It was rebuilt in the late nineteenth century by Miguel Osório Cabral de Castro, in a style different from that of the original.
The tryst ended in 1355 when Pedro's father, King Afonso IV, who suspected Inês and her family to have designs for his throne, orders his henchmen to kill her.
But the story takes a chilling turn when King Pedro ordered that Inês' body was exhumed and put on the throne beside him for the entire court to swear allegiance to their queen.
[5] The fountain, "Fonte das Lágrimas", born of her tears, stands on the property where Inês was killed and supposedly her blood still stains its stone bottom.
For centuries, the estate is reportedly haunted by the ghost of Inês, who is heard crying on the grounds, eternally searching for her lost love, Pedro.