Mong Ha Fort

Macau Travel Guide, Macau Travel Tips, China Travel Guide

     Bookmark and Share

Mong Ha Fort (Fortaleza do Mong Ha) is the last fort to be built in Macau. It is located on Mong-Há Hill, on the northern part of the territory, facing China. The Anglo-Sino conflict of 1841 gave the Portuguese the jitters. This was the time when tension between Chinese nationlist and the European powers was at its peak. The Portuguese, under Governor Ferreira do Amaral, hurriedly started construction of Mong Ha Fort in 1849, in an effort to thwart any attacks on their colony. Governor Ferreira do Amaral was assassinated shortly thereafter, and Governor Coelho do Amaral took over the construction in 1864. The fort was finally completed in 1866, but there was never an attack on the fort.

Mong Ha Fort was in active service until the 1960s. As the relationship between Beijing and Lisbon improved, there was no need of the fort. When Macau was transferred to Chinese sovereignty, ownership of the fort also changed hands.

Today Mong Ha Fort has been converted into a public park. There are walkways to the old fortress walls. The fort itself has been converted for use as a heritage hotel and tourism training school. There is also a Portuguese restaurant managed by trainees.






Bookmark and Share

Let us keep you updated. Just copy and paste our link to your website or blog.





EarthDocumentary and globe logo are trademark and service mark of Timothy Tye.

The EarthDocumentary logo © copyright Timothy Tye 2007-2009. Content and articles in EarthDocumentary are provided in goodwill and are believed to be correct at time of writing. While every reasonable care is taken to check and verify the information shared, EarthDocumentary disclaims responsible for the use of information. Text in EarthDocumentary is available under Creative Commons Attribution/ShareAlike License meaning you are free to copy, distribute, transmit, adapt and make derivative works, as long as you attribute your resulting work and apply it under the same, similar or a compatible license. Wikipedia and Wikitravel are cited as among the sources of references. Photographs appearing in EarthDocumentary are available according to the licensing specified in its caption. Photographs supplied by Panoramio are governed by the Panoramio API terms & condition, are for display only, and may not be downloaded for use. Photographs belonging to the author are the copyright of Timothy Tye and may not be reused without prior written permission from the author. Contact author for licensing terms.