Chapel of the Christ | |
---|---|
Capilla del Santo Cristo de la Salud | |
Alternative names | Capilla del Cristo |
General information | |
Architectural style | Baroque |
Town or city | Old San Juan |
Coordinates | 18°27′50.7″N66°07′03.9″W / 18.464083°N 66.117750°W |
Construction started | 1753 |
Estimated completion | 1780 |
Owner | Catholic Church [1] |
Technical details | |
Material | Masonry |
Floor count | 1 |
Design and construction | |
Engineer | Juan Francisco Mestre [2] |
Known for | Folklore, historic architecture |
Capilla del Cristo | |
Part of | Old San Juan Historic District (ID72001553) |
Designated NHLDCP | October 10, 1972 |
Capilla del Cristo (Chapel of Christ), also called Capilla del Santo Cristo de la Salud is a small chapel / museum located in the Old San Juan, Puerto Rico. [3] Built in the 18th century and saved from demolition in the 20th century and preserved, the structure has become a cultural icon of Puerto Rico. Most of the articles located at its altar are from 1753. [4] [1] Travel guides list Capilla del Cristo as one of the must-see places of Old San Juan. [5] [6] [7] [8]
The chapel with its belfry is located at the end of Calle del Cristo, a pedestrian walkway in the Old San Juan Historic District in the western section of San Juan Islet. [9] [10] Images of the chapel's facade are quite popular, and sometimes featured on the covers of Puerto Rican travel guides as well as on canvas prints, posters, and mug souvenirs. [11] [12] [13]
Inside the chapel are paintings by Jose Campeche and a painting by Jorge Sen called El Milagro (English: The Miracle). Its altar is made of silver and gold.
The St. Juan and St. Peter races, (Las carreras de S. Juan y S. Pedro) is an annual festival that's taken place on Cristo Street near Capilla del Cristo since before the mid 19th century. [14] [15]
Capilla del Cristo is located at the end of Calle del Cristo in the Historic District of Old San Juan near La Fortaleza, the official residence of the governor of Puerto Rico.
The basic structure of the small temple is mampostería ordinaria or stones held together by mortar or cement. It's a one-story-high, brick and stone structure with a curved belfry atop. Its gate was added in the 1940s for the protection of its interior. It has three oversized arches which open up to the Parque de Palomas, Tetuan Street, and Calle de Cristo de la Salud (street). Built in the Spanish Baroque style, Extremaduran Juan Francisco Mestre was the author of its design. [1] The building has been kept in good condition by the volunteer group Cristo de la Salud Brotherhood.
Religious folklore, particularly among Catholics, said that during a horse race on La Calle de Cristo, a young rider and his horse took a bad fall. The rider went over the precipice but was miraculously saved. [1]
The chapel was built where the fateful race was said to have occurred in honor of the young rider named Baltazar Montañez. [16] It has become both a tourist attraction as well as a stop for religious pilgrims, who occasionally leave a religious votive at the chapel. It is only open on Tuesdays. [17]
Different versions of the legend mention that either the rider or Tomas Mateo Pratts, an observer yelled for divine intervention. [4] [18] In a book about Puerto Rican legends, José Ramirez-Rivera writes that the horse was killed but Baltazar lived. Afterwards, permission was granted to build the Catholic chapel and festivals were held for years afterward to celebrate the miracle. [19]
In his writings about Baltazar, Puerto Rican historian Cayetano Coll y Toste described him as a slave who worked in the sugar cane fields of Puerto Rico but made no mention of the legendary accident. [20] [21] [22]
Rafael Cordero Santiago, better known as "Churumba", was the Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from 1989 to 2004. Many considered him as a synonym of Ponce, being baptized as "El León Mayor", an allusion to the city's official symbol, the lion. Mayor Cordero was a firm believer in the government decentralization process.
José Campeche y Jordán, is the first known Puerto Rican visual artist and considered by art critics as one of the best rococo artists in the Americas. Campeche y Jordán loved to use colors that referenced the landscape of Puerto Rico, as well as the social and political crème de la crème of colonial Puerto Rico.
Old San Juan is a historic district located at the "northwest triangle" of the islet of San Juan in San Juan. Its area roughly correlates to the Ballajá, Catedral, Marina, Mercado, San Cristóbal, and San Francisco sub-barrios (sub-districts) of barrio San Juan Antiguo in the municipality of San Juan, Puerto Rico. Old San Juan is the oldest settlement within Puerto Rico and the historic colonial district of the city of San Juan. This historic district is a National Historic Landmark District named Zona Histórica de San Juan and is listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places as the Old San Juan Historic District. Several historical buildings and structures, particularly La Fortaleza, the city walls, and El Morro and San Cristóbal castles, have been inscribed in the UNESCO World Heritage Site list since 1983. Historically the mixed-use commercial and residential real estate in the main streets of Calle Cristo and Calle Fortaleza from Calle Tanca to the Governor’s Mansion is the most valuable in the area and it has kept its value and increased steadily through several years despite the past economic turmoils.
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San Juan Islet is a 3-square-mile (7.8 km2) islet or small island on San Juan Bay in the Atlantic coast of northern Puerto Rico. Home to Old San Juan, it is the site of the oldest permanent European settlement in Puerto Rico (1521), and the second oldest European settlement in the West Indies after Santo Domingo (1496). Due to its strategic location in the Caribbean during the Spanish colonization of the Americas, it is home to a city wall and a number of militaristic buildings such as El Morro Castle. Today, it is also home to many of Puerto Rico's government buildings such as the territory's capitol building.
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The Catedral Basílica Metropolitana de San Juan Bautista, or in English, Metropolitan Cathedral Basilica of Saint John the Baptist, is the Catholic cathedral for the Archdiocese of San Juan de Puerto Rico. It is one of the oldest buildings in Old San Juan, the oldest cathedral in the United States, and the second-oldest cathedral in the Americas.
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Isabel Cuchí Coll was a journalist, writer and the Director of the Sociedad de Autores Puertorriqueños. She came from a family of Puerto Rican historians and politicians.
Centro Médico Episcopal San Lucas, commonly known as Hospital San Lucas, is a hospital in Ponce, Puerto Rico.
The following is a timeline of the history of the municipality of San Juan, Puerto Rico.
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El estar en la calle del Cristo, una de las mas favorecidas por los corredores, el tener á su frente una plaza, y el ser un lugar espacioso, de poca elevacion y seguro por estar murallado, dan á este sitio la preferencia...