Human settlement in the area of Santa Bárbara de Nexe goes back to the
Middle Paleolithic (around 30,000 years), and the area came to be inhabited by
Pre-Roman peoples of the Iberian Peninsula, namely the
Cynetes. Phoenicians, Roman and Arab trading routes crossed these lands across the time, where many came to occupy; the oldest historical resident identified by name was a Roman called Sextus Numisius Eros, from the 2nd century AD: his name was left behind in a local funerary stone. The area had some
Phoenician influence before being incorporated by
Ancient Rome, became part of the
Visigothic Kingdom of
Hispania which was ruled by Germanic peoples from Northern and Central Europe, and was conquered by the
Moors during the 8th century being incorporated into the
Al'Garb Al-Andalus, a region dominated by Muslim invaders from North Africa and the Arab World in general. The area would eventually be incorporated in the
Kingdom of Portugal during the end of the Portuguese
Reconquista against the Moors and their Muslim rule, in 1272, by
King Afonso III of Portugal. The eldest reference to a place called "Nexe" appears in 1291 in a chart about the boundaries of Faro and Loulé. During the 14th century, the parochial church was constructed on the site of an ancient chapel. Santa Bárbara de Nexe became a parish in the 16th century. ==Geography==