Already in the Pre Columbine Era, the legendary city of Tomebamba was considered one of the Inca Empire’s most beautiful cities. Nowadays, the territory now called Cuenca has still the same fame. Declared a World Heritage City by UNESCO in 1998, this historical World Museum of artists and intellectuals is evidently a special place whose uniqueness can be seen in every little detail since you arrive there.
Cuenca is located in the Ecuadorian Austro Region, 2500m (8200feet) above the sea level. It is a city of peace and harmony: unlike most cities, it is not full of traffic, stress and pollution. It has a perfect climate and 4 rivers run through it, completing a landscape of customs, handcrafts and cultures.
A tour to the city can be divided into two parts: the Colonial and the Modern Cuenca. The first consists of the patrimonial treasure of the city’s churches, parks, colonial houses and cobbled streets: a historical world where the past and present cultures coexist. Among the numerous churches of the area, the cathedral stands out with its two turquoise domes as a monument of great beauty that reminds us of a past of conquistadors and conquered people. When you walk through the streets of this section, you find the millenary indigenous culture and the modern occidental culture joined together by the joy and respect of the local people.
To complement the tour, visiting the colorful flower market found next to the cathedral; watching the painters doing their art works in the surroundings of the Calderón Park; or buying a handmade toquilla straw hat in one of the handcraft stores are some things you can do in that area of the city.
A little bit further to the East is found the San Sebastián Square, where you can visit the Museum of Local Modern Art, a place that gathers together the most outstanding artistic expressions of the modern Cuenca spirit.
Walking to the South, you will find the Tomebamba: a river that runs across Cuenca from West to South where you can have a tour along its waters to discover the city. As you watch the rocks crashing with the endless water movements and the centuries-old houses built on the river shores, you will be able to see the customs of the country’s ancestors that remain alive in the people gathered on the shore to wash their clothes.
Cuenca is also a strategic spot to visit other places in the South of the Andes. In its surroundings are found destinations such as the Cajas National Park, the Andes’ most narrow area with unique landscapes; the Ingapirca ruins, an Incan secret found 1200 miles North from Machu Picchu; and the Santa Bárbara Corridor, a road of endless traditions.
Cuenca can be described as the city that found the way to receive modernity and protect passionately its artistic and cultural identity at the same time. It is difficult to know and describe what the mystery of its beauty really is, although it is very evident that such mystery produces genuine feelings. The city of Cuenca is an example of total conservation of the material and the spiritual heritage, based in a profound respect for the past.
Photo: ironmanixs
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