Ciudad Colonial (Santo Domingo)

Ciudad Colonial

Map of Santo Domingo, 1873
Ciudad Colonial
Coordinates: 18°28′22.8″N 69°52′58.8″W / 18.473000°N 69.883000°W / 18.473000; -69.883000Coordinates: 18°28′22.8″N 69°52′58.8″W / 18.473000°N 69.883000°W / 18.473000; -69.883000
Country Dominican Republic
Province Distrito Nacional
City Santo Domingo
Type Cultural
Criteria ii, iv, vi
Designated 1990 (21st session)
Reference no. 526
Region Latin America and the Caribbean

Ciudad Colonial (Spanish for "Colonial City") is the historic central neighborhood of Santo Domingo and the oldest permanent European settlement of the New World. It has been declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.[1] It is colloquially known as "Zona Colonial" (Colonial Zone). The Ciudad Colonial is located on the west bank of the Ozama River, which bisects the city. It covers less than 5 square kilometers.

It is an important section of the city due to the high number of landmarks, including Alcázar de Colón, Fortaleza Ozama, Catedral Primada de America, and others.

History

The first settlement of what is now Santo Domingo was established by Bartholomew Columbus on the East bank of the Ozama River. After the 1502 hurricane that claimed Francisco de Bobadilla among its victims, however, the city was relocated on the West bank under the leadership of Nicolás de Ovando. Ovando and his successor Diego Colón presided over the first constructions of the Colonial City, many of which still exist today. Santo Domingo's fortifications were an important feature of the urban landscape. The defense wall (murralla) extended from the Ozama River to the Puerta del Conde, which was the entrance to the hinterland and the Western boundary of the city until the late 19th century.

The Spaniards used this settlement as the first point of influence in the Americas, from which they conquered other Caribbean islands and much of the American mainland. Santo Domingo was initially the political and cultural hub of Spanish presence in the new world, but after a few decades started to decline as the Spaniards focused their attention more on the mainland after conquering Mexico, Peru, and other regions of Latin America. Ciudad Colonial nevertheless remained an important historical site.[2]

Interior view of Santa María la Menor Cathedral

In 1655, the Ciudad Colonial was submitted to a siege led by the English officers William Penn and Robert Venables. The 1655 invasion was thwarted by Spanish troops commanded by the Captain General of the Colony, Don Bernardino de Meneses y Bracamonte, Count of Peñalva, to whom the Puerta del Conde ("Gate of the Count") is named after.[3] The defensive wall was modified during this episode. Prior to the invasion, there was a fort at the site where the Puerta del Conde is today, Fuerte San Genaro. It is believed that the modification that occurred after the siege involved the expansion of the wall to the fort, effectively creating a bastion, El Baluarte del Conde.

In the late 19th century and early 20th century, the city started to expand beyond its old boundaries but the Ciudad Colonial remained the main hub of activity until the Trujillo era. Trujillo also presided over the restoration of major monuments, including the Alcázar de Colón in the early 1950s.

Colonial City today

The Ciudad Colonial is now the main tourist attraction of Santo Domingo, even though the main sites of governmental and commercial activity are now in other parts of the city.

The central public space of the district is Parque Colon, a square that borders the 16th-century Cathedral and has a late-19th-century bronze statue of Christopher Columbus in its center. East of Parque Colón, the cobblestone Calle Las Damas is the New World's oldest paved street, dating from 1502. The street is bordered by many of the zone's more prominent landmarks, including Fortaleza Ozama, the site of major events in Dominican history; Casa de Bastidas, which now houses a children's museum; the French Embassy, in a building said to have been the house of Hernán Cortés; the Casa de Ovando, said to be the former residence of Governor Nicolás de Ovando and now a luxury hotel; the National Pantheon of the Dominican Republic; and the Museo de las Casas Reales, in the former governors' palace and Audiencia building.

Calle del Conde is a pedestrian-only street that includes several notable commercial buildings of the early 20th century and connects Parque Colon with the Puerta del Conde and Parque Independencia. Another traditional commercial district is the portion of Avenida Duarte just north of the Zona Colonial, which is currently undergoing a renovation plan that aims to make the area more appealing to tourists.[4]

On the north end of Calle Las Damas, the restored and expanded Plaza de España is bordered by Las Atarazanas (former naval yard, now a museum) and a number of small shops and restaurants. This area was one of the first commercial centers in the Americas, and is still a hub of activity today. The Alcázar de Colón, having once been the colonial palace of the Columbus family—beginning with his son Diego—is now a museum displaying period furniture and decorations. The building was originally built in 1510, and restored to its current appearance in 1952.

A 700 million US dollar investment was made in the Port of the Ozama river adjacent to the Ciudad Colonial aiming to turn Santo Domingo into a port of call for luxury cruise ships and including a privately owned marina. The project is being completed by Sans Soucí Ports S.A.[5] It is hoped that this ambitious project will boost the attraction of the Ciudad Colonial and the rest of Santo Domingo to international tourists.

Historical sites of Ciudad Colonial

Calle El Conde in the Zona Colonial.
Catedral Santa María La Menor, is the oldest cathedral built in the Americas
Gate de la Misericordia in the Zona Colonial.
Ciudad Colonial historical marker

In the Ciudad Colonial there are different places built by the Spaniards during the colonial era, which together form more than 300 historical sites in the area; these include various monuments of cultural and historical character, as well as houses of great figures of the society of that time, but it can not fail to mention important streets, such as the Las Damas street. Some of these are:

  • Antonio Montesino
  • Alcázar de Colón
  • Altar of the Nation
  • Basilica Cathedral of Santa María la Menor, First Cathedral of America
  • Casa de Bastidas, once home to the prominent Bastidas family, now a children's museum (Museo Infantil)
  • Casa del Cordón, perhaps the oldest still-erect stone building of the New World (1502) with a beautifully carved door frame in the form of a Franciscan monk's rope belt (cordón)
  • Casa of the Currency, with a door surrounded by five sculpted medallions in the early Renaissance style
  • Casa of the Dávila Family
  • Casa de Diego Caballero
  • Casa de Hernán Cortés, French Embassy since 1999 and thought to be the former house of Hernán Cortés
  • Casa of the Gargoyles
  • Casa of the Jesuits
  • Casa de Juan de Viloria
  • Casa de Juan Pablo Duarte
  • Casa del Sacramento
  • Casa de "El Tapado"
  • Casa del Tostado, now the Museum of the Dominican Family (Museo de la Familia Dominicana), the only civilian building in the New World with a period gothic window
  • Calle El Conde
  • Calle Las Damas
  • Calle Las Mercedes
  • Chapel of the Franciscan Third Order
  • Chapel de los Remedios
  • Chapel del Rosario
  • Chapel de San Andrés
  • Church and Convent of the Dominican
  • Church of the Dominican Third Order
  • Church Hospital San Lázaro
  • Church Las Mercedes
  • Church of Nuestra Señora de la Altagracia
  • Church Nuestra Señora del Carmen
  • Church Regina Angelorum
  • Church of Santa Bárbara
  • Church of San Miguel
  • Ceiba of Columbus
  • Colonial Sewer
  • Convento Santa Clara
  • Fort of El Angulo
  • Fort of La Carena
  • Fort of La Caridad
  • Fort of La Concepción
  • Fort of El Invencible
  • Fort of San Diego
  • Fort of San Gil
  • Fort of San José
  • Fortaleza Ozama
  • Gate de la Misericordia
  • Gate de las Reales Atarazanas
  • Gate de San Diego
  • Hermitage of San Antón
  • Hostal of Nicolás de Ovando, in a 16th-century patrician house
  • Independence Park
  • Modelo Market
  • Monasterio de San Francisco (Ruins of the Franciscan Monastery)
  • Museo de las Casas Reales
  • Museo de la Catedral
  • Museo de Juan Pablo Duarte, in the house where the Dominican Republic's national hero was born
  • Museo Memorial de la Resistencia Dominicana, honoring the struggles against the Trujillo and Balaguer regimes
  • Museo del Ambar
  • Museo Larimar
  • Museo Naval de las Atarazanas
  • Panteón Nacional, in a former Jesuit church
  • Parque Colón (Columbus Park)
  • Palace of the Captains
  • Palace Consistoral
  • Palace of Borgellá
  • Park Independencia
  • Plaza de España
  • Plaza Fray Bartolomé de las Casas
  • Plaza Duarte
  • Plaza María de Toledo
  • Plaza Montesinos
  • Plaza Pellerano Castro
  • Plazoleta de los Curas
  • Plazoleta Padre Billini
  • Puerta del Conde
  • Real and Pontifical University of Santiago de la Paz and Gorjón
  • Remains of Ancient Walls
  • Royal Shipyards (Reales Atarazanas)
  • Ruins of the Hospital San Nicolás de Bari, the New World's first hospital
  • Ruins of San Francisco
  • Stronghold El Conde
  • Sundial
  • Steps of Las Damas

References

  1. UNESCO – Justification for Inscription
  2. Santo Domingo; Fragmentos De Patria by Banreservas ISBN 99934-898-1-6
  3. "El Baluarte del Conde". DiarioLibre.com. 2010. Retrieved 2010-07-28.
  4. Inician asfaltado avenida DuarteDiario Libre Online - Spanish
  5. http://www.seaportspr.com/viewir.cgi?newsletter_id=96&article_id=3219

See also

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