Lisbon's trademark seven hills are peppered across the  cityscape like lofty guardians of colour and history. Capped by a collection of  terraces known as 
miradouros (viewpoints), a must-see web of  no-filter-necessary views over Lisbon, the Tejo and beyond is formed. Our  favourite 
miradouros – Portas do Sol, São Pedro de Alcântara, da Graça,  da Nossa Senhora do Monte, Santa Luzia and, of course, Castelo de São Jorge –  all offer stunning spots to get your bearings and while away afternoons overs  
bicas (espresso), elegant glasses of 
Touriga Nacional or refreshing pitchers of sangria, while rubbernecking the city's  stupendous horizons.
Dining in Lisbon is far more dynamic than navigating  countless preparations of 
Portugal's  beloved 
bacalhau (dried and salted cod fish; 365 recipes and  counting!). While 
bacalhau à Brás (shredded cod with onions, eggs and  potatoes; a 
Bairro  Alto original) is never far, Lisbon's strategic seaside position on 
Europe's doorstep means a bounty of  fresh seafood (octopus, tuna, monkfish, shrimp, sardines, clams, snails) rules  the city's kitchens, from Michelin-starred restaurants to gourmet-food markets  to countless corner tascas (taverns). Top-grade Alentejan beef beckons with  juicy steaks and gourmet burgers; and you'll find everything from tantalising  Indian curries to authentic Moroccan couscous in-between.
The absence of open-container laws and cheap booze means  Lisbon loves a night on the town! Don't be fooled by Bairro's Alto's sleepy  daytime feel – by night, these narrow cobbled lanes transform into one of 
Europe's most raucous drinking  addresses. Student dives, traditional fado houses, upscale wine bars and LGBT  hotspots merrily coexist among the muddled mess. In Cais do Sodré, 'Pink Street'  and environs are home to some of the city's classic nightclubs and best cocktail  bars, while trendier megaclubs stretch along the waterfront from 
Santos to Santa Apolónia. Last call? Sunrise!
You couldn't blame your average 
lisboêta for  thinking of the apocalypse when the ground gave way just before 10am on 1  November, 1755. What followed was up to eight astonishing minutes of  city-shattering shaking spread across three tremors, followed 40 minutes later  by a massive, city-engulfing tsunami, culminating in a week-long firestorm that  incinerated what little was initially spared. Lisbon was decimated. Today, the  modern city is shaped by that cataclysmic day – nearly everything is defined as  before or after the earthquake – and the Pombaline architecture that defined  post-quake Lisbon reconstruction counts as some of the first seismically  protected constructions in 
Europe.
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