Inicio >> Viajes >> Travel Review: Guanajuato
Register Now Free
Service Provider Registration
Anything you need to know about Mexico? Ask Sam

Buscar propiedades

 

Busqueda en el Directorio de Negocios

Nuevo Proveedor de Servicio

Boletin Informativo de SA

Por favor regístrese en el portal antes de registrarse en una lista.
¿Quiere registrarse?

Travel Review: Guanajuato

Imprimir E-Mail

History of Guanajuato

Guanajuato, MexicoThere is nothing "native" about Guanajuato. The Creole (born of Spanish parents in New Spain) culture was spawned by mining wealth, with sparse contribution from local Chichimec - an essentially nomadic presence. In any case, those who remained after the conquest went to work in the mines, by then considered an imperial, and certainly not local, property.

 

The tale is told up in the hills of Mellado - one of many mines above the town - that one of Cortes' captains, Pedro de Roa, cured the Conquistador's dislocated shoulder, and so was granted anything he fancied. What he fancied was the "real source" of Montezuma's treasure - not the beautifully crafted artifacts in Tenochtitlan, but the gold and silver mines of Guanax-huac ("Hill of Frogs"). Yet Roa's adventures were lost to history, which attributes Guanajuato's discovery to Juan de Rayas - an itinerant miner - in the 1540s. Bound for Zacatecas, Rayas spent a night in a cave on a mountain pass. To ward off wolves he kept a light burning and, to his amazement, in the morning found rivulets of silver surrounding the remains of the flame.

Museums and Festivals of Guanajuato

Wealth often inspires great deeds, but it usually just conspires to greed. Eventually, however, the leisure it propitiates leaves room for philosophy, refined amusement and books for research. The grandest building in Guanajuato is the awe-inspiring university of grey and green marble. The city became a seat of learning, but also of the applied and theatrical arts. The Cervantine festival, which will celebrate its 29th anniversary this year, grew from the tradition of the players and troubadours. A festival town, furthermore, becomes a year-long visitor attraction. Hotels range from inns on the plaza to converted haciendas, with their formal gardens and historic museums. One of the loveliest is San Gabriel de Barrera, a reminder of that apogee of prosperity and grandeur that ended with the political unrest of the 19th century.

 

Other museums include the home of native son Diego Rivera, as well as the mining museum and Albondiga de Granaditas, the fortress-city museum with its relics of the Independence Movement, whose vivid local hero, "El Pipila," a worker from the mine in Mellado, is commemorated in the statue of pink stone, framed against the blue sky, on the hill behind the town.

 

The city itself is actually one of Mexico's most fascinating museums. The winding stairs and twisting lanes, some no wider than a kiss from facing balconies, are apt for the serious walker, equipped with proper shoes. Yet the greatest repositories of beauty, devotion, skill and passion are the churches. Nearly all of them are expressions of gratitude, lavish or humble, and date from the heyday of the 17th and 18th centuries. The shrine to Our Lady of Guanajuato, a Virgin of Light, stands in the center of the bicycle hub of the town's labyrinth, on a solid silver pedestal. Behind the Basilica is the Jesuit Church of the Company of Jests, just next to the university. The Church and Plaza of San Roque are to be found on the way to the Hidalgo Market, an art nouveau masterpiece intended as a railway station during the city's revival. On the opposite side of the street is the exquisite Church of Belem. The most remarkable churches however - the real wonder - are three very unusual ones directly related to the city's mining legacy. These are the Churrigueresque Valenciana (featuring amazing woodwork and three remarkable altars), the Church of the Merced in Mellado (featuring the Miners' Christ bathed in dried blood) and the Church of the Señor de Villaseca, a church full of all the appreciative texts dedicated by faithful followers.

 

There is no end to Guanajuato. The hilly city boasts colorful buildings and cobblestones streets reminiscent of Salzburg, including underground roads and labyrinthine neighborhoods perfect for a stroll, a relaxing lunch accompanied by mariachis, or a rest at one of the quaint cafes the city has to offer. The mines are also worth a visit, the best one being Rayas. A sculpture of sorts, it seems to be the symbol of Guanajuato, the phoenix city that persists in rising, again and again, from its own ruins.

Getting to Guanajuato 

Getting to Guanajuato by car will cost approximately $400 pesos by toll road and will take an approximate 4 hours to get there. By bus the trip will last 5 hours and a ticket will cost $350 pesos for a round trip. The best bus lines are ETN and Flecha Amarilla and they have buses taking off from Mexico City hourly. When it comes to accomodation, the Posada Santa Fe (Jardín de la Union 12, tel: 473-20084) and the Castillo de Santa Cecilia (Carretera a Mexico 110, tel: 473-20485) are recommended. When it comes to dining, Las Piñatas (Alonso 34, tel: 473-29759), El Tapatío (Lascuraín de Retana 20, tel: 473-23291) and Casa del Conde de la Valenciana (Casa de la Valenciana, tel: 473-22550) are in.

 

By Carol Miller

 

Return to top

 
< Anterior   Siguiente >

Other Articles

 

Travel Review: Acapulco

Desperately in need of a quick trade route between Southeast Asia and the Mexican Pacific in order to better compete with the British, among other European rivals, Philip II of Spain ordered the conquest of the Philippines, his namesake, and of the Molucca or "Spice" Islands, during the mid-16th century.

 



 

Travel Review: The State of Guerrero

The landscape along the "Highway of the Sun," that places Mexico City within a scant three hours of Acapulco, is especially dazzling after the Querendes tunnel, with its palmetto forest, organ and candlestick cactus canefields - often tipped with frail, heather-like flowers - stretching into the distance, wide riverbeds and mesquite-covered red rock hills. We are entering the "Hot Country," where the sun like a hammer on the devil's anvil is king.

 



 

Travel Review: The Mayan Site of Izamal

Itzamná, supreme Mayan deity in Northern Yucatan, is credited not only with founding the grandiose ceremonial center that later became the Peninsula's greatest monastery, but he also founded religion and the priesthood. He discovered the cultivation and application of henequen fiber, for the ropes, mats and clothing on which the local economy was based.



Travel Review: Monterrey

Actually another world, as different from the central plateau as it possibly can be, Monterrey is considerably more than business and industry, though its well-earned fame does seem to center on steel, cement, paper, beer, glass and banking.

 



 

Travel Review: Ajusco

Everyone in México City, especially those who drive south on the Periférico or look west from a tower in Lomas, is familiar with the silhouette - like a crooked bracket lain sideways - of the Ajusco.

 



 

Travel Review: The Ruins at Mayapan

Mayapan was considered the last Mayan capital, at least within Mexican territory. It was undoubtedly the final, urban center just before the Spanish conquest - what academics insist on calling, euphemistically at best, the "contact period."

 



<<  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10  >  >>

 Travel Mexico P... Travel Mexico -... Weekend Trip Me... Travel Mexico -...
 Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -... Scuba Diving in...
 Weekend Trip Me... Weekend Trip Me... Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -...
 Magic Town Mexi... Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -...
 Skydiving in Me... Cervantino Inte... Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -...
 Travel Mexico -... Magic Town Mexi... Travel Mexico -... Mazamitla - Pue...
 Tapalpa - Puebl... Tequila - Puebl... Mexcaltitan - P... Useful Travel T...
 Cosala - Pueblo... Jerez - Pueblos... Real de Catorce... Malinalco
 Santiago - Pueb... Parras - Pueblo... Alamos - Pueblo... Mitla
 Mexico Aims to ... Tourist Revenue... Mexico Timeshar... Vacation Rental...
 Airlines Servin... Car Rentals Health and Safe... Foreign Embassi...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ...

Service Request

Most viewed articles Upcoming events
No Events Available
Lastest news

Warning: mysql_fetch_array(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in /home/emexpert/public_html/modules/mod_advertise.php on line 46
Recent Classified Ads