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The Historical Center
In 1680, the army engineer Martin de la Torre sent his discourse
about "the plan for fortifications which the city of Campeche,
in the province of Yucatan, needs" to Emperor Charles
II of Spain. De la Torre explained that without fortifications the
city was open to invasion and greed at the hands of her enemies
because she all but lacked a soul, which would be a wall and other
fortifications.
How well the inhabitants of Campeche knew what it meant to be exposed!
The list of terrors the city had experienced was all but too long.
Two years before De la Torre’s discourse the pirate Lewis
Scott had sacked the city taking numerous hostages, and eight years
earlier Laurent Graff, the famous "Lorencillo",
had done the same to the St. Roman district. Pirates, corsairs and
freebooters were at large all over the Caribbean and the Gulf of
Mexico. Cruising the ocean at will that reached right into the heart
of Campeche, they always kept an eye on the still small city which
had turned into one of the main ports of New Spain — hence,
De la Torre’s call for fortifications.
Our tour through the historical center of Campeche touches nine
bulwarks and fortifications and several other sites of interest.
San Carlos Fortress
Dedicated to the king at that time: Carlos II. Its surface is around
840m, and today it houses the City Museum.
Santa Rosa Fortress
Its name was inspired by the first sanctified American, Rosa from
Lima. Its surface was 1157.45m, now day it is a painting museum
San Juan Fortress
Its name is enlaced to San Juan de Dios, founder of the Juaninos
order. This is an example of work of arts of engineering with a
of surface 764m.
San Francisco Fortress
Its name celebrates the order of San Francisco. With an original
surface of 1342m2. In 1889 one of its part was demolished, dividing
the fortress in two. Now day, one of its parts is used as the library
“Gustavo Martinez Alomia”.
San Pedro Fortress
Dedicated to the founder of the church and first Pope. 780m of surface,
built in 1702. In it was established the Court of the Inquisition,
and today is an information centre.
Santiago Fortress
Named after the Saint Protector of Spain.
It was finished in 1704. In it was demolished at the beginning of
this century, and what we see know is only a similar construction
from it, but it is really different from the original, housing today
the Didactic Botanic Garden.
Soledad Fortress
Named after our Madam of Loneliness. With a surface of 993m, now
day serves as the Museum of Stele.
San Jose El Bajo Fortress
The eighth fortress was names after the husband of Virgin Mary.
It was located in one of the parts where the High School Justo Sierra
Mendez is placed, and it was one of the firs fortresses demolished
while the beginning of the firs decades of this century.
The wall had four entrances, and the most important were the sea
side door and the land side door. This last one was opened by Don
Antonio Figueroa y Silva in 1727, which was well protected with
eight canons and fosses
San Jose Fortress
It was built by the King Lieutenant, finished on august 9th, 1792.
Its surface is around 1828.29m2.
San Miguel Fortress
Built over 1km from Lerma, occupies a surface of 3858.37m2. Here
President Santa Ana installed the headquarters when attacked Campeche
in 1842. Nowadays, one of its main attractions is the hydraulic
system.
House of the king Lieutenant
Four of these houses were built in the city, with built-in columns
in the façade, one in each side of the main entrance. In
them representatives of the Governor of the Peninsula lived. They
are located downtown of the Historical Centre on 59th, 14th and
51st streets.
House 6
Located on 57th street, between 8th and 10th streets, downtown.
This construction comes from the XVII century and has been modified
to remember the lifestyle of the people from Campeche in the XIX
century. The entrance is free and it has a restaurant and a bookstore.
It also is used as an Information Centre.
Weekly activities are organized for the public such as "The
Campechanas’ Serenade" on Thursdays night, and "Campechana
Lottery" on Saturdays evening.
Mansion Carvajal
On 10th street you can find one of the most beautiful samples of
the XIX century civil architecture. It belonged to Mr. Rodrigo Carvajal
Iturralde, who also owned the Hacienda Uayamon. Now days it has
been restored. Its main characteristics are the Moorish arches and
a great marble stairway.
Campeche's Main Plaza
Though the date of the construction is uncertain, it is possible
that it was built at the end of the 1540 or beginning of 1541, when
the Villa of San Francisco was founded. The Plaza became the main
area of the Spanish population settled on one mile, approximately,
of the Indian population of Ah Kim Pech.
During the colonial time it was known as the Major Plaza, after
a while is was named Plaza of the Constitution and finally in 1826
it was named as Plaza of the Independence. At the end of the XIX
century the plaza had three streets of "rounds": the small
one where children used to play or parents would walk to take care
of the kids; the second one, or the middle one, youth and grown
ups would walk by, and finally the main part was used by couples
in love since it was away form the uproar.
The Plaza has had several changes through years, but it has recovered
the image that it used to have at the beginning of the XIX century
with a central kiosk and its ironwork fence.
Municipal Palace
In 1846, Dr. Vicente Mendez, a Presbyterian, founded a well known
charity hospice which was located on Municipal Square and served
to the public until 1874. From 1892 and over more than 65 years
it was occupied as a barracks, making the necessary changes.
Campeche's Library
In 1989, the secretary of national defense allowed it to be used
as the City Hall pf Campeche, after a process of restoration and
rehabilitation. In 1962 ends the colonial cycle, and gives birth
to the modernism; the Municipal and Government Palaces (buildings)
were demolished, and now days the library is located, and costumes.
In the year 2000, when the reconstruction of Campeche’s Library
began, there were accomplished two of the main objectives: cultural
richness and technology focused on the community, and the recovery
of the original structure of the Plaza, recovering the building
that used to have during the colony by the politician powers, giving
today a recreational and didactic space for the youth to use.
Light And Sound Show Land Gate Tour Around The Pier
Built in 1732, the Land Gate is a lasting tourist attraction. As
the only original entrance to the city remaining from the defense
system, the Land Gate is one of the distinguished symbols of the
Campeche capital. The gate has preserved its imposing splendor with
its gunboats and casemates or houses, still intact, where the powder
was stored. Likewise you still find the embrasures, that is the
openings in the walls where soldiers discharged their rifles at
the enemy. There is also still the defenses constituted by a slope
in form of a triangle with a moat four meters wide and three meters
deep. This moat completely surrounded the structure which had no
water but spikes crossed with sharp points. Nowadays, a light and
sound show transports you back into the glorious times of the Land
Gate. The spectacle explains the city’s history, the rescue
of the French canon, the pirate attacks and the history of the Campeche
State Escutcheon. Folkloric prints of the escutcheon are handed
out at the end of the spectacle.
Schedule: Tuesday, Friday and Saturday 8.30 p.m.,
English and Spanish.
Churches
The following tour includes eight sites of interest, among them
churches in the center and the suburbs of Campeche.
Growing steadily from the end of the 17 th to the end of the 18
th century, the fortification wall, which had been intended from
colonial times on, marked with stones a division of the city. The
inner city is known as the Spanish Town, while the outer one is
formed by barrios where the majority of the native population lived.
Leading from each of the gates of the walled-in area, roads connected
the center to the outer precincts, some of them founded in the 15
th century such as Saint Francis, Saint Roman, while others were
registered in the 16 th century like Santa Ana Guadalupe and Santa
Lucia.
By the end of the 18 th century, Campeche was one of best-defended
places in the Americas after the city had amplified the fortifications
with redoubts and batteries as proposed by the Infantry Brigadier
and engineer Agustín Crame who arrived at the port around
1779.
From the beginning of the Spanish colonization, the Mayan inhabitants
of Campeche were kept apart from the Spanish colonizers. They were
settled half a league to the northeast of the main square at the
entrance to the convent of San Francisco. San Francisco is considered
the first place on Mexican territory where, in 1517, a mass was
celebrated. The Franciscan church was built in the middle of the
16 th century. The neighborhood of San Francisco is one of the primordial
ones outside the city walls, along with those of Guadalupe, Santa
Ana, and San Roman.
Campeche's Cathedral
Located in the Main Square on 55th street between 8th and 10th streets
downtown (Historical Center). In 1540 Francisco de Montejo´s
son ordered the construction of a small church in honor of the Conceptions
Virgin.
This construction was built with lime and pebble, with palm roof.
On October 22, 1760, the construction of the Jesus Nazareno Chapel
and the water side tower ended, the Española (the Spanish),
where the first public clock was placed, with a written stone shield,
which was destroyed after the Independence of Mexico. Between 1849
and 1850 the land side tower was built, known today as "La
Campechena", the beautiful clock placed on it in 1916
still works. The Chapel is located in the garden. On the right of
the church it’s located the bishopric building.
Guadalupe Church
Located in the neighborhood of Guadalupe on 47th Street, between
10B and Miguel Aleman Avenue, this old temple was the first to be
dedicated to the virgin Guadalupe, after the one in the Tepeyac.
In 1575 Pedro Martin of Bonilla began the construction of the church.
It was finished and consecrated in 1660.
Church Of San Roman
The church of San Roman is located on Bravo Street between 10B and
12th streets in front of San Roman’s park.
This church was constructed in 1563 and named in honor of San Roman
Martyr. At the beginning the mansion of San Roman was humble, as
well as the one of the Black Christ Inside, one can see the wooden
sculpture of the Black Christ, which was placed there by the people
of Campeche in 1565, ordered by Juan de Cano y Cocoa Gaitan, who
brought the image from Alvarado Veracruz, and was carved in Civitavecchia,
Italy. With the time the humble chapel grew, the ending of the church
with the proportions that now shows was around the XVII century.
Church Of San Francisco
Church of San Francisco is located on the corner of Miguel Aleman
Avenue and Mariano Escobedo street, in the neighborhood under the
same name, known before as "Campechuelo". Franciscans
missioners founded on the Indian ground of Kin Pech, one mile from
the Villa of San Francisco of Campeche, the first Franciscan convent
in 1546, place where the fist mass in Mexican territory took place
in 1517.
In this convent many historical facts took place, like giving
hospitality to Martin Cortes’ wife -son of the conqueror of
Mexico-, who gave birth to Jeronimo on October 31, 1562, baptized
by the Bishop Don Francisco de Toral, and having as Godfather Don
Francisco de Montejo.
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