Experts say that you cannot know Zacatecas,
or any of the other Mexican colonial cities, if
you have not “lived” them. And to “live” them
means to sing and dance to the cadence of
the barreteros, a metallic and rhythmic sound
produced by the couples of miners that
worked inside the entrails of the mountains,
one sustaining the barreta (a small iron bar)
and the other one hitting it with the marro
(mallet). These rhythmic sounds, that go
back to the golden era of this central zone of
Mexico, in the 17th Century, have given rise
to one of the most traditional festivals where
many cultures live together.
In Zacatecas they are called andanzas
or tamborazo, in Guanajuato they are
callejoneadas and in Oaxaca tuna de
Antequera, but basically they are the same:
a festive itinerary centered around a band of
eight to ten musicians, which takes place at
night through streets and alleys of the center
of town and where songs are combined
with music and dances of different types,
with frequent stops to taste a shot of miner’s
mezcal. So nothing hinders the enjoyment of
the revelers, a small jar is hung from the neck
where the liquor is poured into at each one of
the frequent stops.
At its origins, the tamborazo was a man’s
only activity and only the miners participated
on Saturday afternoons after receiving their
weekly journey’s pay. Their wives had
instructions to go find them in jail if they did not
get home on time. The wife used the money
available to cover the weekly food expenses
and to pay for the fine. After being released
from jail, the miner would pawn his best suit
to replace the money used to pay the fine.
Come next Saturday, he would rescue his suit
from the pawnshop and the festival through
the streets would begin anew.
Nowadays, little of it remains. The majority of
the mines have closed and the miners have
emigrated and looked for other jobs, but the
tradition and the “fiesta” live on. And the setting
for its performance is still intact. Zacatecas,
which, as well as Guanajuato, Querétaro and
Morelia, is part of UNESCO’s World Heritage,
is a perfect symbiosis between Spanish city
and native character, of Creole beauty and
mestizo pride.
The Spaniards arrived here in 1531, although their development
started fifteen years later when important silver deposits where found.
In 1585 Phillip II granted the city the title of “Ciudad de Nuestra
Señora de los Zacatecas” (City of our Lady of the Zacatecans), and
soon after declared it noble and granted it a coat of arms. During
the colonial time various begging orders established themselves
there (Franciscans, Augustinians, Dominicans, Jesuits, juaninos and
mercedarios), and constructed great monasteries and temples that
came to compete in luxury and riches with the regal mansions of
the rich “silver aristocrats”.
A marvelous irregularity
The religious and lay heritage of its times of splendor can be felt
when walking its streets, paths and squares. Like all mining cities
that grew in those areas where metal deposits were found, frequently
in mountainous or hilly zones, Zacatecas, like Taxco or Guanajuato,
lacks the grid organization of most cities, but in exchange has hugely
attractive vistas and variety, full of surprises. Its irregularity becomes
an esthetic advantage, undoubtedly.
Pink stone constructions that paint the sun filled squares in this color,
the iron filigree of its balconies, capricious alleys and straight stone
paved streets polished by time, outline its stately face. The gorge
in which the city grows generates a fabric of irregular streets, which
suddenly widen to form a square, like the main square, whose limits
were never ascertained by its founders, mixed into the widened street,
where its more important buildings are located. There is the cathedral,
whose ornamented façade renders speechless those who see it for
the first time. This building was started around 1730 as a parish and
its design is attributed to the architect Domingo Ximénez Hernández.
The grand façade was finished in 1745, and it rises like a giant
altarpiece fitted between the bases of the towers. The ornamental
columns are profusely worked, in a strong relief (sometimes 10 cm
deep). Thirteen niches lodge Christ and the twelve apostles. Other
iconographic elements represent the Immaculate Conception, the
Trinity and the Eucharist, symbolized by bunches of grapes and angels
with musical instruments.
The cathedral is witness to the prosperity of Zacatecan mining in
the mid 17th Century, and the majority of the important colonial
buildings in the city date from this period. Another building that merits
mentioning is the San Agustín temple, whose side entrance shows
two enormous stipites (upside down truncated pyramids) in tight
churrigueresco style. The temple of Santo Domingo dates from the
17th Century, and keeps in its interior eight beautiful altarpieces of
gold covered wood. The Calderón Theatre, which was built in the
19th Century, exhibits a sober neo-classical style, and still has inside
decorations made of cast iron and sculpted precious woods, typical
of the golden era of the city.
Zacatecas has several excellent museums: the Pedro Coronel
Museum, lodged in the old college of San Luis Gonzaga, has
the best collection of universal art pieces formed by the famous
Zacatecan painter Pedro Coronel; the Francisco Goitia Museum;
the Rafael Coronel Museum that shows an extensive collection of
5,000 masks from primitive Mexican, African and Australian peoples,
as well as architectural drawings made by Diego Rivera; in addition,
a retrospective exhibition of the work of Rafael Coronel.
To visit the interior of the mine El Edén is a pleasing experience. A little
train with narrow carriages, similar to the ones that in the Hispanic era
transported the precious minerals, takes the visitors through narrow
and difficult places from where it is possible to admire the brilliant
colors of the metal veins. Upon exiting, one can take the cable car that
crosses the air over the city until it reaches the Cerro de la Bufa.
Colonial Treasures
Zacatecas can also be the starting point for a wide itinerary through the Mexican colonial treasures,
a net of cities stemming from the Spanish conquest and that today are authentic architectural jewels,
many declared as part of the World Heritage by UNIESCO. In the first ten years of the Spanish
conquest, the following cities were founded: Mexico City (1521), Oaxaca (1521), Puebla (1531),
Villa Real, nowadays San Cristóbal de las Casas (1528), Querétaro (1532), Pátzcuaro (1534),
Valladolid, nowadays Morelia (1541) and Mérida (1542). Other establishments resulted from the
new economic order; in this manner the mining cities were born, like Taxco (1534), Zacatecas
(1548) and Guanajuato (1557). The coastal cities, like Veracruz and Campeche, were natural
consequences of the need for maritime communication with Spain, and of Spain with the Orient,
through the Pacific to the Philippines, which implied developing ports, like Acapulco.
One of the cities closest to Zacatecas is Aguascalientes, founded in 1575 to give shelter, refuge
and protection to the travelers during their transit through the old pathways of the Silver Route.
A walk through the historic center of the city lets you discover beautiful architectural jewels and
numerous historical vestiges that reflect its valuable past. For example, the Basílica Cathedral in
salomonic baroque style, where the Sanctuary Chapel and its paintings collection stand out. As
its name indicates, the city also offers the prestigious thermal baths.
Not very far is Guanajuato, whose name means “frog hill”, and was founded in 1552. It is located
in a narrow valley protected by arid mountains. Under a transparent and blue sky, its houses,
streets and hidden places are molded to its rough topography. The city grew a little at random,
with balconies, squares and alleys here
and there that after a while met at the
markets and churches. Guanajuato is a
beautiful and welcoming city, the design
of its streets forms surprising little places
like the famous alley of Kiss, which owes
its name to a romantic colonial legend.
Two buildings were you would see the
churrigueresco style, are the Jesuit
temples of San Diego and San Cayetano,
from the 18th Century. On the other hand,
notable buildings stand out like the Juárez
Theater, the Alhondiga de Granaditas, the
University and the mansion of the Conde
Rul, amongst others.
The neighboring state is Querétaro, whose
capital, of the same name, reached an
important economic prosperity in the
18th Century, which has given the city its
characteristic profile that lasts to this day: churches, convents, squares that were cut in a pink, soft and smooth
stone. One of the most admirable lay works of America, built in the
18th Century, is the imposing aqueduct which is 1,280 m long, with
monumental arches that reach up to 23 m in height. Some buildings
are real colonial jewels, among the more notable of churrigueresco
art are: the Augustinian convent, the temple and convent of San
Francisco, the churches of Santo Domingo, of the Congregation,
of Santa Clara and of Santa Rosa; the building of the present
Government Palace, built in the 18th Century, whose façade shows
railings of cast iron. Fresh gardens and public parks, like the Hidalgo
Walk and the Independence Plaza, invite to rest contemplating the
beautiful architecture surrounding them.
Morelia, capital of the state of Michoacán, is a city of singular beauty,
with a pleasing student environment and magnificent colonial
constructions. Among the various buildings worth mentioning is the
Cathedral in baroque style, with a façade in the shape of a triptych,
a lesson in stately beauty; the Government Palace, which dates from
the 18th Century; the Colegio de San Nicolás de Hidalgo, whose
founder was Vasco de Quiroga; and the Clavijero Palace, an old Jesuit
convent, among others. Several museums shelter treasures from the
viceroyalty era; among them stand out the Colonial Arte Museum,
which shows a collection of Christ statues made from corn paste,
from the 16th and 19th Centuries, and the Michoacan Museum, that
exhibits archeological pieces.
The quick itinerary through Mexican colonial treasures ends in San Luis
de Potosi, called the “city of the gardens” for its numerous squares;
the state capital extends through an arid plain, with a checkered street
design, stone buildings and sober houses with balconies and noble
proportions. Among its abundant monuments, the city shelters one
of the more valuable examples of the churrigueresco art: the chapel
of Aránzazu from the ex Franciscan convent, today occupied by the
Potosino Regional Museum. In the Plaza Mayor rises the Cathedral
of San Luis Rey, which dates to the 17th Century, on its façade stand
out the figures of the twelve apostles sculpted in stone, a copy of the
ones made by Bernini in the Basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome. One
of the more beautiful squares in San Luis houses the temple of the ex
convent of Carmen, built in the mid 18th Century, whose entrance is
in churrigueresco baroque style. The temple of San Francisco, built
in the 17th Century, presents a capricious baroque façade in which
several Franciscan saint |