'', or Royal
Riding Hall of
Belém, was built in 1787. The school's origins as an institution trace to 1726, during the reign of King
João V of Portugal, as the
Real Academia Equestre da Corte (Royal Equestrian Academy of the
Portuguese Royal Court), which served as the riding school of the
Portuguese Royal Family and the
Portuguese nobility. However, prior to its formal creation, the riding school of the Portuguese Royal Family had long been one of the most respected in Europe, since the publication of the seminal "
Bem Cavalgar" by King
Duarte I of Portugal in 1438. During the reign of King
José I of Portugal, the 4th
Marquis of Marialva served as the
Estribeiro-Mor (
Master of the Horse) of the royal household and the Equestrian Academy of the Court. Marialva pioneered the Portuguese tradition of equestrianism (sometimes called the Marialva Tradition or
Arte Marialva) and is considered a founding father to the school and the Portuguese tradition. Likewise, his 1790 work "
Luz da Liberal e Nobre Arte da Cavallaria" is considered the magnum opus of study in the school to this day. In 1807, the Equestrian Academy of the Court was transformed into the
Real Picaria Portuguesa (Royal Portuguese Riding Academy). In 1821, the school and its property nationalized and made into an institution of the state and not of the royal family.
Samuel Lupi became Director of the Real Picaria Portuguesa in 1855 and later the private instructor to King
Carlos I of Portugal. However, it was during the reign of King Carlos I that the Real Picaria became dormant, at the end of the 19th century. Throughout the dormant period of the school's history, the Portuguese tradition was practiced and maintained in private equestrian academies and
picadeiros. The school's history restarted in 1979, with the founding of the
Escola Portuguesa da Arte Equestre as the successor institution of the Real Picaria Portuguesa. ==Mission==