (ACERG) in the Guardian. ‘The need for the horse as an agricultural tool has ended and its intensive breeding as well. The Association is trying to ensure the breed’s survival by highlighting its potential: it can pull buggies, do dressage and – because of its size  – is an ideal horse for novice riders.

Garranos are well known for their hardiness, physical resilience and ability to thrive in harsh environments, making them perfect for living in the northern mountainous regions of Portugal.

Native to Minho and Trás-os-Montes, the pony is a herbivore that plays a fundamental role in the prevention of bushfires, consuming fuel material in large areas as it is tradition to release and breed the horses in semi-feral state. Some herds are even completely feral in nature reserves like the Peneda-Gerês National Park.

Obsolescence however is not the only threat to the Garranos. The mountains of northern Portugal are also home to Iberian wolves, comprising some 300 animals. Like the ponies, the wolves have been in the area since at least Roman times and protected since 1988.

Gerrano foals are easy picking for the wolves. The Institute for the Conservation of Nature and Forests (ICNF) – a state body that pays farmers whose livestock are killed by the carnivores – has launched a range of projects to support farmers in preventing wolf attacks, such as the use of traditional Portuguese livestock dogs and the building of fences.

But the Garrano breeders argue that neither measure is suited to roaming ponies and say the only sustainable solution would be the introduction of other animals for the wolves to eat, such as goats. In the meantime, many breeders are bringing their pregnant mares down from the mountains to raise their foals in safety.

Enjoy the week                     Aproveite a semana                (pic Pixnorm)

Patients of the oldest psychiatric hospital in Lisbon left an artistic footprint

The former hospital Miguel Bombarda in de Rua Dr Almeida Amaral in Lisbon was the first psychiatric hospital in Portugal. The history of the building goes back to the beginning of the 18th century, when there was an estate called Rilhafoles, on which in 1720, a monastery for the nuns of S. Vincent of Paul (Congregação da Missão de S. Vincente do Paulo) was build.

After the Portuguese government banned all religious orders in 1834, the building was occupied by students of the military college (Colégio Militar) until1848, after which it was transformed into a mental hospital called the Rilhafoles Hospital for the Insane (Hospital dos Alienados de Rilhafoles).

In 1892 doctor Miguel Bombarda was appointed director there. This physician, born in Rio de Janeiro, was trained in Lisbon and devoted himself to the mentally ill. He taught at the Medical Faculty on Lisbon’s second hilltop (Campo Santana) and founded – together with the famous surgeon Sousa Martins – the medical journal Medicina Contemporânea.

Under Bombarda’s leadership, a special Security Pavilion was constructed behind the hospital – for patients who had committed a crime – a rare panoptic building. Cells strung together in a circle with a lookout at the centre from which patients could be permanently observed. A model designed by the English philosopher Jeremy Bentham.

In addition to being an inventive physician, Bombarda also was a passionate politician, who wanted to abolish the monarchy. But just one day before the Republic was proclaimed on the 5th of October 1910, he was shot by an ex-patient in his consultation room. One year later, the name of the hospital changed to Hospital Miguel Bombarda, in honor of its late director.

After the closure of the hospital in 2011, a real estate developer bought the hospital grounds to build residential towers on it but the government didn’t allow that since the buildings are part of the cultural heritage. Nowadays, the panopticon is a forgotten building in the heart of Lisbon.

Fortunately, since last year, a group of volunteers is rescuing it from degradation by highlighting the art made by psychiatric patients at the time. Part of that artistic legacy can be admired in two rooms, remnants of a proto-museum founded by the late Bombarda, but since long closed to the public.

Here we encounter paintings from the dancer Valentim de Barros, who spent most of his life in a panoptic cell. Hospitalized in the late 1930s – apparently only for his homosexuality – he died in 1986 on the same day he was discharged. Another patient Jaime Fernandes became famous with his outsider art, which reached the Gulbenkian Foundation and the Bruta Art Collection in Lausanne, Switzerland.

But most of the patients who left work are anonymous, emphasizes Stefanie Franco, a university researcher focusing on the relationship between art and psychiatry, which aroused a vivid interest in the international cultural arena for many years. The pioneering collection of Lausanne – started in 1945 – continues to be a reference.

However, the bulk of the collection – consisting of thousands of drawings, paintings, photographs and tiles – is stored in the basements of the Júlio de Matos Hospital, still to be fully inventoried and waiting for a proper destination. ‘This is a mission’, says Amélia Lérias, a former psychiatrist at Bombarda, charged with the task of inventorying. ‘What we have here is of great wealth and needs institutional protection.’

 Enjoy the week           Aproveite a semana               (pic Público)