Coimbra is served by motorway A1 which connects Lisbon to Porto.
Sud Express is the name of a famous night train which originally connected Paris and Lisbon, but now covers only the southern part of the traditional route.
(The marginal is the coastal highway connecting Lisbon with the resort town of Cascais.)
In the vicinity of this site existed the Roman via Olissipo-Bracara Augusta connecting Lisbon and Braga, respectively.
The A1 motorway connecting Lisbon with Oporto was closed due to low visibility caused by the smoke on the 27th.
It connects Lisbon, the capital, to Albufeira in the Algarve, the country's southern-most mainland province.
By 1571, a string of outposts connected Lisbon to Nagasaki along the coasts of Africa, the Middle East, India, and Asia.
It connects Lisbon, the capital, to Porto, the country's second-largest city, and serves other important cities like Coimbra and Leiria.
The settlement developed primarily around the junction of various rail-lines that connected Lisbon to the Algarve.
The A5 is 25 km (15 miles) long motorway of Portugal that connects Lisbon and Cascais.