The old A Moureira neighbourhood was divided into three parts corresponding to three Moureiras: the
Moureira de Arriba, the
Moureira da Barca and the
Moureira de Abaixo. It extended from the vicinity of the
Burgo bridge to the vicinity of the
Barca bridge, where the shipyards and workshops related to the sea were located. The salted fish of the fishermen and other Galician products such as Ribeiro wine or wood were distributed to other countries such as
England or
Flanders. In
Xan Guillermo Street, the main street that connects the Moureira de Arriba to the walled city, there are still houses from the 16th century with
Tuscan columns. • The
Moureira da Barca was located near the quay where the boat that connected with the other side of the ria was located, which later gave rise to the wooden bridge and the current
Barca Bridge. It extended to the north side of the
bullring, where the commercial activity took place. In its
shipyard, longer and heavier ships, such as
galleys and
caravels, were built. • The
Moureira de Abaixo was a self-sufficient fishing village. It extended from the area around the
Barca Bridge and the
bullring to the mouth of the Gafos River. It was the location of the docks with fish salting factories, salt warehouses and a hospital for lepers. This Moureira was a fishing village, with houses dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries. In the Campo de la Torre, where the fishermen worked and where they repaired and dried the fishing equipment, since 1900 the
Pontevedra bullring has been located and, a little further on, the
chapel of Saint Roch, built in an area very close to the docks in honour of Saint Roch, the protector of the plague, to protect the inhabitants of the city from the deadly effects of the ships that arrived infected with the plague. It is neoclassical in style and Romanesque
corbels have been added to its exterior. In Hermanos Nodales Street were some of the salt warehouses for the conservation of sardines. Also in A Moureira de Abaixo, in Ribeira dos Peiraos Street were the docks located at the mouth of the Gafos River. The old
Saint Lazarus Hospital, dating from the 15th century, stands out in the street, with a small stone terrace at the end of the external staircase and high quadrangular
pilasters. The building has witnessed the different epidemics that Pontevedra suffered until the 19th century. The
quays (
peiraos) of the Moureiras consisted of a central stone staircase and two lateral platforms that protruded towards the water, facilitating the loading and unloading of boats, and each had its own name. The neighbourhood was made up of hundreds of small seafarers' houses of different types, former fishermen's residences, many with stone terraces at the end of an external staircase and their corresponding quays, others with
attics and others finished in the shape of a
mitre, which in the 15th century were known as
outón houses. There were practically no streets in the traditional structure of the neighbourhood. All the paths that connected the quays, the houses and the fields were not paved. The occupation of the land was unaligned and scattered, except for the streets that connected with the path that surrounded
the walls. Some of the current names of the streets and alleys of the Moureiras are linked to the maritime architecture of the district, such as Plaza del Muelle, Xan Guillermo (owner of one of the Lérez docks), Sardina, Hermanos Nodales, Almirantes Matos, Milano de los Mares or Juan Villaverde Barcala (former president of the Sailors Guild). == Gallery ==