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Quito Metropolitan Cathedral

The Quito Metropolitan Cathedral (Spanish: Catedral Metropolitana de Quito), is a Catholic cathedral in Quito, Ecuador. Located on the southwestern side of the Plaza de la Independencia (La Plaza Grande), it (and its predecessor building) served as a seat of the Diocese of Quito from 1545 until 1848 when it was elevated to Archdiocese. In 1995, it was elevated to the Cathedral of Ecuador, making it the seniormost Catholic church in the country.[2]

Quito Metropolitan Cathedral
Catedral Metropolitana de Quito (in Spanish)
Religion
AffiliationCatholic Church
ProvinceProvince of Quito
RiteRoman Rite
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusMetropolitan cathedral
LeadershipArchbishop Fausto Trávez Trávez, O.F.M.
Year consecrated1545
Location
LocationQuito, Ecuador
Geographic coordinates0°13′13″S 78°30′51″W / 0.22028°S 78.51417°W / -0.22028; -78.51417
Architecture
TypeChristian basilical church
StyleBaroque, Gothic-Mudéjar, Neoclassical
Groundbreaking1535[1]
Completed1799
Direction of façadeNorthwest
Website

History edit

Background edit

Soon after the founding of the city of San Francisco de Quito (6 December 1534), the entire southern side of the future Plaza Grande was given over to the Church. The first temporary building, raised in the same year by Father Juan Rodriguez — first pastor of the fledgling town — was of adobe with wood frame and thatch roof.[3][4] With the establishment of a parish of Quito (January 1545), a Bishop — García Díaz Arias — was named and reached the city on April 13 of the following year, along with Vicar General Pedro Rodríguez de Aguayo and plans to build a more eminent edifice.[5]

Construction edit

Construction began in 1535[1] and became cathedral with the creation of the Bishopric of Quito in 1545.[1] From 1562 to 1565, the building rose from its limestone foundations under the leadership of now Archdeacon Rodríguez de Aguayo, who served as acting bishop — Diaz Arias having died.[6] The architect was Antonio García.[7] Construction was of stone and the minga system (a local traditional practice of communal hauling, carving, and masonry) was utilized. Turning its flank broadside to the Plaza, the Church helped define its size and shape. The anomaly of the main entrance not fronting onto the Plaza is explained by the presence of a deep gorge (la quebrada de Sanguña or Zanguña) present at the time of construction, which precluded extending the building backwards (toward the southwest).[7] The site, adjacent to the ravine, had been selected for defensive purposes. The ravine was itself overtopped by the Iglesia de El Sagrario in the 17th century. The cathedral was consecrated by the second bishop of Quito — Fray Pedro de la Peña — in 1572.

17th century edit

 
Chapter house located in today's museum

After the eruption of Mount Pichincha, a local volcano which struck Quito in 1660, the damaged Cathedral was rebuilt by order of Bishop Alfonso de la Peña y Montenegro. Much of its internal decor was reworked and it is from this period that Miguel de Santiago's painting of the Virgin Mary (Dormition of the Virgin), formerly in the main choir reredos, is dated. At this time the building was also lengthened toward the west, the aisles were connected behind the choir, and an opening made for a side doorway to the square. The sacristy was also extended and the separate chapter house (known as La Iglesia de El Sagrario) was built. [8]

18th century edit

 
The Quito Metropolitan Cathedral in 1800, anonymous. Museum of the Bank of the Republic of Colombia[9]
 
Interior of the Quito Cathedral in 1860 by Henry Walter Bates

A second reconstruction came in 1755 owing to an earthquake that struck the city in that year, although the work was relatively minor as the damage had not been significant. A more significant earthquake struck in 1797 at which time major changes were made to the interior decoration including a new choir. According to tradition, the artist known as Caspicara (Manuel Chili) participated in this and incorporated paintings of his teachers Manuel de Samaniego and Bernardo Rodríguez, removing from the choir de Santiago's great 17th century canvas Dormition and replacing it with Samaniego's El Tránsito de la Virgen.[10] The present gilt wooden pulpit was re-surfaced at this time.

19th century edit

The cathedral was enhanced in 1797–1799, during the administration of the 20th President of the Real Audiencia Baron Héctor de Carondelet, by the addition of the Carondelet Arch, a work of Spanish military engineer Antonio García. The early 19th century also saw the replacement of the original 16th-century Mudéjar-style coffered ceiling with a copy. (This was itself replaced by another copy in the mid-20th century.) Earthquakes again damaged the building in 1858 and '59, this time deteriorating the belltower. It was restored in 1930.[11]

The catacombs of the Cathedral have served as a resting place for many important figures in Ecuador's history, such as independence leader Antonio José de Sucre (1795–1830), who is laid to rest in his own Mausoleum Chapel. On 13 January 1848 the Diocese of Quito was elevated to an archdiocese.

The small altar of Nuestra Señora de los Dolores (English: "Our Lady of Sorrows") has a plaque showing where President Gabriel García Moreno was shot in 1875. The murder of the Bishop of Quito, José Ignacio Checa y Barba, took place here during the mass of Good Friday, 30 March 1877, when he was poisoned with strychnine dissolved in the consecrated wine. The cathedral is also the burial place of several other presidents of the Republic, as well as of bishops and priests who died in the diocese.

20th century edit

Along with the early 19th century coffered ceilings, the transverse arches of the side naves were replaced in the mid-20th century. (The latter largely destroyed a curious mural painting which perhaps dated from the 17th century.) The tall campanario (belfry) was restored in 1930. In the wake of a 1987 earthquake, the municipality of Quito has structurally restored the deep foundations of the cathedral with micropile technology. In 1995 the Cathedral of Quito was elevated to the Cathedral of Ecuador, making it the seniormost Catholic church in the country. Restorations of the artium and the parapet were undertaken in 1997 and 1999 respectively.

Description edit

The cathedral is a white-painted monumental church with a single high belltower offset to the right of the main entrance. Built on a plan comprising three longitudinal naves surmounted by semi-ogival arches on square pillars, the basic spatial structure of the cathedral is typical of the 16th century. Based upon interior features — especially the details of the pillars, arches, and the carved and coffered ceiling — some experts assert that the cathedral should be characterized as Gothic-Mudéjar in style. It has Gothic features in the pointed arches of its naves, as well as in the ambulatory that surrounds the presbytery.[12]

Exterior edit

In a deviation from Spanish convention, the Cathedral actually has two main entrances: one at mid-nave that faces the Plaza and the other, with the belltower, at the northwest facade facing Calle Garcia Moreno. The axis has a southeast–northwest orientation due to the local topography: 16th century ravines prevented the main facade from facing the plaza, as is customary. The elaborate arched side-entrance and its semi-circular staircase facing the Plaza were an early 19th-century addition. Known as the Carondelet Arch, this portal is the main interface between Cathedral and square. The relationship is also underlined by a longitudinal stone parapet running the length of the building on that side (and decorated with spheres, pyramids, etc.) which preserves the difference in level between the Cathedral floor and that of the Plaza. Three attractive domes dressed in glazed green ceramic rise atop the transept, the high altar, and the Carondelet Arch. The transept dome is itself surmounted by an iron rooster weather vane, subject of several local legends. (These Neo-Classical domes, along with the neo-classical balustrade sculptures, various arches, Ionic pilasters, and the semi-circular Plaza staircase are modernizing 19th century additions.)

Plaques on the exterior walls of the Cathedral commemorate the fourth centenary (1934) of the founding of the city: first, the site is celebrated as the launching point of the Amazon expedition of Francisco de Orellana (1511–1546). ("It is the glory of Quito to have discovered the great River of the Amazons.") The next five name the five founders of the city. Then: "Quito, Patrimony of Humankind". Finally, "Cathedral, Main church construction, 16th century (1545–1572); Restoration, 17th–18th & 20th centuries".

Interior edit

Inside, the three naves are supported by pointed arches, which in turn are supported by pillars with square bases. The central nave has cedar panelling betraying Moorish influences. An extraordinary wooden coffered ceiling is supported by a golden frieze and beautiful paintings hang among the arches. The right nave opens into several chapels along the wall, each surmounted by domes with skylights. The chapels, in order, are: All Souls; Calvary; The Denial of Peter; Saint Peter, First Pope of the Church; The Sacred Family. Here also is a large wooden carved door, in a semi-circular arch, leading to La Iglesia de El Sagrario [Church of the Sanctuary], a 17th-century chapel attached to the main building[13] which is usually locked. (El Sagrario is accessed from outside the cathedral.)

Works by artists of the Quito School of Art, based in the nearby Church and Convent of St. Francis, adorn the interior of the cathedral. The side reredos, covered with goldleaf, were carved by the early masters of that school and in their niches are placed images of saints and martyrs. The large painting of the Assumption of the Virgin, from 1793,[1] located in the upper choir, is the work of Manuel de Samaniego, all in sky and blue. The altarpiece of the Chapel of All Souls has the notable sculptural group known as The Denial of St. Peter, attributed to Father Carlos. Other notable Cathedral artworks include the Altarpiece (Retablo) of Santa Ana (comprising images of Saint Joaquín, Saint Joseph, and Saint Ann and dating to the 18th century); Bernardo Rodríguez’s Cure of the Lame by Saint Peter; the 1734 sculpture Inmaculada of Bernardo de Legarda (the replica of which watches over Quito from the top of El Panecillo); also, the Adoration of the Three Magi and the Cure of the Crippled (a mural).

The high altar, said to be entirely of gold, shows both Baroque and Mudéjar patterns.

There area works of art by the colonials Miguel de Santiago, Manuel Chili "Capiscara" and Bernardo Rodríguez, who painted the fresco with biblical images in the central nave of the cathedral[1] Further down, following the curve of the apse, the row of cedar chairs of the Cabildo, dated 1794, painted and covered in gold by magnificent artisans.[1]

El Arrastre de Caudas edit

On the Wednesday of Holy Week, a liturgy is held called "el Arrastre de Caudas", roughly "the dragging of the trains", said to be unique to this cathedral. It derives from ancient Roman practice, in which a banner was passed over the body of a deceased general and then flown over his troops in a symbolic transfer of his qualities to them. The ceremony originated in Seville and passed to its suffragan dioceses of Quito and Lima, surviving only in Quito since the sixteenth century. The "cauda" is a black cloth several meters in length that sweeps the floor behind each of the cathedral canons as they process through the aisles of the cathedral as part of a larger procession of clerics including the archbishop carrying a relic of the True Cross. A second large cloth banner, black with a red cross, covers the altar and then is waved by the archbishop over the cathedral canons who have prostrated themselves after processing with their trains and then over the congregation.[14][15][16][17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Evelia Peralta; Rolando Moya Tasquer (2003). Quito: patrimonio cultural de la humanidad. MRE. pp. 37, 39. ISBN 9978300023.
  2. ^ Arquidiócesis de Quito y Primada del Ecuador (25 Jan 2013), La Arquidiócesis de Quito en la historia (1545–2009) 2012-01-20 at the Wayback Machine [In Spanish].
  3. ^ Peralta, Evelia (1991), Guía Arquitectónica de Quito; Editorial Fraga, Dirección de Planificación del Ilustre Municipio de Quito, pp 40–41.
  4. ^ Álvarez Moyano, Franco (26 Jan 2013), La catedral, iglesia y museo de arte religioso 2016-02-22 at the Wayback Machine, Agencia Pública de Noticias de Quito [In Spanish].
  5. ^ Álvarez Moyano, Op. cit..
  6. ^ Virgen del Buen Suceso, La Catedral de Quito, Obispos de Quito [In Spanish].
  7. ^ a b Peralta, Op. cit..
  8. ^ Ortíz Crespo, Alfonso (1993), “Some historical data on the Plaza Grande and the surrounding buildings” ; Historical Museum [a magazine of the Quito municipal archives], number 60, year 1993. [Ortíz Crespo was deputy director of the Cultural Centers of the Directorate for Education and Culture of the Municipality of San Francisco de Quito.]
  9. ^ "Fundación de Quito". calendarr.com.
  10. ^ Ortíz Crespo, Op. cit.
  11. ^ ÁLVAREZ MOYANO Franco. "La catedral, iglesia y museo de arte religioso". Agencia Pública de Noticias de Quito.
  12. ^ Architectural Guide of Quito – Evelia Peralta & Rolando Moya tasquer – Trama Ediciones – 2007.
  13. ^ Peralta, Op. cit.
  14. ^ "Arrastre de Caudas". Archivo Metropolitano de Historia de Quito (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  15. ^ "El Arrastre de Caudas, una ceremonia única en el mundo". Viajes y Fotografía (in Spanish). 4 April 2015. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  16. ^ "The Arrastre de Caudas". Viva Verde. 17 April 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  17. ^ Rosas, Evelin (29 March 2018). "Quito, el último lugar del mundo donde se realiza el Arrastre de Caudas". EFE Noticias (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 November 2020.

External links edit

  • on Quito's tourism website

quito, metropolitan, cathedral, spanish, catedral, metropolitana, quito, catholic, cathedral, quito, ecuador, located, southwestern, side, plaza, independencia, plaza, grande, predecessor, building, served, seat, diocese, quito, from, 1545, until, 1848, when, . The Quito Metropolitan Cathedral Spanish Catedral Metropolitana de Quito is a Catholic cathedral in Quito Ecuador Located on the southwestern side of the Plaza de la Independencia La Plaza Grande it and its predecessor building served as a seat of the Diocese of Quito from 1545 until 1848 when it was elevated to Archdiocese In 1995 it was elevated to the Cathedral of Ecuador making it the seniormost Catholic church in the country 2 Quito Metropolitan Cathedral Catedral Metropolitana de Quito in Spanish ReligionAffiliationCatholic ChurchProvinceProvince of QuitoRiteRoman RiteEcclesiastical or organizational statusMetropolitan cathedralLeadershipArchbishop Fausto Travez Travez O F M Year consecrated1545LocationLocationQuito EcuadorGeographic coordinates0 13 13 S 78 30 51 W 0 22028 S 78 51417 W 0 22028 78 51417ArchitectureTypeChristian basilical churchStyleBaroque Gothic Mudejar NeoclassicalGroundbreaking1535 1 Completed1799Direction of facadeNorthwestWebsiteWebsite Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Construction 1 3 17th century 1 4 18th century 1 5 19th century 1 6 20th century 2 Description 2 1 Exterior 2 2 Interior 3 El Arrastre de Caudas 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editBackground edit Soon after the founding of the city of San Francisco de Quito 6 December 1534 the entire southern side of the future Plaza Grande was given over to the Church The first temporary building raised in the same year by Father Juan Rodriguez first pastor of the fledgling town was of adobe with wood frame and thatch roof 3 4 With the establishment of a parish of Quito January 1545 a Bishop Garcia Diaz Arias was named and reached the city on April 13 of the following year along with Vicar General Pedro Rodriguez de Aguayo and plans to build a more eminent edifice 5 Construction edit Construction began in 1535 1 and became cathedral with the creation of the Bishopric of Quito in 1545 1 From 1562 to 1565 the building rose from its limestone foundations under the leadership of now Archdeacon Rodriguez de Aguayo who served as acting bishop Diaz Arias having died 6 The architect was Antonio Garcia 7 Construction was of stone and the minga system a local traditional practice of communal hauling carving and masonry was utilized Turning its flank broadside to the Plaza the Church helped define its size and shape The anomaly of the main entrance not fronting onto the Plaza is explained by the presence of a deep gorge la quebrada de Sanguna or Zanguna present at the time of construction which precluded extending the building backwards toward the southwest 7 The site adjacent to the ravine had been selected for defensive purposes The ravine was itself overtopped by the Iglesia de El Sagrario in the 17th century The cathedral was consecrated by the second bishop of Quito Fray Pedro de la Pena in 1572 17th century edit nbsp Chapter house located in today s museumAfter the eruption of Mount Pichincha a local volcano which struck Quito in 1660 the damaged Cathedral was rebuilt by order of Bishop Alfonso de la Pena y Montenegro Much of its internal decor was reworked and it is from this period that Miguel de Santiago s painting of the Virgin Mary Dormition of the Virgin formerly in the main choir reredos is dated At this time the building was also lengthened toward the west the aisles were connected behind the choir and an opening made for a side doorway to the square The sacristy was also extended and the separate chapter house known as La Iglesia de El Sagrario was built 8 18th century edit nbsp The Quito Metropolitan Cathedral in 1800 anonymous Museum of the Bank of the Republic of Colombia 9 nbsp Interior of the Quito Cathedral in 1860 by Henry Walter BatesA second reconstruction came in 1755 owing to an earthquake that struck the city in that year although the work was relatively minor as the damage had not been significant A more significant earthquake struck in 1797 at which time major changes were made to the interior decoration including a new choir According to tradition the artist known as Caspicara Manuel Chili participated in this and incorporated paintings of his teachers Manuel de Samaniego and Bernardo Rodriguez removing from the choir de Santiago s great 17th century canvas Dormition and replacing it with Samaniego s El Transito de la Virgen 10 The present gilt wooden pulpit was re surfaced at this time 19th century edit The cathedral was enhanced in 1797 1799 during the administration of the 20th President of the Real Audiencia Baron Hector de Carondelet by the addition of the Carondelet Arch a work of Spanish military engineer Antonio Garcia The early 19th century also saw the replacement of the original 16th century Mudejar style coffered ceiling with a copy This was itself replaced by another copy in the mid 20th century Earthquakes again damaged the building in 1858 and 59 this time deteriorating the belltower It was restored in 1930 11 The catacombs of the Cathedral have served as a resting place for many important figures in Ecuador s history such as independence leader Antonio Jose de Sucre 1795 1830 who is laid to rest in his own Mausoleum Chapel On 13 January 1848 the Diocese of Quito was elevated to an archdiocese The small altar of Nuestra Senora de los Dolores English Our Lady of Sorrows has a plaque showing where President Gabriel Garcia Moreno was shot in 1875 The murder of the Bishop of Quito Jose Ignacio Checa y Barba took place here during the mass of Good Friday 30 March 1877 when he was poisoned with strychnine dissolved in the consecrated wine The cathedral is also the burial place of several other presidents of the Republic as well as of bishops and priests who died in the diocese 20th century edit Along with the early 19th century coffered ceilings the transverse arches of the side naves were replaced in the mid 20th century The latter largely destroyed a curious mural painting which perhaps dated from the 17th century The tall campanario belfry was restored in 1930 In the wake of a 1987 earthquake the municipality of Quito has structurally restored the deep foundations of the cathedral with micropile technology In 1995 the Cathedral of Quito was elevated to the Cathedral of Ecuador making it the seniormost Catholic church in the country Restorations of the artium and the parapet were undertaken in 1997 and 1999 respectively Description editThe cathedral is a white painted monumental church with a single high belltower offset to the right of the main entrance Built on a plan comprising three longitudinal naves surmounted by semi ogival arches on square pillars the basic spatial structure of the cathedral is typical of the 16th century Based upon interior features especially the details of the pillars arches and the carved and coffered ceiling some experts assert that the cathedral should be characterized as Gothic Mudejar in style It has Gothic features in the pointed arches of its naves as well as in the ambulatory that surrounds the presbytery 12 Exterior edit In a deviation from Spanish convention the Cathedral actually has two main entrances one at mid nave that faces the Plaza and the other with the belltower at the northwest facade facing Calle Garcia Moreno The axis has a southeast northwest orientation due to the local topography 16th century ravines prevented the main facade from facing the plaza as is customary The elaborate arched side entrance and its semi circular staircase facing the Plaza were an early 19th century addition Known as the Carondelet Arch this portal is the main interface between Cathedral and square The relationship is also underlined by a longitudinal stone parapet running the length of the building on that side and decorated with spheres pyramids etc which preserves the difference in level between the Cathedral floor and that of the Plaza Three attractive domes dressed in glazed green ceramic rise atop the transept the high altar and the Carondelet Arch The transept dome is itself surmounted by an iron rooster weather vane subject of several local legends These Neo Classical domes along with the neo classical balustrade sculptures various arches Ionic pilasters and the semi circular Plaza staircase are modernizing 19th century additions Plaques on the exterior walls of the Cathedral commemorate the fourth centenary 1934 of the founding of the city first the site is celebrated as the launching point of the Amazon expedition of Francisco de Orellana 1511 1546 It is the glory of Quito to have discovered the great River of the Amazons The next five name the five founders of the city Then Quito Patrimony of Humankind Finally Cathedral Main church construction 16th century 1545 1572 Restoration 17th 18th amp 20th centuries nbsp Bell tower nbsp Roof domes lantern roofs and bell tower nbsp The northeast elevation of the cathedral on the Plaza is dominated by the Arch of Carondelet entrance built in 1797 and its staircase nbsp Cathedral s museumInterior edit Inside the three naves are supported by pointed arches which in turn are supported by pillars with square bases The central nave has cedar panelling betraying Moorish influences An extraordinary wooden coffered ceiling is supported by a golden frieze and beautiful paintings hang among the arches The right nave opens into several chapels along the wall each surmounted by domes with skylights The chapels in order are All Souls Calvary The Denial of Peter Saint Peter First Pope of the Church The Sacred Family Here also is a large wooden carved door in a semi circular arch leading to La Iglesia de El Sagrario Church of the Sanctuary a 17th century chapel attached to the main building 13 which is usually locked El Sagrario is accessed from outside the cathedral Works by artists of the Quito School of Art based in the nearby Church and Convent of St Francis adorn the interior of the cathedral The side reredos covered with goldleaf were carved by the early masters of that school and in their niches are placed images of saints and martyrs The large painting of the Assumption of the Virgin from 1793 1 located in the upper choir is the work of Manuel de Samaniego all in sky and blue The altarpiece of the Chapel of All Souls has the notable sculptural group known as The Denial of St Peter attributed to Father Carlos Other notable Cathedral artworks include the Altarpiece Retablo of Santa Ana comprising images of Saint Joaquin Saint Joseph and Saint Ann and dating to the 18th century Bernardo Rodriguez s Cure of the Lame by Saint Peter the 1734 sculpture Inmaculada of Bernardo de Legarda the replica of which watches over Quito from the top of El Panecillo also the Adoration of the Three Magi and the Cure of the Crippled a mural The high altar said to be entirely of gold shows both Baroque and Mudejar patterns There area works of art by the colonials Miguel de Santiago Manuel Chili Capiscara and Bernardo Rodriguez who painted the fresco with biblical images in the central nave of the cathedral 1 Further down following the curve of the apse the row of cedar chairs of the Cabildo dated 1794 painted and covered in gold by magnificent artisans 1 nbsp View of the main nave from the altar pipe organ from the 18th century nbsp 17th century Mudejar artesonado of the main nave nbsp The 18th century Altarpiece of Santa Ana nbsp Archiepiscopal library nbsp Altar of the Our Lady of Sorrows nbsp Pulpit nbsp A colonial carved door nbsp Colonial Quito School painting in the cathedral museumEl Arrastre de Caudas editOn the Wednesday of Holy Week a liturgy is held called el Arrastre de Caudas roughly the dragging of the trains said to be unique to this cathedral It derives from ancient Roman practice in which a banner was passed over the body of a deceased general and then flown over his troops in a symbolic transfer of his qualities to them The ceremony originated in Seville and passed to its suffragan dioceses of Quito and Lima surviving only in Quito since the sixteenth century The cauda is a black cloth several meters in length that sweeps the floor behind each of the cathedral canons as they process through the aisles of the cathedral as part of a larger procession of clerics including the archbishop carrying a relic of the True Cross A second large cloth banner black with a red cross covers the altar and then is waved by the archbishop over the cathedral canons who have prostrated themselves after processing with their trains and then over the congregation 14 15 16 17 See also editList of buildings in QuitoReferences edit a b c d e f Evelia Peralta Rolando Moya Tasquer 2003 Quito patrimonio cultural de la humanidad MRE pp 37 39 ISBN 9978300023 Arquidiocesis de Quito y Primada del Ecuador 25 Jan 2013 La Arquidiocesis de Quito en la historia 1545 2009 Archived 2012 01 20 at the Wayback Machine In Spanish Peralta Evelia 1991 Guia Arquitectonica de Quito Editorial Fraga Direccion de Planificacion del Ilustre Municipio de Quito pp 40 41 Alvarez Moyano Franco 26 Jan 2013 La catedral iglesia y museo de arte religioso Archived 2016 02 22 at the Wayback Machine Agencia Publica de Noticias de Quito In Spanish Alvarez Moyano Op cit Virgen del Buen Suceso La Catedral de Quito Obispos de Quito In Spanish a b Peralta Op cit Ortiz Crespo Alfonso 1993 Some historical data on the Plaza Grande and the surrounding buildings Historical Museum a magazine of the Quito municipal archives number 60 year 1993 Ortiz Crespo was deputy director of the Cultural Centers of the Directorate for Education and Culture of the Municipality of San Francisco de Quito Fundacion de Quito calendarr com Ortiz Crespo Op cit ALVAREZ MOYANO Franco La catedral iglesia y museo de arte religioso Agencia Publica de Noticias de Quito Architectural Guide of Quito Evelia Peralta amp Rolando Moya tasquer Trama Ediciones 2007 Peralta Op cit Arrastre de Caudas Archivo Metropolitano de Historia de Quito in Spanish Retrieved 18 November 2020 El Arrastre de Caudas una ceremonia unica en el mundo Viajes y Fotografia in Spanish 4 April 2015 Retrieved 18 November 2020 The Arrastre de Caudas Viva Verde 17 April 2019 Retrieved 18 November 2020 Rosas Evelin 29 March 2018 Quito el ultimo lugar del mundo donde se realiza el Arrastre de Caudas EFE Noticias in Spanish Retrieved 18 November 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Catedral Metropolitana Quito Webpage on Quito s tourism website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quito Metropolitan Cathedral amp oldid 1203963628, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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