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Cracks due to differential settlement
Introduction
The Metropolitan Cathedral of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary into the Heavens of Mexico City (also, Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary of Mexico or Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico City) is a church "Church (building)") cathedral of Catholic Christian worship, seat of the Primate archdiocese of Mexico. It is located on the north side of the Plaza de la Constitución "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)") in the historic center of Mexico City, in the Cuauhtémoc district "Cuauhtémoc (Mexico City)"). Being part of the aforementioned architectural complex in that area of the city, it has consequently been a World Heritage Site since 1987.
Founded in 1570 as a replacement for the old cathedral built in 1524; The first stone was laid in 1571, however the works began formally in 1573, completed inside in 1667 and outside in 1813. It was erected according to the plans of the Spanish architect Claudio de Arciniega, who was inspired by Spanish cathedrals (particularly in the Jaén Cathedral "Cathedral of the Assumption (Jaén)")); Both buildings were located on the esplanade of the old ceremonial center of Tenochtitlán, in front of the Templo Mayor (and not on it, as was erroneously disclosed until the location of the archaeological ruins in 1978).[5] Built on an area of at least two hectares, it occupies an area of 7,752 square meters;[6] the approximate measurements of this temple are 61 meters wide by 128 meters long and a height of 67 meters to the tip. of the towers. It is one of the most outstanding works of Latin American architecture.[7][8][9].
Due to the long time it took to build it, just under 250 years, practically all the main architects, painters, sculptors, gilders and other visual artists of the viceroyalty worked at some point on the construction of the complex. The extensive period of the works allowed the various architectural styles that were current and in vogue in those centuries to be integrated into it: Gothic, Baroque, Churrigueresque and Neoclassical, among others; something similar to what happened inside with the different ornaments, paintings, sculptures and furniture.[10][11][12].
Its realization represented a point of social cohesion, since ecclesiastical and government authorities, different brotherhoods, religious brotherhoods and multiple generations of social groups participated.[13]
As a consequence of the influence of the Catholic Church in public life, the property became intertwined with events of historical significance for the societies of New Spain and independent Mexico. To name a few, there is the coronation of Agustín de Iturbide and Ana María Huarte as emperors of Mexico by the president of Congress; the protection of the funeral remains of the aforementioned monarch; the burial until 1925 of several of the heroes of independence such as Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla and José María Morelos y Pavón; the disputes between liberals and conservatives caused by the separation of church and state in the Reformation; the closing of the property during the days of the Cristero War; the visits of Popes John Paul II (January 26, 1979) and Francis "Francis (Pope)") (February 13, 2016); and the celebrations of the bicentennial of independence, among others.[14].
Cracks due to differential settlement
Introduction
The Metropolitan Cathedral of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary into the Heavens of Mexico City (also, Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary of Mexico or Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico City) is a church "Church (building)") cathedral of Catholic Christian worship, seat of the Primate archdiocese of Mexico. It is located on the north side of the Plaza de la Constitución "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)") in the historic center of Mexico City, in the Cuauhtémoc district "Cuauhtémoc (Mexico City)"). Being part of the aforementioned architectural complex in that area of the city, it has consequently been a World Heritage Site since 1987.
Founded in 1570 as a replacement for the old cathedral built in 1524; The first stone was laid in 1571, however the works began formally in 1573, completed inside in 1667 and outside in 1813. It was erected according to the plans of the Spanish architect Claudio de Arciniega, who was inspired by Spanish cathedrals (particularly in the Jaén Cathedral "Cathedral of the Assumption (Jaén)")); Both buildings were located on the esplanade of the old ceremonial center of Tenochtitlán, in front of the Templo Mayor (and not on it, as was erroneously disclosed until the location of the archaeological ruins in 1978).[5] Built on an area of at least two hectares, it occupies an area of 7,752 square meters;[6] the approximate measurements of this temple are 61 meters wide by 128 meters long and a height of 67 meters to the tip. of the towers. It is one of the most outstanding works of Latin American architecture.[7][8][9].
Due to the long time it took to build it, just under 250 years, practically all the main architects, painters, sculptors, gilders and other visual artists of the viceroyalty worked at some point on the construction of the complex. The extensive period of the works allowed the various architectural styles that were current and in vogue in those centuries to be integrated into it: Gothic, Baroque, Churrigueresque and Neoclassical, among others; something similar to what happened inside with the different ornaments, paintings, sculptures and furniture.[10][11][12].
Its realization represented a point of social cohesion, since ecclesiastical and government authorities, different brotherhoods, religious brotherhoods and multiple generations of social groups participated.[13]
The cathedral has four facades in which open doorways flanked by columns and statues. It has a basilica-type architectural plan with five naves and a transept, which are made up of 51 vaults, 74 arches and 40 columns; There are two towers currently containing 35 bells. Inside, two large altars stand out, the sacristy and the choir. There are sixteen chapels dedicated to different saints, whose construction was sponsored by different religious brotherhoods; These are richly decorated with altars, altarpieces, paintings, furniture and sculptures. In the cathedral choir there are two of the largest eighteenth-century organs on the continent. Under the building there is a crypt in which the remains of some archbishops of Mexico rest. Next to the cathedral is the tabernacle, inside which the baptistery is located.
History
16th century
After the Spanish conquest of the Mexica empire was concluded, and after the return of Hernán Cortés from the exploration of modern-day Honduras, the conquerors decided to build a church in the place where the Templo Mayor of the city of Tenochtitlán was located; In this way they would consolidate Spanish power over the newly conquered territory. After considering the urban layout made by the Spanish from a central plaza, the area chosen for the church corresponded to the lots that closed the old Mexica complex to the north.[15][16][17][18].
The architect Martín de Sepúlveda") was the first director of the project that began in 1524 and was completed in 1532, this in the time of Juan de Zumárraga, the first bishop of the then newly founded diocese of Mexico (1530). The old cathedral was located in the northwest part of what is the current Plaza de la Constitución or Zócalo "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)"). The complexity of the lake area required enormous works. of engineering to settle the building, which, in addition to the long distances, led to the decision to build with some of the remains of the Mexica constructions, made of light and resistant materials, especially the Templo Mayor.
It had three naves separated by Tuscan columns, the central ceiling featured intricate engravings made by Juan Salcedo Espinosa") and gilded by Francisco de Zumaya") and Andrés de la Concha. The main door was probably in the Renaissance style. The choir had 48 seats made by hand by Adrián Suster and Juan Montaño in ayacahuite wood. For construction, they used stones from the destroyed temple of the god Huitzilopochtli, god of war and main deity of the Mexica. Despite everything, this temple was soon considered insufficient for the growing importance of the capital of the viceroyalty of New Spain. This first church was elevated to a cathedral by King Charles I of Spain and Pope Clement VII "Clement VII (pope)") according to the bull of September 9, 1534 and, later, named metropolitan by Paul III in 1547.[19][20].
This small, austere church, derided by all the chroniclers of the time, who judged it unworthy of such a large and famous city, provided its services for many years. By virtue of the importance achieved by the city, elevated since 1545 to the rank of archdiocese by Pope Paul III, it was soon ordered that a new temple be built, of proportional sumptuousness to the greatness of the growing viceroyalty, however this new factory encountered so many obstacles to its beginning, with so many difficulties for its continuation, that the old temple saw sumptuous colonial ceremonies pass in its narrow naves; and only when the fact that motivated them was of great importance, another church was used, such as that of San Francisco "Temple and ex-convent of San Francisco (Mexico City)"), to build the mound for the funeral honors of Charles V in its enormous chapel of San José de los Indios.
Given that the completion of the new church would take a long time, in the year 1584 it was decided to completely repair the old cathedral, which would be almost ruined, to celebrate the third New Spain Council there.
The church, with a basilica plan, was little longer than the front of the new cathedral; Its three naves did not reach 30 meters wide, separated by two dances of octagonal pillars of the Tuscan order; They were roofed, the central one with a half-scissor truss, those on the sides with horizontal beams. In addition to the Puerta del Perdón, there was another call of the Canons, and perhaps a third that overlooked the marquis' square.[21].
It remained in use until 1625 when it was demolished to speed up work on the new cathedral; The main façade was moved to the church of Santa Teresa la Antigua, where it remained until 1691, the year in which the architect Cristóbal de Medina was commissioned to remodel the façade of said church.[22] However, the authorities decided to preserve the old Renaissance façade that had belonged to the Cathedral, so the architect Juan Durán was hired to dismantle the façade, stone by stone, and assemble it on the west façade of the church of the Jesús Nazareno hospital. "Church of Jesus Nazareno (Mexico City)"); where it is currently located, as one of the few vestiges of the century that remain in the city.[23][24].
Since 1544, official documents had been published requesting the replacement of the austere cathedral of Mexico City with a larger one, without this going beyond an intention. Finally, on August 28, 1552, the document was issued that regulated and indicated the steps to follow for the construction project. In that same year, an agreement was reached whereby the cost of the new cathedral would be shared by the Spanish Crown, the commanders, and the indigenous people under the direct authority of the archbishop of New Spain.[26] Initial plans for the founding of the new cathedral began in 1562; Within the project for the construction of the work, the then archbishop Alonso de Montúfar would have proposed a monumental construction composed of seven naves and based on the design of the Seville cathedral; a project that, in Montúfar's own words, would take 10 or 12 years. The weight of a work of such dimensions in a swampy subsoil would require a special foundation. Initially, crossed beams were placed to build a platform, something that required high costs and constant drainage. In the end, this project was abandoned in 1565, not only due to the aforementioned cost, but also due to the flooding suffered by the city center. It is then that, supported by indigenous techniques, in 1570 solid wooden piles were injected at great depth, around twenty thousand of these piles in an area of six thousand square meters. The project is reduced from the original seven naves to only five: one central, two processional and two lateral ones for the 16 chapels. Construction began with designs and models created by Claudio de Arciniega and Juan Miguel de Agüero, inspired by the Spanish cathedrals of Jaén and Valladolid.[27][28].
In 1571, with some delay, Viceroy Martín Enríquez de Almansa and Archbishop Alonso de Montufar laid the first stone of the current temple. The cathedral began to be built in 1573 (when Pedro Moya was archbishop) around the existing church that would be demolished until 1625, when the works advanced enough to house the basic functions of the temple.[18].
The work began with a north-south orientation, contrary to that of most cathedrals, due to the subsoil waters that would affect the building with a traditional east-west orientation. Arciniega's original project was similar to that of the cathedrals of Segovia or Salamanca in Spain and considered that the naves would have to be roofed with wood and the bell tower would be located in the apse, but it was later modified, according to the model proposed by Juan Miguel de Agüero, considering the roof with vaults and the inclusion of a main dome and two towers located in front of the temple.[29].
The beginning of the works was encountered with muddy and unstable terrain that complicated the work. Due to this, tezontle and chiluca stone were favored as construction materials in several areas, over the quarry, as they were lighter. The site determined for the work was on one side of the front of the Templo Mayor, so it is very likely that the enclosures on which it was built were the temples of Quetzalcóatl or Xitle. In 1581, when the foundation work was finished, the walls began to be raised; The work inside began around the apse, so the chapter house and the sacristy were built first; and in 1585 work began on the first chapel. At that time the names of the stonemasons who worked on the work were: the chapels were carved by Juan Arteaga and the casings by Hernán García de Villaverde, who also worked on the main pillars whose half samples were sculpted by Martín Casillas.[30][31].
Anticipating future collapses (as would be the historical constant), the builders of the Cathedral solved the problem of the foundation by driving a grid of stakes 3 meters long approximately every 50 centimeters. After driving the stakes, the ground was leveled by burning the heads of the protruding logs. A stonework template was placed on this palisade that served as the base for a 1.60 meter thick embankment, built with large stones bonded with mortar. On this embankment rests the grid of masonry counter beams 3.50 meters high, which receives the columns. This grid forms a single piece, practically monolithic with the embankment.[30].
17th century
In 1615 the walls reached half their total height. In 1623 the sacristy was completed, it was used provisionally for religious services, which led to the definitive closure of the old cathedral and its subsequent demolition two years later. On September 21, 1629, the works were interrupted by the flood that the city suffered, in which the water reached two meters high, causing damage to the surroundings of the Plaza Mayor "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)") and other parts of the city. Because of the damage, a project was started to build the new cathedral in the hills of Tacubaya, west of the city, but the idea was discarded and the project continued in the same location, under the direction of Juan Gómez de Trasmonte (replacement of Arciniega and Agüeros, who died in 1593 and 1610 respectively). Among the innovations implemented by Trasmonte was abandoning the roof plan for the stone vaults, opting for tezontle, which was already used on the walls; this to accelerate the pace of construction and facilitate the decoration work with plasterwork and other materials.[32][33].
From 1629, and during the five years that the flood lasted, until 1634, as an offering, Archbishop Francisco Manso de Zúñiga ordered the transfer of the famous "tilma of Juan Diego", with the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe "Our Lady of Guadalupe (Mexico)"), to the sacristy of the cathedral.[30].
By 1648 the works on the Cathedral had progressed slowly and in the meantime it was noticeable that the land surrounding the construction was invaded by businesses and some buildings; Those that occupied the primitive church became a cemetery. That same year, Archbishop Juan de Mañozca y Zamora had a stone cross placed on a pedestal in the atrium of the cathedral, to try to delimit it, in the face of the threat of irregular buildings. In 1659, envoys from the viceroy Francisco Fernández de la Cueva and Enríquez de Cabrera accompanied by soldiers, demolished the illegal constructions around the cathedral; and the following year a large perimeter wall was built to prevent this from happening again; The average wall was around 40 centimeters thick and two meters high, it was openwork, with battlements on its upper edge; The delimited area doubled that of the current atrium.[30].
Archbishop Marcos Ramírez de Prado y Ovando carried out the second dedication on December 22, 1667, the year in which the last vault was closed; provisionally, in the space of the dome, a dome was placed. In the ceremony its official name was established as "Metropolitan Cathedral of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary to the Heavens of Mexico City." At the date of consecration (lacking, at that time, bell towers, main façade and other elements built in the century), the cost of what was built was equivalent to 1,759,000 pesos. This cost was largely covered by the kings of Spain Felipe II, Felipe III, Felipe IV and Carlos II.[20].
In 1675, the central part of the main façade was completed, the work of architect Cristóbal de Medina Vargas, which included the figure in stone relief of the Assumption of Mary, the dedication to which the cathedral is dedicated, and the sculptures of Santiago el Mayor and San Andrés guarding it. During the remainder of the century, the first body of the eastern tower was built, the work of architects Juan Lozano and Juan Serrano. The east and west portals were completed in 1688 and 1689 respectively; In that last year, the six buttresses that support the structure on the side of its main façade, the buttresses that support the vaults of the main nave and the first building outside the central core, the "conciliar seminary", were completed, which would be completed ten years later. At the end of this century the ornamentation process of most of the side chapels was completed; Furthermore, in 1696, the choir of canons was built in the middle of the central nave, which, following the style of Spanish cathedrals, had to be located in this sector of the temple, which would block the long hallway from the entrance to the main altar, reducing the capacity of occupants for the most important religious ceremonies.[34][35].
18th century
During the century little was done to advance the completion of the construction of the cathedral; largely because, already completed inside and useful for all the ceremonies that were offered, there was no urgent need to continue working on what was missing, only at the beginning of the century stood out the beginning of the construction of the second and third buildings outside the central core, first the "Chapel of the Souls", completed in 1720 and located on one side of the north façade, at the back of the cathedral; and second, between the aforementioned chapel and at the rear end of the west façade, the "Curia Building", which although it operated in the neighboring Palacio del Arzobispado "Antiguo Palacio del Arzobispado (Mexico)"), when this acquired more residential characteristics, the new building received offices and halls of the chapter.[30].
Although the exterior work had been effectively suspended, some interior work continued. In 1725 Jerónimo de Balbás completed the Altar of the Kings, located in the apse of the cathedral, becoming the main altar of the building and the one with the greatest ornamentation; In 1735, the "Altar of Forgiveness" was built in front of the choir, located right in front of the main entrance or "Holy Door"; In 1736, the installation of the monumental organs was completed, on the arches of the central nave that flanked the canons' choir, while the upper tribunes of the same were built; In 1737, Balbás himself replaced the old main altar of the century with one in the Baroque style, which incorporated a new design called "Cypress", different from the baldachin because the rite was not celebrated under it, but in front, and different from the altarpiece because it was not attached to the wall. Around 1737, Domingo de Arrieta" was the senior master; he made, in the company of José Eduardo de Herrera, master of architecture, the tribunes that surround the choir. In 1742 Manuel de Álvarez"), master of architecture, ruled with Herrera himself on the presbytery project presented by Jerónimo de Balbás.
In 1749, the construction of the most distinctive annex to the central body of the cathedral began, the "Sagrario Metropolitano", the work of Lorenzo Rodríguez, completed in 1768. When it was finished, an access was made to connect it with the cathedral, opening a carpanel arch in the western wing of the tabernacle; This displaces the «Chapel of San Isidro», which remains only as a passage between the buildings.[30].
On September 17, 1752, an iron cross, more than three yards long, with its weathervane, engraved on both sides with the Sanctus Deus prayer, was placed on the crown of the dome of this church, and in the middle of it a quarter oval, in which on one side was placed a wax of Agnus with its stained glass window, and on the other a sheet in which Saint was sculpted. Prisca, lawyer of lightning. The spike of said cross is two rods and its entire weight is fourteen arrobas; It was stuck in a stone base.[36].
19th century
Once Mexico's independence was concluded, the cathedral soon became the scene of important chapters in the history of the new country. Being the main religious center and seat of ecclesiastical power, it was part of different events involving the public life of independent Mexico.
On July 21, 1822, the coronation ceremony of Agustín de Iturbide as emperor of Mexico took place. From early on, the salute of twenty-four cannons sounded, balconies were decorated and the facades of public buildings were decorated, as well as atriums and church portals. Two thrones were placed in the cathedral, the main one next to the priest and the minor one near the choir.[40] Shortly before nine in the morning, the members of Congress and the City Council took their assigned places. Troops of cavalry and infantry surrounded the future emperor and his entourage. Three bishops officiated at the mass. The president of the Congress, Rafael Mangino, was in charge of placing the crown on Augustine I, immediately afterwards the emperor himself placed the crown on the empress. Other insignia were imposed on the newly crowned by the generals and ladies-in-waiting, Bishop Juan Cruz Ruiz de Cabañas y Crespo exclaimed * Vivat Imperator in aeternum!
In 1825 the heads of Miguel Hidalgo, Ignacio Allende, Juan Aldama and Mariano Jiménez, rescued and protected after having remained hanging in front of the Alhóndiga de Granaditas in Guanajuato, were transferred from the parish of Santo Domingo to the Metropolitan Cathedral in a solemn procession. The march of the skulls protected in an urn covered with black velvet was accompanied by the ringing of the bells, the voices of the Cabildo Choir and the brotherhoods that at that time were responsible for the cathedral chapels. Months before, those same skulls hung in front of the Alhóndiga and now Archbishop Pedro José de Fonte y Hernández Miravete gave authorization for the "Jubilee Door" of the site to be wide open to receive the so-called "heroes of Independence."
The remains of José María Morelos, Francisco Javier Mina, Mariano Matamoros and Hermenegildo Galeana were also received. The remains were placed in the "Crypt of the Archbishops and Viceroys" and at that time it was written: "To the honorable remains of the magnanimous and undaunted leaders, fathers of Mexican freedom, and victims of perfidy and nepotism, the tearful and grateful country erected this public monument." In 1838, in a massive state funeral ceremony, the remains of Agustín Iturbide, parading through the entire square, to the "Chapel of San Felipe de Jesús."
In 1847, after the American occupation took place, the cathedral also suffered from the acts of the invaders, highlighting the damage done to the "Sun Stone" when US soldiers used the monolith as target shooting, affecting the face of the sun. Simultaneously, the authorities of the cathedral, far from the turbulent times of the country, asked the architect Lorenzo de la Hidalga to build a cypress to replace that of Jerónimo de Balbás which, according to the chronicles of the time, the change in artistic taste led to its dismantling, at least before 1838, since the accounts of Iturbide's burial do not record that it still existed. The interior monument of the main altar, in neoclassical style, began its construction in June 1848 and was completed in 1851.[30].
20th century
In 1912 the "Mañozca Cross" returned to the cathedral to be located in its current position, behind the metropolitan tabernacle. Since 1913, with the archaeological discoveries on the corner of Seminario and Moneda streets, by the archaeologist Manuel Gamio, the old version that the cathedral was built on the Templo Mayor began to be demystified, since the ruins found correspond to a corner of it, making the location referred to unviable for centuries. In 1914 the trees around the building were removed, as they were high enough to obstruct the view of the enclosure, and replaced with gardens, which remained there until 1924. In the same building, in front of the "Conciliar Seminary", a fountain was built with a sculpture by Bartolomé de las Casas. In 1925, at the direction of President Plutarco Elías Calles, the remains of the heroes of independence left the cathedral to be placed at the base of the Column of the Angel of Independence on Paseo de la Reforma. The Mexican government did not take the body of Agustín de Iturbide, however, it remains in the chapel of San Felipe de Jesús.[30].
As part of the series of events that led to the outbreak of the Cristero War, on February 4, 1926, in the newspaper El Universal "El Universal (México)") a protest that Archbishop José Mora y del Río had declared nine years earlier against the new Constitution was published, but the note was presented as new news,[48] that is, as if it were a recent statement.[49] By orders of the president Calles - who considered the statement as a challenge to the Government - Mora y del Río was brought before the Attorney General's Office "Procuraduría General de la República (Mexico)") and detained; Several temples were closed, including the cathedral itself, and foreign priests were expelled. Constitutional article 130 was regulated as the Law of Cults (known as the Streets Law), religious schools were closed and the number of priests was limited so that only one officiated for every six thousand inhabitants. On June 21, 1929, during the presidency of Emilio Portes Gil, the Church and the Government signed the agreements that put an end to hostilities in Mexican territory, with which the site was reopened.
It was not until 1933 that the first plan for diagnosis and solution to structural problems was implemented, by the architects Manuel Ortiz Monasterio" and Manuel Cortina García"). Starting from this, three alternatives were specified to reduce the impact of the collapse, which were basically limited to reducing weight from the structure and load from the foundation: Demolition of the Seminary buildings; Begin the repair of the structure of the Tabernacle, which was evidently the one that showed the greatest problems in its skeleton; Empty the foundation cells formed in the grid of counter girders and use this space for the implementation of funerary crypts. All these works were carried out between 1933 and 1942.[50] With the space gained in the foundation work, in 1937 the construction of the "Crypts for the Archbishops" under the cathedral was completed, specifically under the "Altar of the Kings." In 1943, to give greater visibility to the aforementioned altar, the Lorenzo de la Hidalga cypress was removed and replaced by a smaller altar made of Tecali marble in 1950.
21st century
The night of September 15, 2010 was one of the main stages of the celebrations of the bicentennial of independence; a multimedia spectacle of images and sound projected on its main façade, accompanied by fireworks, was the closing of the main events in the capital's Zócalo "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)").
It would not be until February 13, 2016 that a new visit by a top Catholic leader would take place, when Pope Francis "Francisco (Pope)") attended a meeting with all the bishops of the dioceses of Mexico.[57].
The cathedral foundation monitoring and protection system was tested during the earthquake of September 19, 2017, and indeed responded positively; However, the same did not occur for the interior and exterior of the enclosure, which for the first time suffered damage that, although superficial and aesthetic, showed wear and degradation of the structures not linked to the foundation, but to the heritage value of the temple.
Among the most significant damages was the fall of the sculpture of "Hope" from the sculptural group of the theological virtues at the top of the main façade; the collapse of the cross of the east tower (which at the same time pierced a vault of the Metropolitan Tabernacle); cracks in the vaults, misalignment of voussoirs in the arches and detachment of flattened ones.
In 2019, the most exhaustive intervention project to the cathedral began since the rescue in the 1990s. In a first stage of attention, by the General Directorate of Cultural Heritage Sites and Monuments, with the support of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), and the Engineering Institute of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, maintenance work was carried out on the control pile system, eradication of parasitic flora, caulking of cracks, and rehabilitation of electrical installation and lightning rod system; works that had an investment of 20 million pesos and a duration of two years.[58].
The second stage of the restoration, framed in the national reconstruction project of the federal government, began on September 7, 2022. On this occasion, the towers, the dome, the main façade and the central vault of the Tabernacle would be intervened at a cost of 84 million pesos. The two towers were covered with gigantic scaffolding for work to consolidate their structure and support, this through the injection of a semi-liquid substance to anchor the cracks and fissures; At the same time, maintenance work was carried out on the bell towers and the ornamental or sculptural pieces of both supports, including the replacement of the fallen cross in 2017; In the case of the vaults, cracks were sewn with pieces of masonry; while the dome, as well as its lantern, received cleaning work, elimination of harmful flora, shoring and consolidation; Finally, the main façade received cleaning and restoration work on elements lost in the 2017 earthquake. This second stage concluded in January 2023.[59][60].
Composition and organization
The Cathedral is the official headquarters of the Primate Archdiocese of Mexico. Since the second half of the century and until 2019 (when it gave up part of its territory for the formation of three new dioceses), it was the largest in the Catholic world. Synod of bishops.
By virtue of the provisions of the regulatory framework that make up the "Law of Religious Associations and Public Worship", the "General Law of National Assets" and the "Federal Law on Monuments and Archaeological, Artistic and Historical Areas", the Cathedral is a "Property owned by the nation" registered as "Historical Monument", so it is property of the federal Government, however it is deposited on loan to a religious association called "Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico City AR", dependent on another, which is the Archdiocese of Mexico.[63][64][65][66].
The administration and protection of the building is carried out jointly by various areas of the federal and local governments and ecclesiastical authorities, due to the heritage, historical, religious and cultural implications of the architectural complex. According to the regulatory framework, the above is distributed as follows:
• - Metropolitan Council — Dependency of the Archdiocese of Mexico, which manages the resources, plans, projects and programs linked to the operation, conservation and authorization of the Cathedral. Coordinating the different areas that have influence over each area; that is, the person directly responsible for the building. They are also responsible for regulating and directing the religious activities of the campus. Constituted as a collegiate body, it is made up of 20 clerics called "canons":[67]
Dean is the highest position, and therefore rector of the Cathedral.
Ardeacon, second in command within the structure and immediate replacement of the dean.
Canon theologian, in charge of the formation and preparation of the chapter, as well as the doctrine taught.
Penitentiary canon, responsible for absolution.
Secretary, custodian and person responsible for the archive and documentation of the temple.
Bursar, responsible for the finances and resources of the temple.
Librarian, in charge of the general archive (library, newspaper archive, etc.).
Chaplains, priests assisting religious practice, and those responsible for the lay personnel who operate in the Cathedral.
• - General Directorate of Cultural Heritage Sites and Monuments — Dependency of the Ministry of Culture "Secretaría de Cultura (Mexico)"), which is responsible for the conservation of the artistic, historical and architectural heritage of the property.
Added to these two are the National Institute of Anthropology and History and the "Authority of the Historical Center" (dependency of the Government of Mexico City), which intervene in the preservation and dissemination of the property's heritage in the first case, and in the adaptations to the surroundings of the building for its correct use, in the second case. Although, by law, its security is the responsibility of the federal government, the council is authorized to employ private security personnel and local police.
The architectural complex is made up of a set of semi-independent buildings, these are: the central core that integrates the basilica plan, the cathedral as such; the "Metropolitan Tabernacle"; the “Curia Building”; and the “Chapel of the Souls”.
Abroad
Covers
The main façade comprises the south front of the building, on the Zócalo road section that connects "5 de Mayo" street with the corner of "Seminario" and "Moneda" streets. It is composed of five bodies delimited by the intercales of the six buttresses that support it, these have a square base topped by enormous scrolls; The two largest bodies correspond to the corners and bases of the bell towers, they are covered with Chiluca quarry and each has an access to the towers, and three windows; The door steps have been constantly modified, as they are the elements of the assembly that most exhibit differential collapse. The other three bodies correspond to the monumental portals, the central one being larger than the lateral ones, since the first, in addition to being higher, has a wider top.[68][69].
The central doorway presents on its first level, on each side of the door, two pairs of Doric columns separated by niches, in which are the sculptures of Saint Peter and Saint Paul (works by the sculptor Miguel Jiménez in 1687), above them they have a lattice-style decoration "Lattice (architecture)"); The upper part of the columns (beams) is decorated with triglyphs and metopes. On the second level, above the door, there is a white marble high relief of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, inspired by a work by the Flemish painter Pedro Pablo Rubens; It is flanked by pairs of tritostyle columns") with an Ionic capital, in whose niches are the sculptures of Saint Andrew and Saint James the Greater (by the same author of the previous sculptures), above them there is a quarry decoration carved in the shape of a rhombus; below the relief lies a marble plaque with the Latin inscription of the dedication of the temple. At the top, there is the figure carved by Luis Rodríguez Alconedo at the beginning of the century, which represents to the iconographic emblem of the city, the founding myth of Mexico-Tenochtitlan, the eagle with outstretched wings, standing on a cactus, devouring a snake, this image is identical to the later used shield of Mexico, in its version of 1823-1846; the coat of arms is within an oval flanked by garlands, and originally the figures inside the medallion were covered with gold, but most of the gold tone has faded. The complex is completed by the clock cube, on which are the sculptures of the "Theological Virtues", which represent faith "Faith (religion)"), hope "Hope (virtue)") and charity "Charity (virtue)"), works by the sculptor Manuel Tolsá.
The left or west side portal shows a finish with the papal tiara, inside a medallion decorated with garlands, on the sides two ciboriums supported by angels, all these elements made in quarry; The second level has a white marble relief flanked by Solomonic columns, this represents the allegorical scene in which Jesus Christ hands the keys of heaven to Saint Peter, surrounded by the apostles and with a triumphal arch in the background.
The right or eastern side cover has an identical finish to the other side, with the papal tiara; Flanked by Solomonic columns, there is a white marble relief with the allegorical image of "the nave of the church", this symbolism is reminiscent of early Christian art, which represented the church as a boat leading to the eternal port; In the image of the relief, Jesus Christ as captain, the twelve apostles and the four evangelists appear.
The three portals have carved wooden doors, the largest being also the central door, and the only one accompanied by iconography in the carving; As with all Catholic cathedrals, the main door is called "Holy Door", which in the case of this enclosure, can only be opened in four situations: the funeral of an archbishop, the inauguration of a new archbishop, the visit of a supreme pontiff and every 25 years in a so-called "jubilee year"; However, it was opened in special situations, such as the coronation of Agustín de Iturbide in 1822, the reception of the funeral remains of the heroes of independence in 1825, the state funeral for Iturbide himself in 1838, the reception of the emperors Maximilian and Carlota in 1864, and in 1925 when the remains of the insurgent heroes were exhumed, to be taken to the Angel of Independence. The images carved on the holy door are four, one for each quadrant of the gate, framed in rectangles in each center of the sections; in the upper part on the left, Saint Joseph with the baby Jesus; on the right Santa Rosa de Lima; In the lower part, on both sides, the Archangel Michael defeating the devil.[68][69].
• - Left portal of the main façade.
• - Central façade of the main façade.
• - Right portal of the main façade.
• - Sculptures of the three theological virtues: Faith, Hope and Charity.
• - Clock cube, sculptural group and national coat of arms at the top of the main façade.
The west façade extends along “Monte de Piedad” street, it was built in 1688 and rebuilt in 1804. It presents a façade divided into three sections. The first in the lower part has the sculptures of Saint Thomas and Saint Matthew; Both statues are located in niches flanked by Doric columns; The beams between the levels have a marble plaque with the Latin inscription that refers to the construction and inauguration of the cover. The second level has three windows adorned with stained glass by Mathias Goeritz, made in the century; The side windows are each accompanied by tritostyle columns with Ionic capitals. At the top, lie the sculptures of Simon the apostle "Simon (apostle)") and Saint Jude Thaddeus, and in the center a stained glass window by the same author, flanked by two Solomonic columns with a Corinthian capital. The esplanade of this façade is publicly accessible and its carved wooden door is the secondary or emerging entrance to the cathedral. In its esplanade there are the column bases of the old cathedral and a sculpture of John Paul II made in the 2000s, from cast keys donated by the population.
The east façade covers the section of the old "Seminario" street, and has restricted access. This consists only of a two-level cover and a finial; In the first are the sculptures of Saint Bartholomew and Saint John the Apostle, each flanked by a pair of Doric columns; On the second level there are three windows adorned with stained glass by Mathias Goeritz, made in the century; The side windows are each accompanied by tritostyle columns with Ionic capitals. At the top, in the center there is a stained glass window by the same author, flanked by two Solomonic columns with Corinthian capitals, and next to these, the sculptures of San Felipe and Santiago el Menor. In the beams between the first and second levels, there is a marble plaque with the Latin inscription that refers to the construction and inauguration of the façade. The esplanade on this cover is also restricted access; It contains the fountain with the sculpture by Bartolomé de las Casas, a small garden, stonework material for repairs and the entrance to the archaeological remains beneath the cathedral; as well as the remains of the famous "Mañozca Cross", on the wall that corresponds to the rear façade of the Tabernacle. At the north end of the façade there is a carved wooden door without a cover, which gives access to the sacristy.[68][69].
The north façade covers the section of "República de Guatemala" street, it was built in the century in Herrerian style, it is the oldest part of the cathedral and the lowest in height. It is covered with tezontle and has in its center a niche with an allegorical relief of the "Lamb of the Apocalypse." This exterior space corresponds to the rear part of the "Altar of the Kings" inside, therefore it is the apse of the cathedral; On its sides it has two carved wooden doors that served as northern access to the cathedral for more than a century, but were closed when two altarpieces from the Jesuit College of San Pedro and San Pablo were placed in the interior as chapels, when it was closed in 1767.[26][70].
• - East or east facade.
• - West or west façade.
• - North façade.
Bell Towers
The towers were built between 1787 and 1791, however between 1642 and 1672 the base and first body of the eastern tower were built. The works were carried out by the architect José Damián Ortiz de Castro; These have a height of between 64 and 67 meters whose interior access is via ellipsoidal stairs made of wood.[74].
The square towers are made up of three bodies: the first is straight with a small entrance and three square windows above it; In the second there is a central opening and two smaller ones on each side, with a semicircular enclosure; Part of the bells are also found in this section; The third body has two openings in the center, one with a semicircular enclosure and the other square in shape, and on each side a large rectangular opening that covers the height of the two central ones. It ends with a roof in the shape of a large bell with an elliptical plan and a semi-ovoid roof crowned by a stone sphere and an iron cross.[68][69].
Each tower has eight sculptures representing saints who protect the city, four being doctors of the Western Church and the other four being doctors of the Church in Spain. The sculptures of the western tower are the work of José Zacarías Cora"), and represent Augustine of Hippo, Gregory the Great, Leander of Seville, Saint Braulio, Saint Rose of Lima "Rosa de Lima (saint)"), Saint Francis Xavier, Saint Emigdio and Saint Barbara "Barbara (martyr)"). For their part, those of the eastern tower were sculpted by Santiago Cristóbal de Sandoval") and represent Saint Ambrose, Saint Jerome, Saint Isidro Labrador, Saint Ildefonso, Saint Philip of Jesus, Saint Hippolytus, Saint Cassian and Saint Gregory the Taumaturgus.[12]
The two towers have space to house 56 bells, although today there are 35, with 23 located in the eastern tower, 11 in the western one, and one more outside the two towers that is located under a niche near the choir. The largest bell of all has the name "Santa María de Guadalupe", it was cast by Salvador de la Vega in 1791 and placed in 1793, it weighs around thirteen tons. The oldest bell was cast in 1578, and is known as "Santa María de la Asunción" or "Doña María", it weighs approximately seven tons and was placed in 1653, like "La Ronca", known for its low tone. The most modern is from 2002, it was placed on the occasion of the canonization of Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin and was blessed by Pope John Paul II.
The bells of the cathedral have rung at important moments in the history of Mexico, thus calling the people to the rescue of El Parián in 1682; They rang at the coronation of Emperor Agustín de Iturbide, at his death and burial; They called on the people to defend the city against the American invasion on September 14, 1847; and they marked the beginning of the festivities of the centenary of national Independence on September 15, 1910, and of the Bicentennial of National Independence on September 15, 2010. They ring in full every year on the feast of Corpus Christi, on the night of September 15, on Christmas night, at the "New Year's" mass and at the Easter mass; in the case of the deaths of the archbishop and the pope, they double 75 and 100 times respectively; and they ring before the announcement of the election of the successors of the aforementioned hierarchs.[75].
Dome
It was completed with adaptations to Ortiz de Castro's project. The Assumption of the Virgin was also represented inside (Rafael Ximeno y Planes, 1810). The dome that exists today is the work of Manuel Tolsá, and has an octagonal plan, which has Ionic pilasters on its drum and between them vertical windows with straight enclosures, topped by a curved pediment. The dome has a great elevation and is divided into eight sections decorated with geometric moldings made with mosaics, which reach the highest part of the base of a slender lantern, whose dome is crowned by a large flame. The current windows are by Matías Goeritz. In the fire of 1967, caused by a short circuit in the Altar of Forgiveness, the painting of the Assumption was consumed.[77][68][69][30].
Inside
Altar of the Kings
The Altar of the Kings is the main altarpiece of the Cathedral, it is located in the apse of the temple, behind the "High Altar", built on an oven vault. It is the work of Jerónimo de Balbás, author, among others, of the «Altar of Forgiveness» of this same cathedral, and of the missing «Altar Mayor» of the church of the Sagrario "Iglesia del Sagrario (Sevilla)") of the cathedral of Seville. Its construction began in 1718, it is made in the Churrigueresque style of white cedar wood and golden ayacahuite, with the characteristic decoration element being the columns and pilasters estípites "Estípite (architecture)"), an innovative method introduced to New Spain by the author of the altarpiece; Its construction ended in 1725, but due to the prolonged gilding process carried out by Francisco Martínez, it was dedicated until 1737 when said ornamentation was finished; This makes it the oldest churrigueresque work in Mexico. It has undergone various restorations, especially after the fire of 1967, the most extensive being in 2003.
It measures 25 meters high, 13.75 m wide and 7.5 m deep, due to these dimensions it is known as "the golden cave"; It is divided into three vertical streets, presenting an abundant composition of pilasters, columns, foliage, garlands and cherubs. The space of the altar is limited on both sides by enormous pilasters, which serve as antas "Anta (architecture)") to large stipes that support the projecting cornice, which extends like an impost around the entire perimeter; Two other stipes support the vaulted vault. There are no records of the existence of an altarpiece that preceded it, so said construction space was empty for almost sixty years, until the project by Jerónimo de Balbás. The altarpieces on the side walls outside the vault were made around 1778 by Isidro Vicente de Balbás").[78][70].
There are two versions regarding its name, the first indicates that, as was the case with different cathedrals in the Spanish colonies in America, the space in the apse was reserved as a "Royal Chapel or Altar", for the exclusive use of the monarchs, contemplating probable visits by them to their possessions outside the peninsula; This version is supported by the existence of several main altarpieces called "Altar of the Kings" and a custom among Spanish cathedrals, which reserved this space in the apse as mausoleums for members of royalty.[79].
However, the most widespread version is that it takes its name from the carvings of saints belonging to royalty, which are part of its decoration. At the bottom, from left to right, six canonized queens appear: Margaret of Scotland "Marguerite of Scotland (saint)"), Helen of Constantinople, Elizabeth of Hungary, Isabel of Portugal "Elizabeth of Portugal (saint)"), Cunegonde of Luxembourg and Edith of Wilton "Edith (saint)"). In the center of the altar are six canonized kings: Hermenegild, Henry II of the Holy Roman Empire, Edward the Confessor and Casimir of Poland, located in a lower position, and Louis IX of France and Ferdinand III of Castile, located in a higher position than the previous four.[70].
In the center of these kings is an oil painting of the "Adoration of the Kings" by Juan Rodríguez Juárez that shows the baby Jesus held by the virgin Mary, being adored by the Three Wise Men in the middle of the manger. The upper part has a painting of the "Assumption of the Virgin", by the same author, as a celestial queen being elevated to the heavens before the gaze of the apostles. The assumption painting is flanked by two oval bas-reliefs depicting "Saint Joseph with the baby Jesus" and "Saint Teresa of Ávila" with a pen in her hand and the Holy Spirit, who inspires her to write, above her. The altarpiece is completed with carvings of angels carrying attributes of praise to the virgin such as "Sealed Fountain", "House of Gold", "Well of Living Water" and "Tower of David". The complex is crowned by a double golden vault in which the image of God the Father appears holding the world in the center, and on its sides medallions with the images of Saint Peter and Saint Paul.[80][68][69][30].
High altar
Throughout its history, the Metropolitan Cathedral has had four main altars, the first three in the shape of a tabernacle free from the walls, so that it could be surrounded and altars placed on its main faces. The first was made in the s. about which not much information is known; This was replaced in the s. by a baroque wooden cypress, in the stipe style made by Jerónimo de Balbás, it had a pinar (pine-shaped pillar), a silver tabernacle of rough workmanship, which has another, smaller one, inside made with gold; The change of taste in artistic fashion, its weak structure and costly repairs led to its dismantling, today only a sculpture of the Assumption of Mary remains.
In 1848 it was replaced by a neoclassical-style cypress, the work of Lorenzo de la Hidalga; It had three bodies with Corinthian style columns, the sculptures of angels and saints, that of Christ the King and that of the "Assumption of Mary" at the top, were made by Francisco Terrazas; Part of its financing was paid for with the casting of a gold sculpture of the "Assumption" from 1610 and a silver lamp nine meters in circumference that hung in front of the "Altar of the Kings"; This cypress tree was demolished in 1943, only some sculptures remain, most of them distributed on the access walls to the cathedral and others in the curia building.
After the removal of the previous cypress, the cathedral authorities proposed the construction of a new "High Altar", but at a lower altitude to prevent the view of the "Altar of the Kings" from being obstructed. The new, and current altar, was installed in 1950 with the sponsorship of the "Commission of order and decorum"; the design is the work of the architect Antonio Muñoz García") and was made by the sculptor Ernesto Tamariz; it is made of tecali jasper, a material already used in the ambos. It is rectangular in plan and only has one level, although with a protruding intermediate in front, like a platform or table; its reliefs represent eight apostles and some liturgical signs: on the left side Simón "Simón (apostle)") and Andrés; in front of the left side Juan, and on the side right Pedro; on the right side Santiago the Lesser and Felipe; on the back left Bartholomew and on the right side Thomas.
Among the liturgical elements of decoration there is a censer in the lower part of the front, a flaming heart on a nimbus that is at the same time on a cross, the pointing hand of God the Father on a cross, the dove of the Holy Spirit also on a cross, and under the altar table, two angels worshiping the name of Jesus with the monogram composed of the letters "J, H and S" with a cross; To his right is the "Lamb of the Apocalypse" and to his left are the "Tables of Moses" and the "Ark of the Covenant." The rear part also has a double lateral staircase of the same material, used to climb the monstrance of the Eucharist; In the center of the staircase is a metal door on which is the shield of the then archbishop Miguel Darío Miranda Gómez. On the upper part of the altar lies a wooden crucifix and four monstrances or monstrances "Custody (liturgy)") that are part of the monumental monstrance set.
Choir
The choir is located in a closed space in the middle of the central nave, between the "Altar of Forgiveness" and the processional hallway towards the "High Altar", this in the style of Spanish cathedrals; It consists of a hemicycle with two rows of seats; The fifty-nine of the upper part are separated by Solomonic columns surrounded by vines that frame relief sculptures of gilded wood, it is for the exclusive use of the canons and the archbishop, while the 45 below are for sixes and sochantres. At the top it presents 59 reliefs that include the twelve apostles, the four evangelists, the four fathers of the Western church, the founders of the religious orders and various saints and martyrs of the church; They are all made of mahogany, walnut, cedar and tepehuaje. Originally the carvings were covered in gold, but the majority, 47 out of 59, were destroyed in the fire of 1967, so the new ones did not contain this element. The choir stalls were made by Juan de Rojas "Juan de Rojas (sculptor)") between 1696 and 1697.
In the center of the choir, between the railing and the stalls, is a lectern made of ebony, tindalum and balsam marquetry, decorated with ivory figures, which include the Assumption of Mary, the four evangelists, the four doctors of the church and a crucifix that crowns the entire work. It is supported by a quadrangular base and an attached shaft with scrolls at each angle. It was gifted by the bishop of Manila Manuel Antonio Rojo del Río in 1762 and is the work of the sculptor José de Núñez, being installed in 1766. It is used to hold the singing books, and is made up of three bodies.
The façade of the choir and the bay "Crujía (architecture)") were made according to the design of the painter Nicolás Rodríguez Juárez") under the supervision of the sangley Quiauló. The choir grille was made in 1722 by Sangley Queaulo"); It was built in Macau, China, (when this port city was a Portuguese colony) using tumbaga, a material made from the alloy of gold and copper. Upon arrival in New Spain it was installed by Jerónimo de Balbás; It was released in 1730, replacing a previous wooden one; The fence is flanked by two columns on which upper tribunes were built attached with golden reliefs of angels. At the top of the façade on the grille there is an oval with the figure of the "Assumption of Mary", crowned with a crucifix, which is complemented by two more on the sides to represent the Calvary scene.[68][69].
On the opposite side, just behind the "Altar of Forgiveness", an altarpiece as a curtain with a canopy, crowns a group composed of two columns with angels in the capitals, guarding an image of the Virgin of Guadalupe "Our Lady of Guadalupe (Mexico)"), and below it an allegorical painting in which Jesus Christ blesses a group of musical angels, while two of them offer him a crown, this is the work of Cristóbal de Villalpando, and It replaced one by Juan Correa that burned in the fire of 1967. In the lower part of the wall, already in the carved wooden ensemble, there is a niche in the center with a cross, beginning the order of the ashlar masonry, with the image of Saint Peter being in the first place.[83].
Organs
The cathedral has had several organs in its history.[84] The first record of its existence is in a written report to the king of Spain in 1530, although no details of it appear. In 1655, Diego de Sebaldos built an organ. The first large organ, which is the Epistle organ (right side), was built by Jorge de Sesma in Madrid in 1690 and was installed in the cathedral by Tiburcio Sanz in 1695. of the organ by Jorge de Sesma.[85] In the fire of 1967 they suffered significant damage, so they were restored in 1978 by the organ company Flentrop and later restored between 2008 and 2014 by Gerhard Grenzing").[88].
They are located between the columns that delimit the choir, supported by its side walls, where the secondary entrances are located. They measure 15 meters high, nine meters wide and 2.80 meters deep. Its decoration includes effigies of angels in golden tones, carrying musical instruments, reliefs on the wood with vegetal and floral motifs, and royal crowns on the finials, supported by angels.[68][69].
• - Interior view in the choir of the right organ.
• - Interior view in the choir of the left organ.
Altar of Forgiveness
It is located in the backchoir, at the front of the central nave. The altarpiece was made by the Spanish architect Jerónimo de Balbás in 1735, being one of his most important works. It is baroque with a single body, finished in gold leaf, it represents the first use of the stipe "Stipite (architecture)") in America, in which the columns represent the human body; The finish is semicircular and in the first two bodies medallions with relief images are displayed; The design is prominently integrated with the upper rear stands of the choir, attached to the altar tones. In early 1967 there was a fire in the cathedral that damaged the altar. Thanks to the restoration carried out, it can be seen today.[70][79].
It is called that because it is located behind the door of the same name. Although there are two other legends about the origin of the name, the first establishes that those condemned by the Inquisition were taken to the altar to ask for forgiveness before their execution. The second refers to the painter Simon Pereyns, author of many works in the cathedral, who was apparently accused of blasphemy and sentenced to prison. While in prison, he painted a beautiful image of the Virgin Mary, for which his crime was forgiven.[80].
On this altar is the image of the crucified Jesus Christ made of corn cane paste known as the "Lord of Poison".[89] The image dates back to the century and was originally located in the chapel of the Porta Coeli Seminary in Mexico City, but after being closed to public worship in 1935, it was transferred to the Metropolitan Cathedral.[89].
Naves and altars of the apse
The basilica-type architectural plan provides for the integration of five naves, one central, two processional and two lateral. The central nave, in which the altars “Del Perdón”, “Major” and “De los Reyes” are located, as well as the choir and organs; It is covered with a lunette vault "Luneta (architecture)") that arises from a barrel vault, which is the one that results from the extension of a semicircular arch; The vaults are decorated with moldings with geometric motifs in green tones. The processional vaults have baída vaults, whose shape appears from the intersection of a dome with a cube, whose base is inscribed at the base of the dome; In this case the vaults were decorated with radial moldings. The side naves where the chapels are located have different types of vault, as described in each case. The vault of the cathedral dome was decorated with radial moldings, after the destruction in 1967 of the painting that adorned it until then.
In 1767, after the expulsion of the Society of Jesus from the Spanish Empire, the Jesuit College of Saint Peter and Saint Paul stopped being used for religious purposes, so to safeguard its two monumental altarpieces, they were moved to the "Metropolitan Tabernacle" and later to the two spaces under the vaults at the northern end of the processional naves of the Cathedral, next to the "Altar of the Kings", where the rear doors of the enclosure were located.
The first altarpiece, in the east wing, is that of the "Virgin of Zapopan" measuring 13 meters high by nine meters wide. The portraits that accompany the Marian devotion belong to founders of religious orders such as Saint Francis of Assisi, Saint Dominic, Saint Ignatius of Loyola, Saint John Bosco, Saint Philip Neri, among others. On the west side and of similar dimensions, an altarpiece dedicated to Jesus Christ and the twelve apostles, called the "Divine Savior", was placed.[68][69][30][79].
• - Left or west processional nave.
• - Altarpiece of the Divine Savior.
• - Pendulum that measures the sinking of the cathedral in the central nave.
• - Altarpiece of the Virgin of Zapopan.
• - Right or eastern processional nave.
Chapels
The 14 chapels located in the side naves of the cathedral are distributed equally on both sides, all have elaborate bronze bars and ornamented at the top, with the inscription of the invocation, saint or dedication of this. The chapels were sponsored and dedicated to brotherhoods and guilds; the first were prohibited by the Reform Laws; The latter belonged to trades and tasks that disappeared with the passage of time, because they were no longer necessary for the chapel's belongings or because they became professional jobs far removed from religious ties.[68][69][30][79].
It is located on the base of the western tower, making it the first chapel in the west wing of the complex, starting from the main façade, and was completed between 1653 and 1660; It is covered by a star vault, typical of late Gothic. This first chapel was destroyed by a fire in 1711, so it was immediately replaced by the current one, completed in 1713.
The three altarpieces are in the Solomonic baroque style, with stewed and polychrome sculptures, works by Manuel de Nava"), which represent the seven archangels (Miguel, Gabriel, Rafael, Uriel, Jofiel, Camael and Zadkiel), all of them in the central altarpiece, representing the allegory of the "Choir of the Angels"; this altarpiece is topped with an effigy of God the Father holding an orb with a crucifix, while in the lintel of the window there is a dove as a symbol of the holy spirit, and below this window Jesus Christ, also holding a robe with a crucifix; the vertical alignment of the three figures represents the "Holy Trinity."
The altarpiece on the right contains paintings of other angels representing the "Angelology" or hierarchies of the heavenly choirs (seraphim, cherubs, thrones, dominions, virtues, powers and principalities), as well as a painting of the Virgin Mary "Mary (mother of Jesus)"); while the altarpiece on the left, in addition to the celestial beings (among which the famous "Guardian Angel" stands out), contains a painting of Saint Joseph who, complemented by the Christ of the central altarpiece, symbolize the allegory of "the Holy Family"; The paintings are the work of Juan Correa. Except for the sculpture of Saint Michael and the furniture in the chapel, most of the set is the original reopened in 1713, making it one of the best preserved spaces in the cathedral.[79].
It is the second chapel in the west wing, its roof is a groin vault. The altarpieces were made around 1650 in a baroque style reminiscent of mannerism. They contain ten paintings, in addition to the one that serves as the background of the "Lord of Health"; The works are framed by Corinthian columns. Among the altarpieces that decorate the interior of the chapel, the main one is dedicated to honoring the tutelary saints of the chapel; It consists of two bodies, the top and three entrecales.
It is one of the cathedral altarpieces of the century in which it can be said that it has a mannerist accent and as proof of this are the fluted classicist columns. The altarpiece was conceived to house paintings, which exalt the life of the medical saints Cosme and Damián "Cosme and Damián (martyrs)") and are due to the painter Sebastián López Dávalos. Only three of the paintings do not belong to the biographical account of the martyrs, and they are, one about the scene in which Pope Nicholas V contemplates the funeral remains of Saint Francis of Assisi and witnesses a miracle, one of Saint Hippolytus, another of Saint Sebastian and a small one in the medallion at the top with the image of God the Father.
Sacristy
It is the oldest space in the cathedral, it is located at the north end of the east wing of the complex. In 1626, when Viceroy Rodrigo Pacheco y Osorio, Marquis of Cerralvo (1624-1635) ordered the demolition of the old temple, the sacristy functioned (until 1641) as the place where services were held. Logically, the main altar was placed there and according to the inventory of 1632, it had two lecterns, one of gilded iron and the other of silver made by the master Pedro Ceballos.
As established by the ecclesiastical canon, the purpose of this place is to safeguard the objects, instruments and accessories necessary for the celebration of religious worship, such as chalices, ciboriums, monstrances, censers; and also where the clerics, especially the archbishop, dress in the garments necessary for the Eucharistic celebration, such as the miter, pallium, tunic and stole.
The doorway is in the Herrerian style, and above the semicircular arch, there is an inscription that records its completion in 1623. The door was placed between 1684 and 1688, and measures 5.65 meters high by 3.25 meters wide; It is paneled and carved, the reliefs, in addition to the papal tiara and the keys of Saint Peter, contain Marian symbols, such as the rainbow, the moon, the star, the palm and the cypress.
It is built with a rectangular plan and its vault has Gothic style ribs. During the great flood between 1629 and 1634, as an offering, the famous "tilma of Juan Diego" was kept here, with the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe "Our Lady of Guadalupe (Mexico)").
Inside the sacristy you can admire six enormous paintings by the New Spain painters Cristóbal de Villalpando and Juan Correa "Juan Correa (Mexican painter)"). The titles of the paintings are: "The Church Triumphant and Militant" from 1685 and located on the west wall; «The Prayer of Saint Michael» from 1686, located around the frame and wall of the entrance door; «The Triumph Of The Church» which is on the right side of the previous one; and at the opposite end a painting whose name has two versions "The Woman of the Apocalypse" or "Fight of Saint Michael with the dragon" (Villalpando). "La Asunción" from 1689, located on the south wall; and on the left side of this painting, on the east wall and next to the door that connects the patio of the east façade, is "The Entry of Christ to Jerusalem" (Correa), the door frame has the painting of a medallion with the "Assumption of Mary", in allusion to the coat of arms of the archdiocese. The gilder of the frames was the sculptor Manuel de Nava and he carried out his work between 1685 and 1691. In addition to the six monumental paintings, around the walls there are other paintings, liturgical vestments, chalices, monstrances, reliquaries, sculptures and the silver cross used in processions, which complement the decoration and furniture of the place.
chapter house
Of similar age to the sacristy, it is located at the north end of the west wing of the enclosure. It is the meeting center of the "Metropolitan Chapter", the governing body of the Cathedral, made up of religious and lay canons.
The doorway inside the cathedral is in the Herrerian style with a semicircular arch. The door measures 5.65 meters high by 3.25 meters wide, it is boarded and carved, the reliefs, in addition to the papal tiara and the keys of Saint Peter, contain Marian symbols, such as the rainbow, the moon, the star, the palm and the cypress. It is built with a rectangular plan and its vault has Gothic style ribs. The entrance that led to the outside was integrated into the "Curia Building" since 1720; Above this door there is a painting of "The Holy Face" from the 19th century. As in the sacristy, a wooden fence divides the space in two, with the northern half being exclusively used by the canons.
On the front wall is the bronze archiepiscopal throne, ordered to be made by Archbishop Luis María Martínez y Rodríguez, which was on the main altar during the second third of the century. It is ornamented at the top with the shield of the archdiocese, which consists of an image of the "Immaculate Conception" standing on a cactus, two keys crossed behind her back, with a pair of angels flanking her and two more carrying the papal tiara. When the throne was replaced it was moved here and used as the frame for a painting of the Virgin of Guadalupe, a work by José de la Cruz from 1680. In front of the throne lies the altar table used by John Paul II in his 1979 mass. On the sides of the throne, from left to right, the paintings "The Christ of Saint Teresa" and "The Assumption of Mary", both dating from colonial times.
On the side walls, distributed on three levels, the portraits of 36 of the 43 archbishops of Mexico; Of these, only seven of them are signed and the majority are from the 19th century onwards. The missing portraits correspond to archbishops who resigned and those who died before assuming office. The rest of the decoration presents paintings from the colonial era with Marian invocations and of Jesus Christ, a wardrobe from the century and a painting with the Pentecost scene by Nicolás Rodríguez Juárez; The oil painting is on a bench with a carving of the Immaculate Conception and some saints. The upper frame of the access door to the cathedral is crowned by a painting of the archdiocese's coat of arms.[68][69][30][79][93].
Crypts
Under the Altar of the Kings is the crypt of the archbishops, there are the remains of most of the archbishops of Mexico, from Fray Juan de Zumárraga to Cardinal Ernesto Corripio y Ahumada, whose remains were deposited in April 2008. The entrance is through a large wooden door, located at the back of the body of the "High Altar", behind which, a spiral staircase descends. gives access to the crypt, made by the architect Ernesto Gómez Gallardo Argüelles; The current conformation and structure of this funerary enclosure was the product of the foundation work, which managed to gain enough space in the old crypts to bring together all the deceased archbishops in a single group. In the center there is a cenotaph with a life-size sculpture of Zumárraga, at the base of which is a skull carved in stone, this was an element of the Templo Mayor, the monument honors this character, since he was considered protector of the Indians against the abuses of the conquerors. Behind this, there is an altar with another pre-Hispanic geometric sculpture located at the bottom. The other archbishops are found in niches in the walls, marked by bronze plaques on which the name and episcopal coat of arms of each one appear. On the floor there are marble slabs that cover the niches of other people buried in the crypt.[94].
The cathedral contains other crypts and niches where other religious figures are buried, including in the chapels. In addition, it has crypts for the faithful who wish to be buried in the cathedral; this part has access to a staircase on one side of the west door.[68][69][30][79].
• - Crypt of the archbishops of Mexico.
• - Pre-Hispanic stone of the altar.
• - Crypt.
• - Zumárraga sculpture.
• - Niches of the archbishops.
Metropolitan Tabernacle
The Metropolitan Tabernacle of Mexico City is located to the east of the cathedral. It was built following the design of Lorenzo Rodríguez between 1749 and 1760,[70] during the height of the Baroque. It had the function of housing the archives and vestments of the archbishop, in addition, it is the place for the reservation and communion of the Eucharist.[95].
The first church that was built on the site of the current cathedral also had a tabernacle although its exact location is unknown. During the construction of the cathedral, the tabernacle was located in the place currently occupied by the chapels of San Isidro and the Virgen de las Angustias of Granada. However, in the century it was decided to build a separate building but connected to the cathedral. The current tabernacle is built of red tezontle stone and white chiluca stone that forms a Greek cross. It is connected to the cathedral through the chapel of San Isidro.[26][70].
The building presents two main entrances from the outside; the main façade opens to the south, to the Plaza de la Constitución "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)"); while the other opens to the east, to the Plaza del Seminario. The two facades are richly decorated with columns in the "Estípite (architecture)" style, a characteristic element of Churrigueresque. The main theme glorifies the Eucharist with images of the apostles, the fathers of the Church, the holy founders of religious orders, martyrs, as well as biblical scenes. There are some zoomorphic and other anthropomorphic reliefs, highlighting a rampant lion and the royal eagle present on the coat of arms of Mexico. The east façade, for its part, presents scenes from the Old Testament, as well as images of Saint John of Nepomuk and Saint Ignatius of Loyola. The dates of the different phases of construction of the tabernacle are inscribed on this façade.[95].
The exterior of the tabernacle is in the baroque style, presenting decorations such as niche shelves of various shapes, floating curtains and a large number of cherubs. Fruit elements stand out such as bunches of grapes and pomegranates, which symbolize the blood of Christ and the Church, and floral elements such as roses, daisies and various types of four-petal flowers.[70].
The interior is built with chiluca and tezontle stone, the chiluca covers the walls and floors, while the tezontle is found in the door and window frames. The transept is covered with a dome supported by arches. The temple is divided into three naves. The central nave is arranged from the main entrance to the main altar, in which was the missing Churrigueresque altarpiece made by Pedro Patiño Ixtolinque in 1829. In the west nave is the baptistery, while in the east, there are offices, next to the entrance, and a sacristy, next to the main altar; all separated by walls from the inner temple.[26].
• - East facade.
• - Interior view of the Tabernacle.
• - Baptismal font.
Chapel of the Souls
Located outside the cathedral, next to the apse to the north-west of it, this century chapel clashes with the rest of the building due to its lean construction. Its simple façade, a semicircular arch, flanked by paneled pilasters; its second body-finish, in turn flanked by a pair of oval windows. This chapel is used today for baptisms that take place in the Primate Cathedral of Mexico.[68][69][30][79].
Chapel masters of the cathedral during the viceroyalty
Throughout the viceregal period the cathedral had intense and brilliant musical activity organized by its corresponding chapel masters. These had the obligation not only to organize the ecclesiastical musical life of the cathedral for all the major festivities, but also to instruct the corresponding musicians, compose the necessary musical works and organize the musical archives. The result of this constant activity is a very rich musical archive that competes in America with the splendid musical archive of the Cathedral of Puebla, that of the Basilica of Guadalupe or the musical archives preserved in Cuzco or Chuquisaca. None of these musical archives have been studied exhaustively and most of that music remains unreleased. Unfortunately, there is no contemporary attempt to continue the musical tradition of Latin American cathedrals by playing the preserved collection or hiring composers to write new works. The chapel masters of the cathedral of Mexico, most of whose works are preserved in the cathedral archive were:[96][97].
The musical archive of the cathedral of Mexico is one of the largest in America; It has a collection of more than 5,000 works, spanning from the 19th century to the 19th century, in various formats such as choir books, religious and secular music, and musical treatises.
• - Archdiocese of Mexico.
• - New Spain baroque architecture.
• - Cathedrals of Mexico.
• - Old Palace of the Archbishopric (Mexico) "Old Palace of the Archbishopric (Mexico)").
• - VALLEJO, Cortés, Dalia (2011). The School of Our Lady of the Assumption and Patriarch San José for the infants of the choro of the Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico: Adabi de México / Alfredo Harp Helú Foundation / Economic Culture Fund. ISBN 978-607-416-258-5.
• - Wikimedia Commons hosts a multimedia category on Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico City.
• - Official site of the Cathedral - Archdiocese of Mexico.
• - File from the National Catalog of Real Estate Historical Monuments number I-09-00421.
• - UNAM article on the rehabilitation of the Cathedral.
• - Cathedral in 3D on Google 3D Warehuose Archived January 8, 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
• - The Cathedral of Mexico (Documentary from the UNAM Aesthetic Research Institute).
• - Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico, Centuries of Harmony (Documentary made by the Primate Archdiocese of Mexico and the Mario Moreno Reyes Foundation).
[8] ↑ «Catedral de México». www.laguia2000.com. Consultado el 31 de enero de 2016. (enlace roto disponible en Internet Archive; véase el historial, la primera versión y la última).: http://arte.laguia2000.com/arquitectura/catedral-de-mexicol
[12] ↑ a b «Nombre de los artistas que ejecutaron la Catedral de México. Y de los que produjeron las principales obras en ella existentes». Biblioteca digital de la UANL. Consultado el 30 de junio de 2025.: https://cdigital.cabu.uanl.mx/fg/11/1020053769/1020053769_019.pdf
[22] ↑ Tovar y de Teresa, Guillermo, La portada principal de la primitiva Catedral de México. boletín de monumentos históricos, tercera época número 12, enero-abril 2008.
[30] ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n ñ o p q r Toussaint, Manuel (1992). La Catedral de México y el Sagrario Metropolitano (Tercera edición). México: Porrúa. ISBN 9789680864263.
[31] ↑ José Luis Soberanes Fernández y Serafín Ortiz Ortiz (28 de septiembre de 2021). «A 500 años de la fundación de la Ciudad de México» (PDF). Archivo jurídico del Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas de la UNAM. Consultado el 20 de enero de 2025.: https://archivos.juridicas.unam.mx/www/bjv/libros/14/6596/10.pdf
[44] ↑ Nuria Salazar Simarro (enero de 2009). «El altar mayor de la Catedral de México: construcción y desmantelamiento del baldaquino de Lorenzo Hidalga (1810-1872)». Boletín de monumentos históricos — Revistas INAH. Consultado el 2 de julio de 2025.: https://revistas.inah.gob.mx/index.php/boletinmonumentos/article/view/3810/3696
[50] ↑ Manuel Aguirre Botello (junio de 2017). «CATEDRAL METROPOLITANA, EVOLUCIÓN GRÁFICA Y CRONOLÓGICA UBICACIÓN DE LA CRUZ DE MAÑOZCA, CIUDAD DE MÉXICO». México Maxico. Consultado el 30 de marzo de 2023.: http://mexicomaxico.org/zocalo/zocaloCatedral.htm#inicio
[53] ↑ Roberto Meli Piralla y Araham Roberto Sánchez Ramírez (30 de junio de 2001). «LA REHABILITACIÓN DE LA CATEDRAL METROPOLITANA DE LA CIUDAD DE MÉXICO». Revista Digital Universitaria. Consultado el 30 de marzo de 2023.: https://www.revista.unam.mx/vol.2/num2/proyec1/index.html
[63] ↑ «Ley Federal Sobre Monumentos y Zonas Arqueológicos, Artísticos e Históricos». Cámara de Diputados. Consultado el 27 de junio de 2025. «Texto vigente a la última reforma del 16 de febrero de 2018».: https://www.diputados.gob.mx/LeyesBiblio/pdf/131_160218.pdf
[64] ↑ «Ley General de Bienes Nacionales». Cámara de Diputados. Consultado el 27 de junio de 2025. «Texto vigente a la última reforma del 3 de mayo de 2023».: https://www.diputados.gob.mx/LeyesBiblio/pdf/LGBN.pdf
[65] ↑ «Ley de Asociaciones Religiosas y Culto Público». Cámara de Diputados. Consultado el 27 de junio de 2025. «Texto vigente a la última reforma del 17 de diciembre de 2015».: https://www.diputados.gob.mx/LeyesBiblio/pdf/24_171215.pdf
[68] ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n ñ Varios autores (1986). Secretaría de Desarrollo Urbano y Ecología, ed. Catedral de México. Patrimonio artístico y cultural (Primera edición). México: Fomento Cultural Banamex. ISBN 978-9688381304.
[69] ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n ñ Varios autores (2014). DGE Equilibrista, ed. La Catedral de México (Primera edición). México: Fundación BBVA Bancomer. ISBN 978-607-95345-8-5.
[74] ↑ Xavier Cortés Rocha. «José Damián Ortiz De Castro, arquitecto de las torres de la Catedral de México: un reencuentro». Campaners. Consultado el 1 de julio de 2025.: https://campaners.com/pdf/pdf2356.pdf
[78] ↑ Reséndiz Martínez, José Francisco; Olvera Coronel, Lilia Patricia; Vázquez Silva, Luis; Nieto de Pascual, Cecilia (septiembre/octubre 2013). «Especies maderables y agentes patógenos del retablo de los reyes de la catedral Metropolitana de la Ciudad de México». Revista mexicana de ciencias forestales 4 (19). Consultado el 21 de enero de 2016.: http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2007-11322013000500002&lng=es&nrm=iso
[79] ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n ñ o p q r s t u v Luisa Pamela Torres Penilla (1996). «La Catedral de México Nuestra Señora de la Asunción — Una Propuesta Iconográfica». Repositorio de Tesis de la UNAM. Consultado el 1 de julio de 2025.: https://ru.dgb.unam.mx/bitstream/20.500.14330/TES01000238546/3/0238546.pdf
[80] ↑ a b Cano de Mier, Olga (1988). «Guía de Forasteros Centro Histórico Ciudad de México». Guías Turísticas Banamex (Ciudad de México): 32-37. |fechaacceso= requiere |url= (ayuda).
[82] ↑ Nuria Salazar Simarro (enero de 2009). «El altar mayor de la Catedral de México: construcción y desmantelamiento del baldaquino de Lorenzo Hidalga (1810-1872)». Boletín de monumentos históricos — Revistas INAH. Consultado el 2 de julio de 2025.: https://revistas.inah.gob.mx/index.php/boletinmonumentos/article/view/3810/3696
As a consequence of the influence of the Catholic Church in public life, the property became intertwined with events of historical significance for the societies of New Spain and independent Mexico. To name a few, there is the coronation of Agustín de Iturbide and Ana María Huarte as emperors of Mexico by the president of Congress; the protection of the funeral remains of the aforementioned monarch; the burial until 1925 of several of the heroes of independence such as Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla and José María Morelos y Pavón; the disputes between liberals and conservatives caused by the separation of church and state in the Reformation; the closing of the property during the days of the Cristero War; the visits of Popes John Paul II (January 26, 1979) and Francis "Francis (Pope)") (February 13, 2016); and the celebrations of the bicentennial of independence, among others.[14].
The cathedral has four facades in which open doorways flanked by columns and statues. It has a basilica-type architectural plan with five naves and a transept, which are made up of 51 vaults, 74 arches and 40 columns; There are two towers currently containing 35 bells. Inside, two large altars stand out, the sacristy and the choir. There are sixteen chapels dedicated to different saints, whose construction was sponsored by different religious brotherhoods; These are richly decorated with altars, altarpieces, paintings, furniture and sculptures. In the cathedral choir there are two of the largest eighteenth-century organs on the continent. Under the building there is a crypt in which the remains of some archbishops of Mexico rest. Next to the cathedral is the tabernacle, inside which the baptistery is located.
History
16th century
After the Spanish conquest of the Mexica empire was concluded, and after the return of Hernán Cortés from the exploration of modern-day Honduras, the conquerors decided to build a church in the place where the Templo Mayor of the city of Tenochtitlán was located; In this way they would consolidate Spanish power over the newly conquered territory. After considering the urban layout made by the Spanish from a central plaza, the area chosen for the church corresponded to the lots that closed the old Mexica complex to the north.[15][16][17][18].
The architect Martín de Sepúlveda") was the first director of the project that began in 1524 and was completed in 1532, this in the time of Juan de Zumárraga, the first bishop of the then newly founded diocese of Mexico (1530). The old cathedral was located in the northwest part of what is the current Plaza de la Constitución or Zócalo "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)"). The complexity of the lake area required enormous works. of engineering to settle the building, which, in addition to the long distances, led to the decision to build with some of the remains of the Mexica constructions, made of light and resistant materials, especially the Templo Mayor.
It had three naves separated by Tuscan columns, the central ceiling featured intricate engravings made by Juan Salcedo Espinosa") and gilded by Francisco de Zumaya") and Andrés de la Concha. The main door was probably in the Renaissance style. The choir had 48 seats made by hand by Adrián Suster and Juan Montaño in ayacahuite wood. For construction, they used stones from the destroyed temple of the god Huitzilopochtli, god of war and main deity of the Mexica. Despite everything, this temple was soon considered insufficient for the growing importance of the capital of the viceroyalty of New Spain. This first church was elevated to a cathedral by King Charles I of Spain and Pope Clement VII "Clement VII (pope)") according to the bull of September 9, 1534 and, later, named metropolitan by Paul III in 1547.[19][20].
This small, austere church, derided by all the chroniclers of the time, who judged it unworthy of such a large and famous city, provided its services for many years. By virtue of the importance achieved by the city, elevated since 1545 to the rank of archdiocese by Pope Paul III, it was soon ordered that a new temple be built, of proportional sumptuousness to the greatness of the growing viceroyalty, however this new factory encountered so many obstacles to its beginning, with so many difficulties for its continuation, that the old temple saw sumptuous colonial ceremonies pass in its narrow naves; and only when the fact that motivated them was of great importance, another church was used, such as that of San Francisco "Temple and ex-convent of San Francisco (Mexico City)"), to build the mound for the funeral honors of Charles V in its enormous chapel of San José de los Indios.
Given that the completion of the new church would take a long time, in the year 1584 it was decided to completely repair the old cathedral, which would be almost ruined, to celebrate the third New Spain Council there.
The church, with a basilica plan, was little longer than the front of the new cathedral; Its three naves did not reach 30 meters wide, separated by two dances of octagonal pillars of the Tuscan order; They were roofed, the central one with a half-scissor truss, those on the sides with horizontal beams. In addition to the Puerta del Perdón, there was another call of the Canons, and perhaps a third that overlooked the marquis' square.[21].
It remained in use until 1625 when it was demolished to speed up work on the new cathedral; The main façade was moved to the church of Santa Teresa la Antigua, where it remained until 1691, the year in which the architect Cristóbal de Medina was commissioned to remodel the façade of said church.[22] However, the authorities decided to preserve the old Renaissance façade that had belonged to the Cathedral, so the architect Juan Durán was hired to dismantle the façade, stone by stone, and assemble it on the west façade of the church of the Jesús Nazareno hospital. "Church of Jesus Nazareno (Mexico City)"); where it is currently located, as one of the few vestiges of the century that remain in the city.[23][24].
Since 1544, official documents had been published requesting the replacement of the austere cathedral of Mexico City with a larger one, without this going beyond an intention. Finally, on August 28, 1552, the document was issued that regulated and indicated the steps to follow for the construction project. In that same year, an agreement was reached whereby the cost of the new cathedral would be shared by the Spanish Crown, the commanders, and the indigenous people under the direct authority of the archbishop of New Spain.[26] Initial plans for the founding of the new cathedral began in 1562; Within the project for the construction of the work, the then archbishop Alonso de Montúfar would have proposed a monumental construction composed of seven naves and based on the design of the Seville cathedral; a project that, in Montúfar's own words, would take 10 or 12 years. The weight of a work of such dimensions in a swampy subsoil would require a special foundation. Initially, crossed beams were placed to build a platform, something that required high costs and constant drainage. In the end, this project was abandoned in 1565, not only due to the aforementioned cost, but also due to the flooding suffered by the city center. It is then that, supported by indigenous techniques, in 1570 solid wooden piles were injected at great depth, around twenty thousand of these piles in an area of six thousand square meters. The project is reduced from the original seven naves to only five: one central, two processional and two lateral ones for the 16 chapels. Construction began with designs and models created by Claudio de Arciniega and Juan Miguel de Agüero, inspired by the Spanish cathedrals of Jaén and Valladolid.[27][28].
In 1571, with some delay, Viceroy Martín Enríquez de Almansa and Archbishop Alonso de Montufar laid the first stone of the current temple. The cathedral began to be built in 1573 (when Pedro Moya was archbishop) around the existing church that would be demolished until 1625, when the works advanced enough to house the basic functions of the temple.[18].
The work began with a north-south orientation, contrary to that of most cathedrals, due to the subsoil waters that would affect the building with a traditional east-west orientation. Arciniega's original project was similar to that of the cathedrals of Segovia or Salamanca in Spain and considered that the naves would have to be roofed with wood and the bell tower would be located in the apse, but it was later modified, according to the model proposed by Juan Miguel de Agüero, considering the roof with vaults and the inclusion of a main dome and two towers located in front of the temple.[29].
The beginning of the works was encountered with muddy and unstable terrain that complicated the work. Due to this, tezontle and chiluca stone were favored as construction materials in several areas, over the quarry, as they were lighter. The site determined for the work was on one side of the front of the Templo Mayor, so it is very likely that the enclosures on which it was built were the temples of Quetzalcóatl or Xitle. In 1581, when the foundation work was finished, the walls began to be raised; The work inside began around the apse, so the chapter house and the sacristy were built first; and in 1585 work began on the first chapel. At that time the names of the stonemasons who worked on the work were: the chapels were carved by Juan Arteaga and the casings by Hernán García de Villaverde, who also worked on the main pillars whose half samples were sculpted by Martín Casillas.[30][31].
Anticipating future collapses (as would be the historical constant), the builders of the Cathedral solved the problem of the foundation by driving a grid of stakes 3 meters long approximately every 50 centimeters. After driving the stakes, the ground was leveled by burning the heads of the protruding logs. A stonework template was placed on this palisade that served as the base for a 1.60 meter thick embankment, built with large stones bonded with mortar. On this embankment rests the grid of masonry counter beams 3.50 meters high, which receives the columns. This grid forms a single piece, practically monolithic with the embankment.[30].
17th century
In 1615 the walls reached half their total height. In 1623 the sacristy was completed, it was used provisionally for religious services, which led to the definitive closure of the old cathedral and its subsequent demolition two years later. On September 21, 1629, the works were interrupted by the flood that the city suffered, in which the water reached two meters high, causing damage to the surroundings of the Plaza Mayor "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)") and other parts of the city. Because of the damage, a project was started to build the new cathedral in the hills of Tacubaya, west of the city, but the idea was discarded and the project continued in the same location, under the direction of Juan Gómez de Trasmonte (replacement of Arciniega and Agüeros, who died in 1593 and 1610 respectively). Among the innovations implemented by Trasmonte was abandoning the roof plan for the stone vaults, opting for tezontle, which was already used on the walls; this to accelerate the pace of construction and facilitate the decoration work with plasterwork and other materials.[32][33].
From 1629, and during the five years that the flood lasted, until 1634, as an offering, Archbishop Francisco Manso de Zúñiga ordered the transfer of the famous "tilma of Juan Diego", with the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe "Our Lady of Guadalupe (Mexico)"), to the sacristy of the cathedral.[30].
By 1648 the works on the Cathedral had progressed slowly and in the meantime it was noticeable that the land surrounding the construction was invaded by businesses and some buildings; Those that occupied the primitive church became a cemetery. That same year, Archbishop Juan de Mañozca y Zamora had a stone cross placed on a pedestal in the atrium of the cathedral, to try to delimit it, in the face of the threat of irregular buildings. In 1659, envoys from the viceroy Francisco Fernández de la Cueva and Enríquez de Cabrera accompanied by soldiers, demolished the illegal constructions around the cathedral; and the following year a large perimeter wall was built to prevent this from happening again; The average wall was around 40 centimeters thick and two meters high, it was openwork, with battlements on its upper edge; The delimited area doubled that of the current atrium.[30].
Archbishop Marcos Ramírez de Prado y Ovando carried out the second dedication on December 22, 1667, the year in which the last vault was closed; provisionally, in the space of the dome, a dome was placed. In the ceremony its official name was established as "Metropolitan Cathedral of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary to the Heavens of Mexico City." At the date of consecration (lacking, at that time, bell towers, main façade and other elements built in the century), the cost of what was built was equivalent to 1,759,000 pesos. This cost was largely covered by the kings of Spain Felipe II, Felipe III, Felipe IV and Carlos II.[20].
In 1675, the central part of the main façade was completed, the work of architect Cristóbal de Medina Vargas, which included the figure in stone relief of the Assumption of Mary, the dedication to which the cathedral is dedicated, and the sculptures of Santiago el Mayor and San Andrés guarding it. During the remainder of the century, the first body of the eastern tower was built, the work of architects Juan Lozano and Juan Serrano. The east and west portals were completed in 1688 and 1689 respectively; In that last year, the six buttresses that support the structure on the side of its main façade, the buttresses that support the vaults of the main nave and the first building outside the central core, the "conciliar seminary", were completed, which would be completed ten years later. At the end of this century the ornamentation process of most of the side chapels was completed; Furthermore, in 1696, the choir of canons was built in the middle of the central nave, which, following the style of Spanish cathedrals, had to be located in this sector of the temple, which would block the long hallway from the entrance to the main altar, reducing the capacity of occupants for the most important religious ceremonies.[34][35].
18th century
During the century little was done to advance the completion of the construction of the cathedral; largely because, already completed inside and useful for all the ceremonies that were offered, there was no urgent need to continue working on what was missing, only at the beginning of the century stood out the beginning of the construction of the second and third buildings outside the central core, first the "Chapel of the Souls", completed in 1720 and located on one side of the north façade, at the back of the cathedral; and second, between the aforementioned chapel and at the rear end of the west façade, the "Curia Building", which although it operated in the neighboring Palacio del Arzobispado "Antiguo Palacio del Arzobispado (Mexico)"), when this acquired more residential characteristics, the new building received offices and halls of the chapter.[30].
Although the exterior work had been effectively suspended, some interior work continued. In 1725 Jerónimo de Balbás completed the Altar of the Kings, located in the apse of the cathedral, becoming the main altar of the building and the one with the greatest ornamentation; In 1735, the "Altar of Forgiveness" was built in front of the choir, located right in front of the main entrance or "Holy Door"; In 1736, the installation of the monumental organs was completed, on the arches of the central nave that flanked the canons' choir, while the upper tribunes of the same were built; In 1737, Balbás himself replaced the old main altar of the century with one in the Baroque style, which incorporated a new design called "Cypress", different from the baldachin because the rite was not celebrated under it, but in front, and different from the altarpiece because it was not attached to the wall. Around 1737, Domingo de Arrieta" was the senior master; he made, in the company of José Eduardo de Herrera, master of architecture, the tribunes that surround the choir. In 1742 Manuel de Álvarez"), master of architecture, ruled with Herrera himself on the presbytery project presented by Jerónimo de Balbás.
In 1749, the construction of the most distinctive annex to the central body of the cathedral began, the "Sagrario Metropolitano", the work of Lorenzo Rodríguez, completed in 1768. When it was finished, an access was made to connect it with the cathedral, opening a carpanel arch in the western wing of the tabernacle; This displaces the «Chapel of San Isidro», which remains only as a passage between the buildings.[30].
On September 17, 1752, an iron cross, more than three yards long, with its weathervane, engraved on both sides with the Sanctus Deus prayer, was placed on the crown of the dome of this church, and in the middle of it a quarter oval, in which on one side was placed a wax of Agnus with its stained glass window, and on the other a sheet in which Saint was sculpted. Prisca, lawyer of lightning. The spike of said cross is two rods and its entire weight is fourteen arrobas; It was stuck in a stone base.[36].
19th century
Once Mexico's independence was concluded, the cathedral soon became the scene of important chapters in the history of the new country. Being the main religious center and seat of ecclesiastical power, it was part of different events involving the public life of independent Mexico.
On July 21, 1822, the coronation ceremony of Agustín de Iturbide as emperor of Mexico took place. From early on, the salute of twenty-four cannons sounded, balconies were decorated and the facades of public buildings were decorated, as well as atriums and church portals. Two thrones were placed in the cathedral, the main one next to the priest and the minor one near the choir.[40] Shortly before nine in the morning, the members of Congress and the City Council took their assigned places. Troops of cavalry and infantry surrounded the future emperor and his entourage. Three bishops officiated at the mass. The president of the Congress, Rafael Mangino, was in charge of placing the crown on Augustine I, immediately afterwards the emperor himself placed the crown on the empress. Other insignia were imposed on the newly crowned by the generals and ladies-in-waiting, Bishop Juan Cruz Ruiz de Cabañas y Crespo exclaimed * Vivat Imperator in aeternum!
In 1825 the heads of Miguel Hidalgo, Ignacio Allende, Juan Aldama and Mariano Jiménez, rescued and protected after having remained hanging in front of the Alhóndiga de Granaditas in Guanajuato, were transferred from the parish of Santo Domingo to the Metropolitan Cathedral in a solemn procession. The march of the skulls protected in an urn covered with black velvet was accompanied by the ringing of the bells, the voices of the Cabildo Choir and the brotherhoods that at that time were responsible for the cathedral chapels. Months before, those same skulls hung in front of the Alhóndiga and now Archbishop Pedro José de Fonte y Hernández Miravete gave authorization for the "Jubilee Door" of the site to be wide open to receive the so-called "heroes of Independence."
The remains of José María Morelos, Francisco Javier Mina, Mariano Matamoros and Hermenegildo Galeana were also received. The remains were placed in the "Crypt of the Archbishops and Viceroys" and at that time it was written: "To the honorable remains of the magnanimous and undaunted leaders, fathers of Mexican freedom, and victims of perfidy and nepotism, the tearful and grateful country erected this public monument." In 1838, in a massive state funeral ceremony, the remains of Agustín Iturbide, parading through the entire square, to the "Chapel of San Felipe de Jesús."
In 1847, after the American occupation took place, the cathedral also suffered from the acts of the invaders, highlighting the damage done to the "Sun Stone" when US soldiers used the monolith as target shooting, affecting the face of the sun. Simultaneously, the authorities of the cathedral, far from the turbulent times of the country, asked the architect Lorenzo de la Hidalga to build a cypress to replace that of Jerónimo de Balbás which, according to the chronicles of the time, the change in artistic taste led to its dismantling, at least before 1838, since the accounts of Iturbide's burial do not record that it still existed. The interior monument of the main altar, in neoclassical style, began its construction in June 1848 and was completed in 1851.[30].
20th century
In 1912 the "Mañozca Cross" returned to the cathedral to be located in its current position, behind the metropolitan tabernacle. Since 1913, with the archaeological discoveries on the corner of Seminario and Moneda streets, by the archaeologist Manuel Gamio, the old version that the cathedral was built on the Templo Mayor began to be demystified, since the ruins found correspond to a corner of it, making the location referred to unviable for centuries. In 1914 the trees around the building were removed, as they were high enough to obstruct the view of the enclosure, and replaced with gardens, which remained there until 1924. In the same building, in front of the "Conciliar Seminary", a fountain was built with a sculpture by Bartolomé de las Casas. In 1925, at the direction of President Plutarco Elías Calles, the remains of the heroes of independence left the cathedral to be placed at the base of the Column of the Angel of Independence on Paseo de la Reforma. The Mexican government did not take the body of Agustín de Iturbide, however, it remains in the chapel of San Felipe de Jesús.[30].
As part of the series of events that led to the outbreak of the Cristero War, on February 4, 1926, in the newspaper El Universal "El Universal (México)") a protest that Archbishop José Mora y del Río had declared nine years earlier against the new Constitution was published, but the note was presented as new news,[48] that is, as if it were a recent statement.[49] By orders of the president Calles - who considered the statement as a challenge to the Government - Mora y del Río was brought before the Attorney General's Office "Procuraduría General de la República (Mexico)") and detained; Several temples were closed, including the cathedral itself, and foreign priests were expelled. Constitutional article 130 was regulated as the Law of Cults (known as the Streets Law), religious schools were closed and the number of priests was limited so that only one officiated for every six thousand inhabitants. On June 21, 1929, during the presidency of Emilio Portes Gil, the Church and the Government signed the agreements that put an end to hostilities in Mexican territory, with which the site was reopened.
It was not until 1933 that the first plan for diagnosis and solution to structural problems was implemented, by the architects Manuel Ortiz Monasterio" and Manuel Cortina García"). Starting from this, three alternatives were specified to reduce the impact of the collapse, which were basically limited to reducing weight from the structure and load from the foundation: Demolition of the Seminary buildings; Begin the repair of the structure of the Tabernacle, which was evidently the one that showed the greatest problems in its skeleton; Empty the foundation cells formed in the grid of counter girders and use this space for the implementation of funerary crypts. All these works were carried out between 1933 and 1942.[50] With the space gained in the foundation work, in 1937 the construction of the "Crypts for the Archbishops" under the cathedral was completed, specifically under the "Altar of the Kings." In 1943, to give greater visibility to the aforementioned altar, the Lorenzo de la Hidalga cypress was removed and replaced by a smaller altar made of Tecali marble in 1950.
21st century
The night of September 15, 2010 was one of the main stages of the celebrations of the bicentennial of independence; a multimedia spectacle of images and sound projected on its main façade, accompanied by fireworks, was the closing of the main events in the capital's Zócalo "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)").
It would not be until February 13, 2016 that a new visit by a top Catholic leader would take place, when Pope Francis "Francisco (Pope)") attended a meeting with all the bishops of the dioceses of Mexico.[57].
The cathedral foundation monitoring and protection system was tested during the earthquake of September 19, 2017, and indeed responded positively; However, the same did not occur for the interior and exterior of the enclosure, which for the first time suffered damage that, although superficial and aesthetic, showed wear and degradation of the structures not linked to the foundation, but to the heritage value of the temple.
Among the most significant damages was the fall of the sculpture of "Hope" from the sculptural group of the theological virtues at the top of the main façade; the collapse of the cross of the east tower (which at the same time pierced a vault of the Metropolitan Tabernacle); cracks in the vaults, misalignment of voussoirs in the arches and detachment of flattened ones.
In 2019, the most exhaustive intervention project to the cathedral began since the rescue in the 1990s. In a first stage of attention, by the General Directorate of Cultural Heritage Sites and Monuments, with the support of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), and the Engineering Institute of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, maintenance work was carried out on the control pile system, eradication of parasitic flora, caulking of cracks, and rehabilitation of electrical installation and lightning rod system; works that had an investment of 20 million pesos and a duration of two years.[58].
The second stage of the restoration, framed in the national reconstruction project of the federal government, began on September 7, 2022. On this occasion, the towers, the dome, the main façade and the central vault of the Tabernacle would be intervened at a cost of 84 million pesos. The two towers were covered with gigantic scaffolding for work to consolidate their structure and support, this through the injection of a semi-liquid substance to anchor the cracks and fissures; At the same time, maintenance work was carried out on the bell towers and the ornamental or sculptural pieces of both supports, including the replacement of the fallen cross in 2017; In the case of the vaults, cracks were sewn with pieces of masonry; while the dome, as well as its lantern, received cleaning work, elimination of harmful flora, shoring and consolidation; Finally, the main façade received cleaning and restoration work on elements lost in the 2017 earthquake. This second stage concluded in January 2023.[59][60].
Composition and organization
The Cathedral is the official headquarters of the Primate Archdiocese of Mexico. Since the second half of the century and until 2019 (when it gave up part of its territory for the formation of three new dioceses), it was the largest in the Catholic world. Synod of bishops.
By virtue of the provisions of the regulatory framework that make up the "Law of Religious Associations and Public Worship", the "General Law of National Assets" and the "Federal Law on Monuments and Archaeological, Artistic and Historical Areas", the Cathedral is a "Property owned by the nation" registered as "Historical Monument", so it is property of the federal Government, however it is deposited on loan to a religious association called "Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico City AR", dependent on another, which is the Archdiocese of Mexico.[63][64][65][66].
The administration and protection of the building is carried out jointly by various areas of the federal and local governments and ecclesiastical authorities, due to the heritage, historical, religious and cultural implications of the architectural complex. According to the regulatory framework, the above is distributed as follows:
• - Metropolitan Council — Dependency of the Archdiocese of Mexico, which manages the resources, plans, projects and programs linked to the operation, conservation and authorization of the Cathedral. Coordinating the different areas that have influence over each area; that is, the person directly responsible for the building. They are also responsible for regulating and directing the religious activities of the campus. Constituted as a collegiate body, it is made up of 20 clerics called "canons":[67]
Dean is the highest position, and therefore rector of the Cathedral.
Ardeacon, second in command within the structure and immediate replacement of the dean.
Canon theologian, in charge of the formation and preparation of the chapter, as well as the doctrine taught.
Penitentiary canon, responsible for absolution.
Secretary, custodian and person responsible for the archive and documentation of the temple.
Bursar, responsible for the finances and resources of the temple.
Librarian, in charge of the general archive (library, newspaper archive, etc.).
Chaplains, priests assisting religious practice, and those responsible for the lay personnel who operate in the Cathedral.
• - General Directorate of Cultural Heritage Sites and Monuments — Dependency of the Ministry of Culture "Secretaría de Cultura (Mexico)"), which is responsible for the conservation of the artistic, historical and architectural heritage of the property.
Added to these two are the National Institute of Anthropology and History and the "Authority of the Historical Center" (dependency of the Government of Mexico City), which intervene in the preservation and dissemination of the property's heritage in the first case, and in the adaptations to the surroundings of the building for its correct use, in the second case. Although, by law, its security is the responsibility of the federal government, the council is authorized to employ private security personnel and local police.
The architectural complex is made up of a set of semi-independent buildings, these are: the central core that integrates the basilica plan, the cathedral as such; the "Metropolitan Tabernacle"; the “Curia Building”; and the “Chapel of the Souls”.
Abroad
Covers
The main façade comprises the south front of the building, on the Zócalo road section that connects "5 de Mayo" street with the corner of "Seminario" and "Moneda" streets. It is composed of five bodies delimited by the intercales of the six buttresses that support it, these have a square base topped by enormous scrolls; The two largest bodies correspond to the corners and bases of the bell towers, they are covered with Chiluca quarry and each has an access to the towers, and three windows; The door steps have been constantly modified, as they are the elements of the assembly that most exhibit differential collapse. The other three bodies correspond to the monumental portals, the central one being larger than the lateral ones, since the first, in addition to being higher, has a wider top.[68][69].
The central doorway presents on its first level, on each side of the door, two pairs of Doric columns separated by niches, in which are the sculptures of Saint Peter and Saint Paul (works by the sculptor Miguel Jiménez in 1687), above them they have a lattice-style decoration "Lattice (architecture)"); The upper part of the columns (beams) is decorated with triglyphs and metopes. On the second level, above the door, there is a white marble high relief of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, inspired by a work by the Flemish painter Pedro Pablo Rubens; It is flanked by pairs of tritostyle columns") with an Ionic capital, in whose niches are the sculptures of Saint Andrew and Saint James the Greater (by the same author of the previous sculptures), above them there is a quarry decoration carved in the shape of a rhombus; below the relief lies a marble plaque with the Latin inscription of the dedication of the temple. At the top, there is the figure carved by Luis Rodríguez Alconedo at the beginning of the century, which represents to the iconographic emblem of the city, the founding myth of Mexico-Tenochtitlan, the eagle with outstretched wings, standing on a cactus, devouring a snake, this image is identical to the later used shield of Mexico, in its version of 1823-1846; the coat of arms is within an oval flanked by garlands, and originally the figures inside the medallion were covered with gold, but most of the gold tone has faded. The complex is completed by the clock cube, on which are the sculptures of the "Theological Virtues", which represent faith "Faith (religion)"), hope "Hope (virtue)") and charity "Charity (virtue)"), works by the sculptor Manuel Tolsá.
The left or west side portal shows a finish with the papal tiara, inside a medallion decorated with garlands, on the sides two ciboriums supported by angels, all these elements made in quarry; The second level has a white marble relief flanked by Solomonic columns, this represents the allegorical scene in which Jesus Christ hands the keys of heaven to Saint Peter, surrounded by the apostles and with a triumphal arch in the background.
The right or eastern side cover has an identical finish to the other side, with the papal tiara; Flanked by Solomonic columns, there is a white marble relief with the allegorical image of "the nave of the church", this symbolism is reminiscent of early Christian art, which represented the church as a boat leading to the eternal port; In the image of the relief, Jesus Christ as captain, the twelve apostles and the four evangelists appear.
The three portals have carved wooden doors, the largest being also the central door, and the only one accompanied by iconography in the carving; As with all Catholic cathedrals, the main door is called "Holy Door", which in the case of this enclosure, can only be opened in four situations: the funeral of an archbishop, the inauguration of a new archbishop, the visit of a supreme pontiff and every 25 years in a so-called "jubilee year"; However, it was opened in special situations, such as the coronation of Agustín de Iturbide in 1822, the reception of the funeral remains of the heroes of independence in 1825, the state funeral for Iturbide himself in 1838, the reception of the emperors Maximilian and Carlota in 1864, and in 1925 when the remains of the insurgent heroes were exhumed, to be taken to the Angel of Independence. The images carved on the holy door are four, one for each quadrant of the gate, framed in rectangles in each center of the sections; in the upper part on the left, Saint Joseph with the baby Jesus; on the right Santa Rosa de Lima; In the lower part, on both sides, the Archangel Michael defeating the devil.[68][69].
• - Left portal of the main façade.
• - Central façade of the main façade.
• - Right portal of the main façade.
• - Sculptures of the three theological virtues: Faith, Hope and Charity.
• - Clock cube, sculptural group and national coat of arms at the top of the main façade.
The west façade extends along “Monte de Piedad” street, it was built in 1688 and rebuilt in 1804. It presents a façade divided into three sections. The first in the lower part has the sculptures of Saint Thomas and Saint Matthew; Both statues are located in niches flanked by Doric columns; The beams between the levels have a marble plaque with the Latin inscription that refers to the construction and inauguration of the cover. The second level has three windows adorned with stained glass by Mathias Goeritz, made in the century; The side windows are each accompanied by tritostyle columns with Ionic capitals. At the top, lie the sculptures of Simon the apostle "Simon (apostle)") and Saint Jude Thaddeus, and in the center a stained glass window by the same author, flanked by two Solomonic columns with a Corinthian capital. The esplanade of this façade is publicly accessible and its carved wooden door is the secondary or emerging entrance to the cathedral. In its esplanade there are the column bases of the old cathedral and a sculpture of John Paul II made in the 2000s, from cast keys donated by the population.
The east façade covers the section of the old "Seminario" street, and has restricted access. This consists only of a two-level cover and a finial; In the first are the sculptures of Saint Bartholomew and Saint John the Apostle, each flanked by a pair of Doric columns; On the second level there are three windows adorned with stained glass by Mathias Goeritz, made in the century; The side windows are each accompanied by tritostyle columns with Ionic capitals. At the top, in the center there is a stained glass window by the same author, flanked by two Solomonic columns with Corinthian capitals, and next to these, the sculptures of San Felipe and Santiago el Menor. In the beams between the first and second levels, there is a marble plaque with the Latin inscription that refers to the construction and inauguration of the façade. The esplanade on this cover is also restricted access; It contains the fountain with the sculpture by Bartolomé de las Casas, a small garden, stonework material for repairs and the entrance to the archaeological remains beneath the cathedral; as well as the remains of the famous "Mañozca Cross", on the wall that corresponds to the rear façade of the Tabernacle. At the north end of the façade there is a carved wooden door without a cover, which gives access to the sacristy.[68][69].
The north façade covers the section of "República de Guatemala" street, it was built in the century in Herrerian style, it is the oldest part of the cathedral and the lowest in height. It is covered with tezontle and has in its center a niche with an allegorical relief of the "Lamb of the Apocalypse." This exterior space corresponds to the rear part of the "Altar of the Kings" inside, therefore it is the apse of the cathedral; On its sides it has two carved wooden doors that served as northern access to the cathedral for more than a century, but were closed when two altarpieces from the Jesuit College of San Pedro and San Pablo were placed in the interior as chapels, when it was closed in 1767.[26][70].
• - East or east facade.
• - West or west façade.
• - North façade.
Bell Towers
The towers were built between 1787 and 1791, however between 1642 and 1672 the base and first body of the eastern tower were built. The works were carried out by the architect José Damián Ortiz de Castro; These have a height of between 64 and 67 meters whose interior access is via ellipsoidal stairs made of wood.[74].
The square towers are made up of three bodies: the first is straight with a small entrance and three square windows above it; In the second there is a central opening and two smaller ones on each side, with a semicircular enclosure; Part of the bells are also found in this section; The third body has two openings in the center, one with a semicircular enclosure and the other square in shape, and on each side a large rectangular opening that covers the height of the two central ones. It ends with a roof in the shape of a large bell with an elliptical plan and a semi-ovoid roof crowned by a stone sphere and an iron cross.[68][69].
Each tower has eight sculptures representing saints who protect the city, four being doctors of the Western Church and the other four being doctors of the Church in Spain. The sculptures of the western tower are the work of José Zacarías Cora"), and represent Augustine of Hippo, Gregory the Great, Leander of Seville, Saint Braulio, Saint Rose of Lima "Rosa de Lima (saint)"), Saint Francis Xavier, Saint Emigdio and Saint Barbara "Barbara (martyr)"). For their part, those of the eastern tower were sculpted by Santiago Cristóbal de Sandoval") and represent Saint Ambrose, Saint Jerome, Saint Isidro Labrador, Saint Ildefonso, Saint Philip of Jesus, Saint Hippolytus, Saint Cassian and Saint Gregory the Taumaturgus.[12]
The two towers have space to house 56 bells, although today there are 35, with 23 located in the eastern tower, 11 in the western one, and one more outside the two towers that is located under a niche near the choir. The largest bell of all has the name "Santa María de Guadalupe", it was cast by Salvador de la Vega in 1791 and placed in 1793, it weighs around thirteen tons. The oldest bell was cast in 1578, and is known as "Santa María de la Asunción" or "Doña María", it weighs approximately seven tons and was placed in 1653, like "La Ronca", known for its low tone. The most modern is from 2002, it was placed on the occasion of the canonization of Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin and was blessed by Pope John Paul II.
The bells of the cathedral have rung at important moments in the history of Mexico, thus calling the people to the rescue of El Parián in 1682; They rang at the coronation of Emperor Agustín de Iturbide, at his death and burial; They called on the people to defend the city against the American invasion on September 14, 1847; and they marked the beginning of the festivities of the centenary of national Independence on September 15, 1910, and of the Bicentennial of National Independence on September 15, 2010. They ring in full every year on the feast of Corpus Christi, on the night of September 15, on Christmas night, at the "New Year's" mass and at the Easter mass; in the case of the deaths of the archbishop and the pope, they double 75 and 100 times respectively; and they ring before the announcement of the election of the successors of the aforementioned hierarchs.[75].
Dome
It was completed with adaptations to Ortiz de Castro's project. The Assumption of the Virgin was also represented inside (Rafael Ximeno y Planes, 1810). The dome that exists today is the work of Manuel Tolsá, and has an octagonal plan, which has Ionic pilasters on its drum and between them vertical windows with straight enclosures, topped by a curved pediment. The dome has a great elevation and is divided into eight sections decorated with geometric moldings made with mosaics, which reach the highest part of the base of a slender lantern, whose dome is crowned by a large flame. The current windows are by Matías Goeritz. In the fire of 1967, caused by a short circuit in the Altar of Forgiveness, the painting of the Assumption was consumed.[77][68][69][30].
Inside
Altar of the Kings
The Altar of the Kings is the main altarpiece of the Cathedral, it is located in the apse of the temple, behind the "High Altar", built on an oven vault. It is the work of Jerónimo de Balbás, author, among others, of the «Altar of Forgiveness» of this same cathedral, and of the missing «Altar Mayor» of the church of the Sagrario "Iglesia del Sagrario (Sevilla)") of the cathedral of Seville. Its construction began in 1718, it is made in the Churrigueresque style of white cedar wood and golden ayacahuite, with the characteristic decoration element being the columns and pilasters estípites "Estípite (architecture)"), an innovative method introduced to New Spain by the author of the altarpiece; Its construction ended in 1725, but due to the prolonged gilding process carried out by Francisco Martínez, it was dedicated until 1737 when said ornamentation was finished; This makes it the oldest churrigueresque work in Mexico. It has undergone various restorations, especially after the fire of 1967, the most extensive being in 2003.
It measures 25 meters high, 13.75 m wide and 7.5 m deep, due to these dimensions it is known as "the golden cave"; It is divided into three vertical streets, presenting an abundant composition of pilasters, columns, foliage, garlands and cherubs. The space of the altar is limited on both sides by enormous pilasters, which serve as antas "Anta (architecture)") to large stipes that support the projecting cornice, which extends like an impost around the entire perimeter; Two other stipes support the vaulted vault. There are no records of the existence of an altarpiece that preceded it, so said construction space was empty for almost sixty years, until the project by Jerónimo de Balbás. The altarpieces on the side walls outside the vault were made around 1778 by Isidro Vicente de Balbás").[78][70].
There are two versions regarding its name, the first indicates that, as was the case with different cathedrals in the Spanish colonies in America, the space in the apse was reserved as a "Royal Chapel or Altar", for the exclusive use of the monarchs, contemplating probable visits by them to their possessions outside the peninsula; This version is supported by the existence of several main altarpieces called "Altar of the Kings" and a custom among Spanish cathedrals, which reserved this space in the apse as mausoleums for members of royalty.[79].
However, the most widespread version is that it takes its name from the carvings of saints belonging to royalty, which are part of its decoration. At the bottom, from left to right, six canonized queens appear: Margaret of Scotland "Marguerite of Scotland (saint)"), Helen of Constantinople, Elizabeth of Hungary, Isabel of Portugal "Elizabeth of Portugal (saint)"), Cunegonde of Luxembourg and Edith of Wilton "Edith (saint)"). In the center of the altar are six canonized kings: Hermenegild, Henry II of the Holy Roman Empire, Edward the Confessor and Casimir of Poland, located in a lower position, and Louis IX of France and Ferdinand III of Castile, located in a higher position than the previous four.[70].
In the center of these kings is an oil painting of the "Adoration of the Kings" by Juan Rodríguez Juárez that shows the baby Jesus held by the virgin Mary, being adored by the Three Wise Men in the middle of the manger. The upper part has a painting of the "Assumption of the Virgin", by the same author, as a celestial queen being elevated to the heavens before the gaze of the apostles. The assumption painting is flanked by two oval bas-reliefs depicting "Saint Joseph with the baby Jesus" and "Saint Teresa of Ávila" with a pen in her hand and the Holy Spirit, who inspires her to write, above her. The altarpiece is completed with carvings of angels carrying attributes of praise to the virgin such as "Sealed Fountain", "House of Gold", "Well of Living Water" and "Tower of David". The complex is crowned by a double golden vault in which the image of God the Father appears holding the world in the center, and on its sides medallions with the images of Saint Peter and Saint Paul.[80][68][69][30].
High altar
Throughout its history, the Metropolitan Cathedral has had four main altars, the first three in the shape of a tabernacle free from the walls, so that it could be surrounded and altars placed on its main faces. The first was made in the s. about which not much information is known; This was replaced in the s. by a baroque wooden cypress, in the stipe style made by Jerónimo de Balbás, it had a pinar (pine-shaped pillar), a silver tabernacle of rough workmanship, which has another, smaller one, inside made with gold; The change of taste in artistic fashion, its weak structure and costly repairs led to its dismantling, today only a sculpture of the Assumption of Mary remains.
In 1848 it was replaced by a neoclassical-style cypress, the work of Lorenzo de la Hidalga; It had three bodies with Corinthian style columns, the sculptures of angels and saints, that of Christ the King and that of the "Assumption of Mary" at the top, were made by Francisco Terrazas; Part of its financing was paid for with the casting of a gold sculpture of the "Assumption" from 1610 and a silver lamp nine meters in circumference that hung in front of the "Altar of the Kings"; This cypress tree was demolished in 1943, only some sculptures remain, most of them distributed on the access walls to the cathedral and others in the curia building.
After the removal of the previous cypress, the cathedral authorities proposed the construction of a new "High Altar", but at a lower altitude to prevent the view of the "Altar of the Kings" from being obstructed. The new, and current altar, was installed in 1950 with the sponsorship of the "Commission of order and decorum"; the design is the work of the architect Antonio Muñoz García") and was made by the sculptor Ernesto Tamariz; it is made of tecali jasper, a material already used in the ambos. It is rectangular in plan and only has one level, although with a protruding intermediate in front, like a platform or table; its reliefs represent eight apostles and some liturgical signs: on the left side Simón "Simón (apostle)") and Andrés; in front of the left side Juan, and on the side right Pedro; on the right side Santiago the Lesser and Felipe; on the back left Bartholomew and on the right side Thomas.
Among the liturgical elements of decoration there is a censer in the lower part of the front, a flaming heart on a nimbus that is at the same time on a cross, the pointing hand of God the Father on a cross, the dove of the Holy Spirit also on a cross, and under the altar table, two angels worshiping the name of Jesus with the monogram composed of the letters "J, H and S" with a cross; To his right is the "Lamb of the Apocalypse" and to his left are the "Tables of Moses" and the "Ark of the Covenant." The rear part also has a double lateral staircase of the same material, used to climb the monstrance of the Eucharist; In the center of the staircase is a metal door on which is the shield of the then archbishop Miguel Darío Miranda Gómez. On the upper part of the altar lies a wooden crucifix and four monstrances or monstrances "Custody (liturgy)") that are part of the monumental monstrance set.
Choir
The choir is located in a closed space in the middle of the central nave, between the "Altar of Forgiveness" and the processional hallway towards the "High Altar", this in the style of Spanish cathedrals; It consists of a hemicycle with two rows of seats; The fifty-nine of the upper part are separated by Solomonic columns surrounded by vines that frame relief sculptures of gilded wood, it is for the exclusive use of the canons and the archbishop, while the 45 below are for sixes and sochantres. At the top it presents 59 reliefs that include the twelve apostles, the four evangelists, the four fathers of the Western church, the founders of the religious orders and various saints and martyrs of the church; They are all made of mahogany, walnut, cedar and tepehuaje. Originally the carvings were covered in gold, but the majority, 47 out of 59, were destroyed in the fire of 1967, so the new ones did not contain this element. The choir stalls were made by Juan de Rojas "Juan de Rojas (sculptor)") between 1696 and 1697.
In the center of the choir, between the railing and the stalls, is a lectern made of ebony, tindalum and balsam marquetry, decorated with ivory figures, which include the Assumption of Mary, the four evangelists, the four doctors of the church and a crucifix that crowns the entire work. It is supported by a quadrangular base and an attached shaft with scrolls at each angle. It was gifted by the bishop of Manila Manuel Antonio Rojo del Río in 1762 and is the work of the sculptor José de Núñez, being installed in 1766. It is used to hold the singing books, and is made up of three bodies.
The façade of the choir and the bay "Crujía (architecture)") were made according to the design of the painter Nicolás Rodríguez Juárez") under the supervision of the sangley Quiauló. The choir grille was made in 1722 by Sangley Queaulo"); It was built in Macau, China, (when this port city was a Portuguese colony) using tumbaga, a material made from the alloy of gold and copper. Upon arrival in New Spain it was installed by Jerónimo de Balbás; It was released in 1730, replacing a previous wooden one; The fence is flanked by two columns on which upper tribunes were built attached with golden reliefs of angels. At the top of the façade on the grille there is an oval with the figure of the "Assumption of Mary", crowned with a crucifix, which is complemented by two more on the sides to represent the Calvary scene.[68][69].
On the opposite side, just behind the "Altar of Forgiveness", an altarpiece as a curtain with a canopy, crowns a group composed of two columns with angels in the capitals, guarding an image of the Virgin of Guadalupe "Our Lady of Guadalupe (Mexico)"), and below it an allegorical painting in which Jesus Christ blesses a group of musical angels, while two of them offer him a crown, this is the work of Cristóbal de Villalpando, and It replaced one by Juan Correa that burned in the fire of 1967. In the lower part of the wall, already in the carved wooden ensemble, there is a niche in the center with a cross, beginning the order of the ashlar masonry, with the image of Saint Peter being in the first place.[83].
Organs
The cathedral has had several organs in its history.[84] The first record of its existence is in a written report to the king of Spain in 1530, although no details of it appear. In 1655, Diego de Sebaldos built an organ. The first large organ, which is the Epistle organ (right side), was built by Jorge de Sesma in Madrid in 1690 and was installed in the cathedral by Tiburcio Sanz in 1695. of the organ by Jorge de Sesma.[85] In the fire of 1967 they suffered significant damage, so they were restored in 1978 by the organ company Flentrop and later restored between 2008 and 2014 by Gerhard Grenzing").[88].
They are located between the columns that delimit the choir, supported by its side walls, where the secondary entrances are located. They measure 15 meters high, nine meters wide and 2.80 meters deep. Its decoration includes effigies of angels in golden tones, carrying musical instruments, reliefs on the wood with vegetal and floral motifs, and royal crowns on the finials, supported by angels.[68][69].
• - Interior view in the choir of the right organ.
• - Interior view in the choir of the left organ.
Altar of Forgiveness
It is located in the backchoir, at the front of the central nave. The altarpiece was made by the Spanish architect Jerónimo de Balbás in 1735, being one of his most important works. It is baroque with a single body, finished in gold leaf, it represents the first use of the stipe "Stipite (architecture)") in America, in which the columns represent the human body; The finish is semicircular and in the first two bodies medallions with relief images are displayed; The design is prominently integrated with the upper rear stands of the choir, attached to the altar tones. In early 1967 there was a fire in the cathedral that damaged the altar. Thanks to the restoration carried out, it can be seen today.[70][79].
It is called that because it is located behind the door of the same name. Although there are two other legends about the origin of the name, the first establishes that those condemned by the Inquisition were taken to the altar to ask for forgiveness before their execution. The second refers to the painter Simon Pereyns, author of many works in the cathedral, who was apparently accused of blasphemy and sentenced to prison. While in prison, he painted a beautiful image of the Virgin Mary, for which his crime was forgiven.[80].
On this altar is the image of the crucified Jesus Christ made of corn cane paste known as the "Lord of Poison".[89] The image dates back to the century and was originally located in the chapel of the Porta Coeli Seminary in Mexico City, but after being closed to public worship in 1935, it was transferred to the Metropolitan Cathedral.[89].
Naves and altars of the apse
The basilica-type architectural plan provides for the integration of five naves, one central, two processional and two lateral. The central nave, in which the altars “Del Perdón”, “Major” and “De los Reyes” are located, as well as the choir and organs; It is covered with a lunette vault "Luneta (architecture)") that arises from a barrel vault, which is the one that results from the extension of a semicircular arch; The vaults are decorated with moldings with geometric motifs in green tones. The processional vaults have baída vaults, whose shape appears from the intersection of a dome with a cube, whose base is inscribed at the base of the dome; In this case the vaults were decorated with radial moldings. The side naves where the chapels are located have different types of vault, as described in each case. The vault of the cathedral dome was decorated with radial moldings, after the destruction in 1967 of the painting that adorned it until then.
In 1767, after the expulsion of the Society of Jesus from the Spanish Empire, the Jesuit College of Saint Peter and Saint Paul stopped being used for religious purposes, so to safeguard its two monumental altarpieces, they were moved to the "Metropolitan Tabernacle" and later to the two spaces under the vaults at the northern end of the processional naves of the Cathedral, next to the "Altar of the Kings", where the rear doors of the enclosure were located.
The first altarpiece, in the east wing, is that of the "Virgin of Zapopan" measuring 13 meters high by nine meters wide. The portraits that accompany the Marian devotion belong to founders of religious orders such as Saint Francis of Assisi, Saint Dominic, Saint Ignatius of Loyola, Saint John Bosco, Saint Philip Neri, among others. On the west side and of similar dimensions, an altarpiece dedicated to Jesus Christ and the twelve apostles, called the "Divine Savior", was placed.[68][69][30][79].
• - Left or west processional nave.
• - Altarpiece of the Divine Savior.
• - Pendulum that measures the sinking of the cathedral in the central nave.
• - Altarpiece of the Virgin of Zapopan.
• - Right or eastern processional nave.
Chapels
The 14 chapels located in the side naves of the cathedral are distributed equally on both sides, all have elaborate bronze bars and ornamented at the top, with the inscription of the invocation, saint or dedication of this. The chapels were sponsored and dedicated to brotherhoods and guilds; the first were prohibited by the Reform Laws; The latter belonged to trades and tasks that disappeared with the passage of time, because they were no longer necessary for the chapel's belongings or because they became professional jobs far removed from religious ties.[68][69][30][79].
It is located on the base of the western tower, making it the first chapel in the west wing of the complex, starting from the main façade, and was completed between 1653 and 1660; It is covered by a star vault, typical of late Gothic. This first chapel was destroyed by a fire in 1711, so it was immediately replaced by the current one, completed in 1713.
The three altarpieces are in the Solomonic baroque style, with stewed and polychrome sculptures, works by Manuel de Nava"), which represent the seven archangels (Miguel, Gabriel, Rafael, Uriel, Jofiel, Camael and Zadkiel), all of them in the central altarpiece, representing the allegory of the "Choir of the Angels"; this altarpiece is topped with an effigy of God the Father holding an orb with a crucifix, while in the lintel of the window there is a dove as a symbol of the holy spirit, and below this window Jesus Christ, also holding a robe with a crucifix; the vertical alignment of the three figures represents the "Holy Trinity."
The altarpiece on the right contains paintings of other angels representing the "Angelology" or hierarchies of the heavenly choirs (seraphim, cherubs, thrones, dominions, virtues, powers and principalities), as well as a painting of the Virgin Mary "Mary (mother of Jesus)"); while the altarpiece on the left, in addition to the celestial beings (among which the famous "Guardian Angel" stands out), contains a painting of Saint Joseph who, complemented by the Christ of the central altarpiece, symbolize the allegory of "the Holy Family"; The paintings are the work of Juan Correa. Except for the sculpture of Saint Michael and the furniture in the chapel, most of the set is the original reopened in 1713, making it one of the best preserved spaces in the cathedral.[79].
It is the second chapel in the west wing, its roof is a groin vault. The altarpieces were made around 1650 in a baroque style reminiscent of mannerism. They contain ten paintings, in addition to the one that serves as the background of the "Lord of Health"; The works are framed by Corinthian columns. Among the altarpieces that decorate the interior of the chapel, the main one is dedicated to honoring the tutelary saints of the chapel; It consists of two bodies, the top and three entrecales.
It is one of the cathedral altarpieces of the century in which it can be said that it has a mannerist accent and as proof of this are the fluted classicist columns. The altarpiece was conceived to house paintings, which exalt the life of the medical saints Cosme and Damián "Cosme and Damián (martyrs)") and are due to the painter Sebastián López Dávalos. Only three of the paintings do not belong to the biographical account of the martyrs, and they are, one about the scene in which Pope Nicholas V contemplates the funeral remains of Saint Francis of Assisi and witnesses a miracle, one of Saint Hippolytus, another of Saint Sebastian and a small one in the medallion at the top with the image of God the Father.
Sacristy
It is the oldest space in the cathedral, it is located at the north end of the east wing of the complex. In 1626, when Viceroy Rodrigo Pacheco y Osorio, Marquis of Cerralvo (1624-1635) ordered the demolition of the old temple, the sacristy functioned (until 1641) as the place where services were held. Logically, the main altar was placed there and according to the inventory of 1632, it had two lecterns, one of gilded iron and the other of silver made by the master Pedro Ceballos.
As established by the ecclesiastical canon, the purpose of this place is to safeguard the objects, instruments and accessories necessary for the celebration of religious worship, such as chalices, ciboriums, monstrances, censers; and also where the clerics, especially the archbishop, dress in the garments necessary for the Eucharistic celebration, such as the miter, pallium, tunic and stole.
The doorway is in the Herrerian style, and above the semicircular arch, there is an inscription that records its completion in 1623. The door was placed between 1684 and 1688, and measures 5.65 meters high by 3.25 meters wide; It is paneled and carved, the reliefs, in addition to the papal tiara and the keys of Saint Peter, contain Marian symbols, such as the rainbow, the moon, the star, the palm and the cypress.
It is built with a rectangular plan and its vault has Gothic style ribs. During the great flood between 1629 and 1634, as an offering, the famous "tilma of Juan Diego" was kept here, with the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe "Our Lady of Guadalupe (Mexico)").
Inside the sacristy you can admire six enormous paintings by the New Spain painters Cristóbal de Villalpando and Juan Correa "Juan Correa (Mexican painter)"). The titles of the paintings are: "The Church Triumphant and Militant" from 1685 and located on the west wall; «The Prayer of Saint Michael» from 1686, located around the frame and wall of the entrance door; «The Triumph Of The Church» which is on the right side of the previous one; and at the opposite end a painting whose name has two versions "The Woman of the Apocalypse" or "Fight of Saint Michael with the dragon" (Villalpando). "La Asunción" from 1689, located on the south wall; and on the left side of this painting, on the east wall and next to the door that connects the patio of the east façade, is "The Entry of Christ to Jerusalem" (Correa), the door frame has the painting of a medallion with the "Assumption of Mary", in allusion to the coat of arms of the archdiocese. The gilder of the frames was the sculptor Manuel de Nava and he carried out his work between 1685 and 1691. In addition to the six monumental paintings, around the walls there are other paintings, liturgical vestments, chalices, monstrances, reliquaries, sculptures and the silver cross used in processions, which complement the decoration and furniture of the place.
chapter house
Of similar age to the sacristy, it is located at the north end of the west wing of the enclosure. It is the meeting center of the "Metropolitan Chapter", the governing body of the Cathedral, made up of religious and lay canons.
The doorway inside the cathedral is in the Herrerian style with a semicircular arch. The door measures 5.65 meters high by 3.25 meters wide, it is boarded and carved, the reliefs, in addition to the papal tiara and the keys of Saint Peter, contain Marian symbols, such as the rainbow, the moon, the star, the palm and the cypress. It is built with a rectangular plan and its vault has Gothic style ribs. The entrance that led to the outside was integrated into the "Curia Building" since 1720; Above this door there is a painting of "The Holy Face" from the 19th century. As in the sacristy, a wooden fence divides the space in two, with the northern half being exclusively used by the canons.
On the front wall is the bronze archiepiscopal throne, ordered to be made by Archbishop Luis María Martínez y Rodríguez, which was on the main altar during the second third of the century. It is ornamented at the top with the shield of the archdiocese, which consists of an image of the "Immaculate Conception" standing on a cactus, two keys crossed behind her back, with a pair of angels flanking her and two more carrying the papal tiara. When the throne was replaced it was moved here and used as the frame for a painting of the Virgin of Guadalupe, a work by José de la Cruz from 1680. In front of the throne lies the altar table used by John Paul II in his 1979 mass. On the sides of the throne, from left to right, the paintings "The Christ of Saint Teresa" and "The Assumption of Mary", both dating from colonial times.
On the side walls, distributed on three levels, the portraits of 36 of the 43 archbishops of Mexico; Of these, only seven of them are signed and the majority are from the 19th century onwards. The missing portraits correspond to archbishops who resigned and those who died before assuming office. The rest of the decoration presents paintings from the colonial era with Marian invocations and of Jesus Christ, a wardrobe from the century and a painting with the Pentecost scene by Nicolás Rodríguez Juárez; The oil painting is on a bench with a carving of the Immaculate Conception and some saints. The upper frame of the access door to the cathedral is crowned by a painting of the archdiocese's coat of arms.[68][69][30][79][93].
Crypts
Under the Altar of the Kings is the crypt of the archbishops, there are the remains of most of the archbishops of Mexico, from Fray Juan de Zumárraga to Cardinal Ernesto Corripio y Ahumada, whose remains were deposited in April 2008. The entrance is through a large wooden door, located at the back of the body of the "High Altar", behind which, a spiral staircase descends. gives access to the crypt, made by the architect Ernesto Gómez Gallardo Argüelles; The current conformation and structure of this funerary enclosure was the product of the foundation work, which managed to gain enough space in the old crypts to bring together all the deceased archbishops in a single group. In the center there is a cenotaph with a life-size sculpture of Zumárraga, at the base of which is a skull carved in stone, this was an element of the Templo Mayor, the monument honors this character, since he was considered protector of the Indians against the abuses of the conquerors. Behind this, there is an altar with another pre-Hispanic geometric sculpture located at the bottom. The other archbishops are found in niches in the walls, marked by bronze plaques on which the name and episcopal coat of arms of each one appear. On the floor there are marble slabs that cover the niches of other people buried in the crypt.[94].
The cathedral contains other crypts and niches where other religious figures are buried, including in the chapels. In addition, it has crypts for the faithful who wish to be buried in the cathedral; this part has access to a staircase on one side of the west door.[68][69][30][79].
• - Crypt of the archbishops of Mexico.
• - Pre-Hispanic stone of the altar.
• - Crypt.
• - Zumárraga sculpture.
• - Niches of the archbishops.
Metropolitan Tabernacle
The Metropolitan Tabernacle of Mexico City is located to the east of the cathedral. It was built following the design of Lorenzo Rodríguez between 1749 and 1760,[70] during the height of the Baroque. It had the function of housing the archives and vestments of the archbishop, in addition, it is the place for the reservation and communion of the Eucharist.[95].
The first church that was built on the site of the current cathedral also had a tabernacle although its exact location is unknown. During the construction of the cathedral, the tabernacle was located in the place currently occupied by the chapels of San Isidro and the Virgen de las Angustias of Granada. However, in the century it was decided to build a separate building but connected to the cathedral. The current tabernacle is built of red tezontle stone and white chiluca stone that forms a Greek cross. It is connected to the cathedral through the chapel of San Isidro.[26][70].
The building presents two main entrances from the outside; the main façade opens to the south, to the Plaza de la Constitución "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)"); while the other opens to the east, to the Plaza del Seminario. The two facades are richly decorated with columns in the "Estípite (architecture)" style, a characteristic element of Churrigueresque. The main theme glorifies the Eucharist with images of the apostles, the fathers of the Church, the holy founders of religious orders, martyrs, as well as biblical scenes. There are some zoomorphic and other anthropomorphic reliefs, highlighting a rampant lion and the royal eagle present on the coat of arms of Mexico. The east façade, for its part, presents scenes from the Old Testament, as well as images of Saint John of Nepomuk and Saint Ignatius of Loyola. The dates of the different phases of construction of the tabernacle are inscribed on this façade.[95].
The exterior of the tabernacle is in the baroque style, presenting decorations such as niche shelves of various shapes, floating curtains and a large number of cherubs. Fruit elements stand out such as bunches of grapes and pomegranates, which symbolize the blood of Christ and the Church, and floral elements such as roses, daisies and various types of four-petal flowers.[70].
The interior is built with chiluca and tezontle stone, the chiluca covers the walls and floors, while the tezontle is found in the door and window frames. The transept is covered with a dome supported by arches. The temple is divided into three naves. The central nave is arranged from the main entrance to the main altar, in which was the missing Churrigueresque altarpiece made by Pedro Patiño Ixtolinque in 1829. In the west nave is the baptistery, while in the east, there are offices, next to the entrance, and a sacristy, next to the main altar; all separated by walls from the inner temple.[26].
• - East facade.
• - Interior view of the Tabernacle.
• - Baptismal font.
Chapel of the Souls
Located outside the cathedral, next to the apse to the north-west of it, this century chapel clashes with the rest of the building due to its lean construction. Its simple façade, a semicircular arch, flanked by paneled pilasters; its second body-finish, in turn flanked by a pair of oval windows. This chapel is used today for baptisms that take place in the Primate Cathedral of Mexico.[68][69][30][79].
Chapel masters of the cathedral during the viceroyalty
Throughout the viceregal period the cathedral had intense and brilliant musical activity organized by its corresponding chapel masters. These had the obligation not only to organize the ecclesiastical musical life of the cathedral for all the major festivities, but also to instruct the corresponding musicians, compose the necessary musical works and organize the musical archives. The result of this constant activity is a very rich musical archive that competes in America with the splendid musical archive of the Cathedral of Puebla, that of the Basilica of Guadalupe or the musical archives preserved in Cuzco or Chuquisaca. None of these musical archives have been studied exhaustively and most of that music remains unreleased. Unfortunately, there is no contemporary attempt to continue the musical tradition of Latin American cathedrals by playing the preserved collection or hiring composers to write new works. The chapel masters of the cathedral of Mexico, most of whose works are preserved in the cathedral archive were:[96][97].
The musical archive of the cathedral of Mexico is one of the largest in America; It has a collection of more than 5,000 works, spanning from the 19th century to the 19th century, in various formats such as choir books, religious and secular music, and musical treatises.
• - Archdiocese of Mexico.
• - New Spain baroque architecture.
• - Cathedrals of Mexico.
• - Old Palace of the Archbishopric (Mexico) "Old Palace of the Archbishopric (Mexico)").
• - VALLEJO, Cortés, Dalia (2011). The School of Our Lady of the Assumption and Patriarch San José for the infants of the choro of the Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico: Adabi de México / Alfredo Harp Helú Foundation / Economic Culture Fund. ISBN 978-607-416-258-5.
• - Wikimedia Commons hosts a multimedia category on Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico City.
• - Official site of the Cathedral - Archdiocese of Mexico.
• - File from the National Catalog of Real Estate Historical Monuments number I-09-00421.
• - UNAM article on the rehabilitation of the Cathedral.
• - Cathedral in 3D on Google 3D Warehuose Archived January 8, 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
• - The Cathedral of Mexico (Documentary from the UNAM Aesthetic Research Institute).
• - Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico, Centuries of Harmony (Documentary made by the Primate Archdiocese of Mexico and the Mario Moreno Reyes Foundation).
[8] ↑ «Catedral de México». www.laguia2000.com. Consultado el 31 de enero de 2016. (enlace roto disponible en Internet Archive; véase el historial, la primera versión y la última).: http://arte.laguia2000.com/arquitectura/catedral-de-mexicol
[12] ↑ a b «Nombre de los artistas que ejecutaron la Catedral de México. Y de los que produjeron las principales obras en ella existentes». Biblioteca digital de la UANL. Consultado el 30 de junio de 2025.: https://cdigital.cabu.uanl.mx/fg/11/1020053769/1020053769_019.pdf
[22] ↑ Tovar y de Teresa, Guillermo, La portada principal de la primitiva Catedral de México. boletín de monumentos históricos, tercera época número 12, enero-abril 2008.
[30] ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n ñ o p q r Toussaint, Manuel (1992). La Catedral de México y el Sagrario Metropolitano (Tercera edición). México: Porrúa. ISBN 9789680864263.
[31] ↑ José Luis Soberanes Fernández y Serafín Ortiz Ortiz (28 de septiembre de 2021). «A 500 años de la fundación de la Ciudad de México» (PDF). Archivo jurídico del Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas de la UNAM. Consultado el 20 de enero de 2025.: https://archivos.juridicas.unam.mx/www/bjv/libros/14/6596/10.pdf
[44] ↑ Nuria Salazar Simarro (enero de 2009). «El altar mayor de la Catedral de México: construcción y desmantelamiento del baldaquino de Lorenzo Hidalga (1810-1872)». Boletín de monumentos históricos — Revistas INAH. Consultado el 2 de julio de 2025.: https://revistas.inah.gob.mx/index.php/boletinmonumentos/article/view/3810/3696
[50] ↑ Manuel Aguirre Botello (junio de 2017). «CATEDRAL METROPOLITANA, EVOLUCIÓN GRÁFICA Y CRONOLÓGICA UBICACIÓN DE LA CRUZ DE MAÑOZCA, CIUDAD DE MÉXICO». México Maxico. Consultado el 30 de marzo de 2023.: http://mexicomaxico.org/zocalo/zocaloCatedral.htm#inicio
[53] ↑ Roberto Meli Piralla y Araham Roberto Sánchez Ramírez (30 de junio de 2001). «LA REHABILITACIÓN DE LA CATEDRAL METROPOLITANA DE LA CIUDAD DE MÉXICO». Revista Digital Universitaria. Consultado el 30 de marzo de 2023.: https://www.revista.unam.mx/vol.2/num2/proyec1/index.html
[63] ↑ «Ley Federal Sobre Monumentos y Zonas Arqueológicos, Artísticos e Históricos». Cámara de Diputados. Consultado el 27 de junio de 2025. «Texto vigente a la última reforma del 16 de febrero de 2018».: https://www.diputados.gob.mx/LeyesBiblio/pdf/131_160218.pdf
[64] ↑ «Ley General de Bienes Nacionales». Cámara de Diputados. Consultado el 27 de junio de 2025. «Texto vigente a la última reforma del 3 de mayo de 2023».: https://www.diputados.gob.mx/LeyesBiblio/pdf/LGBN.pdf
[65] ↑ «Ley de Asociaciones Religiosas y Culto Público». Cámara de Diputados. Consultado el 27 de junio de 2025. «Texto vigente a la última reforma del 17 de diciembre de 2015».: https://www.diputados.gob.mx/LeyesBiblio/pdf/24_171215.pdf
[68] ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n ñ Varios autores (1986). Secretaría de Desarrollo Urbano y Ecología, ed. Catedral de México. Patrimonio artístico y cultural (Primera edición). México: Fomento Cultural Banamex. ISBN 978-9688381304.
[69] ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n ñ Varios autores (2014). DGE Equilibrista, ed. La Catedral de México (Primera edición). México: Fundación BBVA Bancomer. ISBN 978-607-95345-8-5.
[74] ↑ Xavier Cortés Rocha. «José Damián Ortiz De Castro, arquitecto de las torres de la Catedral de México: un reencuentro». Campaners. Consultado el 1 de julio de 2025.: https://campaners.com/pdf/pdf2356.pdf
[78] ↑ Reséndiz Martínez, José Francisco; Olvera Coronel, Lilia Patricia; Vázquez Silva, Luis; Nieto de Pascual, Cecilia (septiembre/octubre 2013). «Especies maderables y agentes patógenos del retablo de los reyes de la catedral Metropolitana de la Ciudad de México». Revista mexicana de ciencias forestales 4 (19). Consultado el 21 de enero de 2016.: http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2007-11322013000500002&lng=es&nrm=iso
[79] ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n ñ o p q r s t u v Luisa Pamela Torres Penilla (1996). «La Catedral de México Nuestra Señora de la Asunción — Una Propuesta Iconográfica». Repositorio de Tesis de la UNAM. Consultado el 1 de julio de 2025.: https://ru.dgb.unam.mx/bitstream/20.500.14330/TES01000238546/3/0238546.pdf
[80] ↑ a b Cano de Mier, Olga (1988). «Guía de Forasteros Centro Histórico Ciudad de México». Guías Turísticas Banamex (Ciudad de México): 32-37. |fechaacceso= requiere |url= (ayuda).
[82] ↑ Nuria Salazar Simarro (enero de 2009). «El altar mayor de la Catedral de México: construcción y desmantelamiento del baldaquino de Lorenzo Hidalga (1810-1872)». Boletín de monumentos históricos — Revistas INAH. Consultado el 2 de julio de 2025.: https://revistas.inah.gob.mx/index.php/boletinmonumentos/article/view/3810/3696
In 1787, the architect José Damián Ortiz de Castro was appointed, after a competition in which he won over the projects of José Joaquín García de Torres and Isidro Vicente de Balbás), to direct the construction works of the bell towers, the main façade and the dome. For the construction of the towers, the Mexican architect Ortiz de Castro designed a project to make them effective against earthquakes; a second body that appears to be openwork and a shaped top. of bell. His direction in the project continued until his death in 1793.
On December 17, 1790, during the remodeling of the Plaza Mayor "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)"), promoted by Viceroy Juan Vicente de Güemes, the "Sun Stone" (erroneously known as the "Aztec calendar") was located, and it was moved to the west side of the western tower of the Cathedral. In 1792 the perimeter wall was replaced by a set of pillars joined by chains, and pedestals with crosses in the corners; while the "Mañozca Cross" was taken to another site.[30].
In 1793, after the death of Ortiz de Castro, he was replaced by Manuel Tolsá, architect and sculptor who promoted the Neoclassical, who came to the viceroyalty in 1791. The task for the new construction director was to definitively conclude the cathedral. Perhaps Tolsá's greatest contribution has been to achieve the harmony of the set of elements that make up the main façade and to do so it was necessary to underline the central module, placing an enormous volume integrated by the clock case, in such a way that it was in line with the start of the towers.
He reconstructed the dome, which was low and disproportionate, and designed a project that consisted of opening a larger ring on which he built a circular platform, to raise a much taller lantern from there. He also designed and built a series of balustrades, flameros and rosettes that helped homogenize the diverse style of the temple's façade. On the cube of the clock he places the sculptures that symbolize the three theological virtues (Faith, hope and charity), designed and sculpted by him. On August 15, 1813, with Archbishop Francisco Javier de Lizana y Beaumont and Viceroy Félix Calleja, in a public ceremony that included the ringing of the bells, the Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico City was formally declared completed; At that time José María Morelos y Pavón already commanded the insurgent army and the Congress of Anáhuac was about to take place in Chilpancingo.[30].
In this concluding stage, there were also works inside, highlighting the monumental fresco in the dome, which represented the assumption of the Virgin Mary "Mary (mother of Jesus)"), the work of Rafael Ximeno y Planes.[37][38][39].
This was circular in plan; Only in the lower part he planned four altar tables, on top of which there is a stand, which served to place the candelabras that were placed in solemn functions, interrupted by eight pedestals for as many saints; Above said gallery was the plinth of the body; this had a niche in each of the four fronts, and eight Corinthian pedestals on the eight vertical axes that dominated the total elevation; Eight columns of the same Corinthian order rested on the plinth and body, and the corresponding cornice with a parapet on which eight pedestals of as many saints are outlined; Within the floors of the intercolumnia, there was the one with four pilasters that forms the large niche for the monstrance, composed of four arches and a spherical vault; The second body rested on the four pilasters, which consisted of a plinth on which the niche for the image of Jesus Christ was formed, with four walls decorated with angular pilasters, finished as the monstrance niche by four arches and a spherical vault, crowning everything with a cornice on which the group of the invocation of the Assumption rests. The sculptures of the saints were distributed as follows: in the first body were Saint Joseph, Saint John the Baptist, Saint Peter, Saint Paul, Saint Philip of Jesus, Saint Rose, Saint Hippolytus and Saint Cassian; in the second, Saint Dominic, Saint Francis of Assisi, Saint Ignatius of Loyola, Saint Philip Neri, Saint Augustine, Saint Bernard, Saint Camillus and Saint Cajetan.[43][44].
When José Lázaro de la Garza y Ballesteros was Archbishop of Mexico, he spoke out against the Reform Laws and the Constitution of 1857. In March 1857, he declared during a sermon that the new laws were "hostile to the Church." On April 17, he sent a circular to all the priests of his diocese "preventing that the faithful who had sworn to the constitution should not be absolved without prior public retraction." His position was heard by many employees who refused to swear the Magna Carta, who were removed from their positions by the Mexican government. In different parts of the country, different statements and armed uprisings were made under the cry of "Religion and jurisdictions".[45].
Consequently, Mexican society was divided into two factions. The liberals who supported the reforms to the Constitution and the conservatives who detracted from it supported the clergy. The Reform War broke out in Mexican territory, establishing two governments. On the one hand, the Constitutional one by Benito Juárez and the one promulgated by a Board of the Conservative Party "Conservative Party (Mexico)") under the command of Félix María Zuloaga. On January 23, 1858 the conservative government was formally established, the liberal government had to escape from the capital. The Archbishop celebrated a mass in the cathedral and to celebrate the event the Te Deum was sung. On February 12, De la Garza sent a letter to interim president Zuloaga to officially congratulate his government and provide his support.[46].
For a good part of the centuries, a series of diverse factors influenced a partial loss of its artistic heritage; Added to the natural deterioration of time were generational changes in taste, fires, thefts, but also the lack of a regulatory framework and awareness for the conservation of the property and its properties, this of course, by both ecclesiastical and government authorities. In this way, both entities made use of artistic treasures to solve the consequences of the political and economic instability of the country. For example, silver lamps and lecterns, as well as gold vessels and other jewelry, were melted down to finance the mid-century wars.
On June 12, 1864, it was part of the lavish reception in Mexico City of the Emperors Maximilian of Habsburg and Charlotte Amalie, who attended a thanksgiving mass that day in the building.[47]
In 1881 the area of the atrium was reduced by replacing the fence pillars with a new fence, this time with latticework and stonework, while the area adjacent to the atrium of the main façade was planted with trees; However, the crosses at the corners of the previous enclosure remained in their same location until 1886 when they were moved to the corners of the new enclosure; This perimeter border is the one that remains to this day.
Around 1885, by orders of the then president Porfirio Díaz, the remains of the insurgents were removed from the cathedral and then, again, they were taken in procession to the cathedral grounds, but this time, the procession was led by the president of the Republic, the Ministers and Secretaries of the City Council, civil authorities, popular organizations, Mexican flags and secular banners that reflected the character of the time. Once again, the "Jubilee Gate" saw the heroes of the Homeland parade, although this time without Morelos. They were then placed in the chapel of Saint Joseph. That same year, the "Sun Stone" was removed and taken to the National Museum, installed since the time of Maximilian, in the annex building of the National Palace "Palacio Nacional (Mexico)") where the Mint was located.[14][30].
The construction of the cathedral on unstable ground led to problems from the beginning of the work. The cathedral, along with the rest of the city, sinks into the lake bed from the beginning of its construction. This process was accelerated as a result of the overexploitation of underground aquifers by the enormous population that lives in the place. Although since the end of the century, intervention work was carried out in the areas affected by differential subsidence, especially vaults and walls, these were only corrective works, which did not address the degrading process of the progressive descent of the structure, increased by its weight (including foundations) of 127,000 tons.
• - Paintings and photographs of the cathedral in the 19th century.
• - Painting by Ignacio Serrano c. 1850.
• - Painting by Pedro Gualdi c. 1850.
• - View of the cathedral, photograph c. 1860.
• - View of the cathedral between 1880 and 1887, when the Stone of the Sun was moved to the Museum on Moneda Street.
• - Image of the Zócalo during most of the second half of the 19th century.
In 1968, with the work on the Mexico City Metro, the Bartolomé de las Casas fountain was removed from "Seminario" street and moved to the esplanade on the eastern façade of the cathedral. In 1978, while excavation work was being carried out in the archaeological ruins located by Manuel Gamio in 1913, the monolith of Coyolxauhqui was discovered, which pre-Hispanic records and chronicles located at the base of the steps of the Templo Mayor. This confirmed the real location of the ancient Mexica enclosure and discarded the myth of the cathedral built on it; In this way, the hypothesis is opened that the Mexica basements found beneath the cathedral belong to secondary temples such as that of Quetzalcóatl or Xitle.
In 1976, as a result of the damage caused by the remodeling of the drainage system in 1968 and the construction of the subway in 1969, adaptation work began on the foundation of the building. By then the structural behavior of the temple was quite worrying and that is why the engineer Manuel González Flores, inventor of the "De-Cimbrar-Cimbrando" procedure and the control pile system, was turned to to cement or re-cement buildings. The engineer proposed the installation of 280 control piles for the Cathedral, under the assumption that the differential subsidence was linear with a maximum value on the south façade; Later, the number of piles was increased when also considering the Tabernacle, which required 129 additional piles. These works were completed in 1982 and for several years it was considered that they would have solved the problem of differential subsidence. All of the above proved that the control pile system, so effective in multiple applications, in this case had not had the originally planned effect.
On January 26, 1979, for the first time in history, "Visits of John Paul II to Mexico"), a supreme pontiff of the Catholic Church, Pope John Paul II, received a visit, who in the midst of a massive event, offered a historic mass in which he would pronounce one of his famous phrases: "*Mexico always faithful!"[51].
On the night between January 17 and 18, 1967, a short circuit in the sacristy of the "Altar of Forgiveness" generated a major fire in the cathedral. At the altar of forgiveness, most of the structure and decoration were lost, as well as the paintings "The Holy Face" by Alonso López de Herrera, "The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian" by Francisco de Zumaya") and "The Virgin of Forgiveness" by Simon Pereyns. In the choir, 75 of its 99 seats were lost, a painting by Juan Correa "Juan Correa (New Spain painter)") and many books that Four years after the fire, in 1972, restoration work on the cathedral began to restore its appearance. original, the work was carried out by Miguel Ángel Soto Rodríguez.[26].
The Altar of Forgiveness was completely restored with the same original style, both in the conformation of the altarpiece and the ornamentation; Several paintings were added to replace the burned ones, "The Flight from Egypt", "The Divine Face" and "The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian", all works by Pereyns, as well as "Saint Mary Magdalene" attributed to Juan Correa. In addition, 51 paintings were found, works by Nicolás and Juan Rodríguez Juárez, Miguel Cabrera "Miguel Cabrera (painter)") and José de Ibarra, hidden behind the altar. In 1975 the organs were dismantled and sent to the Netherlands where they were repaired in a process that lasted until 1977; However, it was not until the beginning of the century that they were completely repaired for normal operation. The choir was rebuilt in 1979; The stalls were fully restored, although due to lack of budget the gilding characteristic of the sculptures was not added; In the upper stands outside, some of the statues were repaired or replaced with replicas due to damage caused by pollution. At the altar of the kings it was impossible to recover the tonality of the affected paintings, but the ampullae of the altarpiece could be repaired, as well as the sculptures and reliefs on the columns rescued. During the work, the tomb of President Miguel Barragán was found in the wall of the central arch of the cathedral; and inside one of the organs a 1529 copy of the appointment of Hernán Cortés as governor of New Spain was found.[26].
The seismic movements and the subway works increased the original problem of the cathedral, the irregular floor of its settlement. This fact caused the collapse at different rates in different sections of the cathedral, thus, the bell towers presented a dangerous inclination in the 1970s. After the 1985 earthquake, in which there was no major damage, the small cracks in the vaults widened with the rains of April 1989, causing the fracture of one of them.
In 1990, work began to stabilize the cathedral, although it was built on a solid foundation,[26] this was in turn located on a soft clay soil that was a threat to its structural integrity, since it suffered subsidence into the lower water tables, causing damage to the structure. For this reason, the cathedral was included in the World Monuments Fund as one of the hundred sites at greatest risk. After the stabilization and completion of the work, the cathedral was removed from said list in 2000.[18] Before beginning the sub-excavation, precautions were taken to safeguard the structure against any unforeseen movement in the foundation. A roof shoring structure was placed in the part that is supported by the columns; this, based on towers and arches formed by steel tubes, provided with mechanisms that allow their height to be adjusted and control the load that varies due to the settlements of the floor that are produced by under-excavation. Additionally, braces were placed to restrict the possible opening of the arches and vaults of the main nave and the processional naves. Considering the particularly critical situation for some columns subject to axial loads and high collapses, a strap made of steel elements was placed in seven of them to protect them from any accidental overload during the process. Once the preparatory work was completed, sub-excavation began in August 1993 and was completed in May 1998.
Underexcavation consists of lowering the highest parts at the base of the building in a slow and controlled manner, by extracting soil in the most compressible strata beneath them. 32 ports were excavated, starting from the level of the crypts and a depth of 20 m, distributed in the areas where it was necessary to generate subsidence under the cathedral and the tabernacle. Wells were dug under the cathedral and concrete shafts were placed to provide a more solid foundation for the building. This did not stop the sinking but it did ensure that it was uniform. Additionally, the tilt of the towers was corrected.
The purpose was not only to eliminate part of the differential subsidence, but also to produce movements that favored the structural stability of both buildings. The maximum difference in level that existed between points on the cathedral floor was 240 cm. This was reduced by 83 cm, which represents a correction of 34%.[52][53].
Along with the structural rescue of the building, remodeling, conditioning and rescue work on the interior of the architectural complex also began, highlighting among others, that of the Altar of the Kings, which was carried out in collaboration with the government of Spain; the consolidation of the cracks in the walls and vaults, paying special attention to that of the Metropolitan Tabernacle, which was the one with the greatest deterioration; and the interior reinforcement of the columns with reinforced seams. The intervention project led by engineer Sergio Zaldívar Guerra"), then general director of National Heritage Sites and Monuments, became a permanent program of monitoring, diagnosis and emergent care of the cathedral site, through monitoring and control systems for seismic movements, subsidence and variations in the structure to guarantee the stability of the building.[54][55][56].
• - Photographs of the cathedral in the 20th century.
• - Lighting for the festivities of the centenary of independence in 1910.
• - The Plaza, the Cathedral and the Palace in 1916.
• - Concentration in the Plaza with the Cathedral in the background in 1928.
• - Cathedral in 1958, during the works to place the concrete slab in the Zócalo.
• - Cathedral during the demonstrations of the 1968 movement.
The third (and final) stage of this intervention had as its purpose the reinstallation of the three sculptures of the "Theological Virtues", removed after the 2017 earthquake, this concluded on February 27, 2024. The first of them, "La Esperanza", the only one that fell due to the earthquake, was completely restored, while "La Fe" and "La Caridad" had only superficial repair work and cleaning; Ornamental elements lost over two centuries were replaced with all three and would finally be definitively fixed, remembering that originally they were only superimposed.[61].
The sphere of the eastern tower was used as a time capsule, in 2007, during the restoration work of the cathedral, it was opened and a lead box was discovered inside with religious medals, coins of the time, a reliquary, a palm cross, various images of saints and prayers and testimonies authorized by the cathedral chapter. Under the sphere, in the highest part of the tower, the inscription "May 14, 1791. Tibursio Cano" was found carved into the stone.[76].
In 1962, the Second Vatican Council prohibited the priest from celebrating Mass with his back to the faithful, so the high altar table was no longer used. In front of it, and in order to carry out the worship ceremonies, a provisional wooden table was placed, decorated with geometric and gold-tone motifs, which nevertheless served for 40 years, except during the mass of John Paul II in 1979 when a more ornate one was used, which is currently located in the "Chapter Room", next to the chair used by the Supreme Pontiff on that occasion.[79].
On the occasion of the Jubilee of the year 2000, a new high altar table was made to replace the previous one. This was built in modernist style by the architect Ernesto Gómez Gallardo Argüelles and was premiered at the Christmas Eve mass. It is made of bronze, weighs a ton, and the design consists of a set of spherical triangles in movement, which generate curved volumes in tension. The two triangles, one in front and one in the back, symbolize the mystery of redemption, as one is descending and the other ascending. Between the altar and the table is the archbishop's chair, which consists of an oak chair, upholstered in leather with the coat of arms of the archdiocese on the back, and above it, as a finishing touch, a metal carving of the archbishop's miter "Mitra (religious clothing)") with the crossed "Keys of Saint Peter" and above them the pallium "Palio (religious clothing)"). diocesan.[81][82][68][69].
• - Choir grille flanked by the upper stands.
• - Set of stalls in the choir and lectern.
In the center there is an ancient wooden crucifix known as the "Lord of Health", who is invoked against diseases and is considered protector of the city in cases of epidemics; It was brought from the Church of the Santísima, where it was the titular image of the brotherhood of apothecaries and surgeons, which is why it is highly venerated by those dedicated to health sciences and by the sick. The last time the image was taken to the streets in a procession and transferred to the altar of forgiveness was in 2009, on the occasion of the 2009 influenza A (H1N1) epidemic "Influenza A (H1N1) outbreak of 2009"); The image had not been taken since 1850,[90] when there was a plague epidemic in the city. For its part, in 2020 the image was displayed in the "Altar of the Kings" to ask for the end of the coronavirus pandemic.[91].
A small side altarpiece is dedicated to the birth of Jesus, and comes from the Franciscan temple of Zinacantepec. This chapel was consecrated in 1661 to the guild of hat makers and silk makers, that is, hat makers and silk artisans; which were based in a hospital in the city that was dedicated to these saints, said clinic had been founded by Juan de Zumárraga, so it is likely that the decision to honor the patron saints of doctors, sick people and twins with a chapel is due to this.[79].
Third chapel of the west wing, its vault is also star-shaped in the Gothic style, although its arch, like that of all the chapels, is semicircular (an element not used in the Gothic); The building was located between 1653 and 1660. Its main altarpiece is baroque, coming from the old church of "Our Lady of Montserrat" and has in the center the image of Saint Joseph with the baby Jesus, surrounded by saints, among which Saint Brigid of Sweden stands out. The side altarpiece is a composition of baroque paintings, consisting of "The Triumph of Faith", "The Transfiguration", "The Circumcision" and "The Assumption".
There is an ancient seated Ecce homo, popularly called the "Lord of Cocoa". It is a Mexican sculpture made of corn cane from the first cathedral, and highly revered by the indigenous people during the colony, who, lacking coins, deposited cocoa seeds as an offering, which in pre-Hispanic times were considered valuable pieces of exchange. Nowadays it is common for children to leave offerings in the form of candy.
In this chapel were the remains of Miguel Hidalgo, Ignacio Allende, Juan Aldama, Mariano Jiménez, José María Morelos, Francisco Javier Mina, Mariano Matamoros and Hermenegildo Galeana since July 29, 1885. They were originally in the crypt of the cathedral since 1825, but they were taken to the chapel to be honored by the public; From here they left for the Independence Monument on September 16, 1925.[79].
Completed around 1660, it has a star vault, which, however, was not part of the original structure, as it was covered in wood, while the structure was used as a formwork in the work of the cathedral; The chapel is dedicated to the Virgin of Soledad. It is dedicated to the protection of the construction workers who participated in the construction of the cathedral. The main altarpiece is made up of two bodies and a top, in it you can see the Solomonic columns with Corinthian capitals that separate the streets.
The sculpture of the "Virgin of Solitude" is a copy of a Spanish image. The altarpiece can be located in the decade of 1670-1680 thanks to the paintings with the theme of the "Passion of Christ" made by the painter Pedro Ramírez. In the left side altarpiece is a painting of "Our Lady of Constantinople"; In the right altarpiece there are paintings by Andrés de la Concha, José María Vásquez, Luis Suárez, Alonso López de Herrera, José Juárez, Baltazar Echave Rojas and Nicolás Rodríguez Juárez.[79].
It was opened on December 8, 1648, and was dedicated to the guild of silversmiths who placed two solid silver images in it, one of the "Purísima Concepción" and another of San Eligio or Eloy. Originally this chapel was dedicated precisely to the invocation of the Immaculate Conception, later when the silver figure was moved to the main altar, it took the name of San Eligio. Finally, in 1867, it took the name of Christ's invocation of the "Lord of the Good Office", because the date of its inauguration coincided with that of the religious festival of this denomination. The sculpture was flanking one of the north doors of the cathedral, which were closed when the altarpiece of the "Divine Savior" was placed there; However, between 1861 and 1867, without an official dedication, the chapel was presided over in its center by an oil painting by Blessed Bartolomé Gutiérrez").
This is perhaps the chapel with the greatest number of changes in its ornamentation, since historical records indicate that, on at least two occasions, the altarpieces were removed or completely modified; Given that many silversmiths in the city offered gifts to the cathedral that were deposited in its honorary chapel, most of the pieces that were sold or melted came from this place to finance adaptations of the cathedral or political affairs of the curia during the century.
It is covered by a hollow vault, similar to those of the side and central naves, although with a different distribution of the moldings; It lacks altarpieces, since its decoration is in the neoclassical style, and belongs to the second half of the century; instead it has three altars on each wall; in the central one the one of its dedication, on the left wall an image attributed as the "Virgin of Tears", which however only replaces the original that does correspond to that dedication, and which ended up sold; it is flanked by St. Joachim "Joachim (father of Mary)") and St. Augustine (replacing a lost figure of St. Anne "Anne (mother of Mary)"); while on the right wall are the Virgin of Sorrows (replacing a disappeared "Ecce homo"), accompanied by Saint Anthony of Padua (replacing a lost figure Saint Joseph) and Saint John of the Cross.[79].
This chapel and the previous one not only share the neoclassical style in their decoration, but are the chapels that flank the door of the west façade, which faces "Monte de Piedad" street; Its star vault with more complex moldings than the previous ones, similar to that of the sacristy, denotes its antiquity above the majority; However, it also shares the uniqueness of its constant modification. Completed around 1600, it was dedicated to the arch-confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament, which sumptuously decorated it with a small altarpiece that contained a painting of "The Last Supper", in 1651 the altarpiece was renovated with an even larger one; It was called for a long time «Chapel of the Supper» and was subject to various changes in its ornamentation, it was even planned to cover it with stone carved in the times of Manuel Tolsá, however, the prioritization of its work abroad and the lack of money led to its cancellation. It was dedicated to the Virgin of Sorrows when the sculpture, the work of Clemente Terrazas, was placed on the central altar. This image was in the chapel of the National Palace "Palacio Nacional (Mexico)") during the time of Maximilian I of Mexico. The three altars of the chapel are flanked by Corinthian columns and are topped by a broken semicircular pediment.[79].
The Chapel of San Felipe de Jesús was completed in the first construction stage of the cathedral, in 1615; Its vault was closed in quarry stone with Gothic style ribs, since it is one of the oldest roofs of the temple. In this chapel there is a sculpture, dating from the last third of the century, allusive to the first Mexican saint: San Felipe de Jesús. This work, in the opinion of many art critics, is the best-made stewed, carved and polychrome sculpture in Latin America. However, initially this space was dedicated to another worship, since the New Spain martyr was beatified in 1627, and it was not until 1636 that he had his first worship space in the "Chapel of the Supper", although the presentation of his wooden carving in the premises took place in the "High Altar". In 1638, after several complaints from some faithful and authorities to return the main altarpiece of the "Chapel of the Supper" to its place, the image of San Felipe de Jesús was moved to its current space.
The modality of the altarpiece is anástilo; The front wall has a body with four pilasters with a mixed capital, in the center of the east in order from bottom to top are a cross-shaped niche with the sculpture of San Felipe de Jesús, a statue of the Virgin Mary and a painting of the "Apotheosis of San Felipe de Jesús", in which the saint is represented carrying a cross standing on an eagle, and allegorical figures from America and Spain, the painting and the finish with a curved pediment were disproportionate, since They permanently blocked the window that gave natural lighting to the premises. On the sides of the body, six paintings narrate the life, mission and martyrdom of the character. On the left wall there is an altarpiece with the image of Saint Rose of Lima in the center, surrounded by paintings that narrate her life.[79].
On the right wall there was originally an altarpiece dedicated to San Carlos Borromeo, which was removed in 1838 to make room for the urn with the remains of Agustín de Iturbide. Later in 1964, a neoclassical style pedestal was built to place the urn in the niche, at the foot of a portrait of the monarch. Among the elements protected by the chapel is a relic with the martyr's incorrupt finger, the throne used by Iturbide at his coronation, the baptismal font in which Felipe de Jesús received said sacrament and an urn with the heart of Anastasio Bustamante.[92].
It was built between 1610 and 1615 dedicated to the "Holy Christ of the Conquerors" with a star vault and is located on one side of the sacristy, making it the first chapel in the eastern wing of the cathedral, starting from the apse (the last if it starts from the main façade). It is also called "Chapel of Relics" due to the famous remains and vestiges kept in the baroque altarpieces. According to some historians, the image of the crucified Christ known as the "Holy Christ of the Conquerors" (s. o) was a gift from Emperor Charles V, others maintain that it is a work carried out in these lands, the truth is that it already received great veneration in the first cathedral.
In the central altarpiece the paintings and sculptures stage moments of the passion of Christ, uniting to this theme the passion or torment of the holy martyrs; In the center of the complex is the aforementioned Holy Christ in a cross-shaped niche; the sculpture of the “Santo Entierro”, which is located at the foot of the altar in an urn, is used every year in the Good Friday procession; in the side niches lie the sculptures of the Dolorosa, John the Evangelist, Saint Peter and Saint Mary Magdalene, in the finials are Saint Veronica "Veronica (saint)") and María Salomé "Salomé (disciple)"); most of these sculptures attributed to Manuel de Nava"). The altarpiece on the left has in the center a Virgin of Guadalupe "Our Lady of Guadalupe (Mexico)"), by José de Ibarra, before whom she was sworn to this invocation as the "General and Universal Patroness" of all the kingdoms of New Spain on December 4, 1746, and which preserves a relic of Juan Diego's ayate Cuauhtlatoatzin; paintings of the chronology of the Guadalupan apparitions complement the set. The altarpiece on the right is in the Quito style, in the center it has a sculpture of the Virgin Mary carrying the Child Jesus, she is known as "Virgin of Confidence", however the origin of the veneration in this chapel of this dedication is unknown, since there are no references to it on American soil; Alexandria and is complemented by sculptures of Saint Joachim "Joachim (father of Mary)"), Saint Anne "Anne (mother of Mary)") and Saint Joseph with the Child Jesus.
The relics in this chapel are of the first degree, that is, parts of the body or remains of it, and of the second degree, objects that were in contact with the saints or elements of the Holy Land; These are exhibited annually on All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day (November 1 and 2), since most of the year, many of them are found behind the oil paintings that cover the altarpiece. According to tradition, this chapel houses relics of, among others, Saint Vincent of Zaragoza, Saint Vitus, Saint Úrsula, Saint Gelasius, Saint Vital of Milan, as well as a splinter of the True Cross "True Cross (Christianity)") and a thorn from the crown of Jesus.[79].
The main altarpiece in the center is dedicated to honoring the life of the holy apostle and was built around 1670. The guidelines of the early Baroque can already be seen in it, in which Mannerist elements such as lacework reliefs, corbels and pinjantes can still be observed. The altarpiece is made up of three bodies, the last of which is integrated into the architectural space, leaving the window opening in the center. The altarpiece deserves a special mention for its general decoration in which the various vegetal and inanimate motifs typical of the Baroque stand out. As for the paintings on this altarpiece, it has not been possible to know with certainty who the authors were, these are works whose theme is the life of Saint Peter, and in one passage the martyrdom of the apostle is remembered who asked to be crucified upside down "because he was not worthy to die like his master."
The altarpiece on the left is dedicated to Saint Teresa, with her sculpture in the center and oil paintings on the sides with the narration of her life. The altarpiece on the right is dedicated to the "Sagrada Familia". The three altarpieces are from the 19th century, replacing others whose characteristics are not recorded; Among the characteristics of its ornamentation are the Solomonic columns and the gilding in the decorative details with floral and plant motifs; Most of the paintings are attributed to Baltazar Echave Rioja").[79].
Built between the decades of 1640 and 1660, without a specific inauguration date, it has a lowered vault, similar to the processional naves; The original baroque altarpiece was removed to adapt the chapel to the neoclassical style; The little information we have about it before the 19th century confirms the versions about its use as a wine cellar or even as a meeting room of the "Archicofradía del Santísimo Sacramento." It is consecrated to the Marian dedication of the same name, and on the neoclassical main altar, the work of Juan de Rojas (1718), there is a copy of the image of the Virgin of Antigua, the original of which is in the cathedral of Seville. This image of Byzantine influence was highly revered by the Spanish population of Mexico City during the colonial period.
Under the image of the virgin there is a magnificent Sevillian sculpture of the Child Jesus, original from the first half of the century and attributed to Juan Martínez Montañés. It is popularly known as "The Captive Holy Child", because it remained in Algiers with Francisco Sandoval de Zapata, rationer of the cathedral, who was taken prisoner by pirates from North Africa in 1622, when he was taking the sculpture to Mexico.[79].
It was roofed during the third stage of the building's enclosure, between 1653 and 1660, and used before the second cathedral consecration, first as a baptistery and then as a meeting room for the arch-confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament and Charity.
It had altarpieces from the century assembled between 1670 and 1675, which were renovated in 1754 through a contract between the arch-confraternity and José Joaquín de Sáyago), including the altarpiece of Guadalupe and the sides dedicated to Saint John the Baptist and canvases of Christ Our Lord. In 1807 it was decided to intervene again on these altarpieces because the deterioration and age were not, in the opinion of those responsible from then, worthy of the Archiconfradía. The work is carried out between 1807 and 1809 (in accordance with the opinion of the Royal Academy of San Carlos), by José Martínez de los Ríos"), with the collaboration, for seventeen sculptures, of Clemente Terrazas").
Three altars were worked: the central one continued dedicated to the Guadalupana, flanked by San Joaquín "Joaquín (father of Mary)") and Santa Ana "Ana (mother of Mary)"); the left one dedicated to Saint John the Baptist, with his parents Saint Zechariah "Zechariah (father of John the Baptist)") and Saint Elizabeth "Elizabeth (mother of John the Baptist)"); and the right that changed its dedication in 1809, previously with canvases of Christ linked to the Blessed Sacrament and later dedicated to the Jesuits San Luis Gonzaga, San Estanislao Kostka and San Juan Francisco Regis.[79].
When its vault was completed during the construction period of 1624-1648, it originally had a reticulated altarpiece on its front, with Solomonic supports dating back to the last third of the century dedicated to Saint Anne "Ana (mother of Mary)" and with six panels by Juan Sánchez Salmerón). Only two paintings placed in the chapel of Divina Providencia are preserved in the church: the "Annunciation to Saint Anne" and "The Betrothal of the Virgin". The paintings dedicated to "La Purísima with San Joaquín and Santa Ana", "The Apparition of the Archangel to San Joaquín" and "The Birth of the Virgin" are now located in the Viceroyalty Museum.
On July 21, 1752, Canon Joaquín Zorrilla") gave the chapel an important silver lamp that was melted in 1847. The senior sacristan, bachelor Ventura López"), was not far behind and also donated a niche of mercury glass, inside which there were two waxes of Agnus and some relics; plus a "Holy Child" reclining on a wooden cross, with two gilded silver chapetas, as well as emeralds and fine pearls. The fate of these pieces is unknown.
Archbishop Labastida y Dávalos – who decided on his new dedication – ordered the first remodeling of the chapel, placing a neoclassical alabaster altar from the “Hacienda de los Negros” in Guadalajara, and which was shared with the Chapel of San José. Finally rebuilt, it was sent to the Temple of the Assumption in the Industrial neighborhood, where it disappeared in 1985.
In the middle of the century the chapel again obtained a baroque altarpiece of the anástila style (without columns), that of the Altar of San José located first on the east wall of the north doorway. This altar contains works by Simón Pereyns, Baltasar de Echave Orio and José de Ibarra.
A half century point representing Jesus in glory and a painting of the Assumption of the Virgin by José Ibarra disappeared from the chapel, in addition to the representative sculptures of Saint Anne, Saint Joachim, Saint Anthony of Padua, Saint Lorenzo, Saint Nicholas Tolentino and two holy children.
The main altarpiece has in the center a sculpture of the Immaculate Conception and ten paintings of different dimensions that narrate the episodes of the birth and life of the Virgin Mary.[79].
The devotion of the Spanish royal family to San Isidro Labrador, to whom they credited a miracle that saved Philip III, allowed a person of recent sainthood to have his own chapel in this enclosure. This shared with its neighbor the "Chapel of the Virgin of Granada" the difficulty of its construction, since the soil here was more unstable than in the rest of the spaces, which is why its construction was mostly with tezontle; It also shared a passage with its neighbor, since it was initially used as a baptistery and both spaces were to receive parishioners for the impartation of said sacrament.
Known for many years as the "Chapel of the Holy Black Christ, El Señor del Veneno", it was completed between 1624 and 1627. It internally connects the cathedral with the "Metropolitan Tabernacle", due to the fact that the Chapter decided to open an access that converted it into a simple passage in 1768. It has a Churrigueresque baroque façade in gray quarry, the work of Lorenzo Rodríguez (late 1767 and early 1768); There are no records that an altarpiece ever existed on the central wall, before the opening of the door. The aforementioned image of Christ, around which different legends and anecdotes revolve due to its antiquity, was an original piece from the Dominican church of Porta Coeli, closed in 1935, and taken to the Cathedral in 1945; In 1960, due to its popularity, the image was placed in this Chapel, replacing a painted canvas representing the order of the Sisters of Charity that had been in the right niche since the 19th century. After the restoration of the “Altar of Forgiveness” was completed in the 1980s, the Lord of Poison was taken there, which is its current location.
On the right wall, the image of San Isidro Labrador lies at the top of a small altarpiece in the anastil baroque style, while in the lower part is San Antonio de Padua. On the left wall, a neoclassical style altar contains a niche with a baroque altarpiece, in which there is a painting of the "Lord of Poison" reminding that this was its original space, and next to it a sculpture of San Ramón Nonato.
The lowered vault of this space is the only one with ornamentation work unrelated to the moldings of its design, as it is covered with plasterwork illustrations, which in each section represent "Faith, Hope, Charity and Justice."[79].
The chapel is located under the seat of the oldest tower of the temple, therefore the first in the eastern wing, it was roofed between the years 1624 and 1627, and was originally used as a sacristy. The chapel has a medieval style, with a fluted vault and two Churrigueresque-style altarpieces. In its right side altarpiece it has an oval painting from the 19th century, the work of the Flemish painter Martín de Vos, "Saint Raphael, Archangel and the Young Tobias". At the top of this altarpiece there is a painting of the "Virgen del Carmen" and above this another painting of the "Last Supper".
The front altarpiece that presides over the chapel, is in the Churrigueresque style, uses the retabilistic supports of stipes and niche pilasters, and is presided over by a painting of the «Virgen de las Angustias de Granada "Our Lady of Angustias (Granada)")»; It presents four sculptures arranged in niche pilasters in its single body; It consists of a table, bench, sotabanco, and a large top. Among the elements of the altarpiece there are two medallions with the figures of Saint Peter and Saint Paul; The window frame, as in some other chapels, is integrated into the ornamentation.
The left altar is one of neoclassical style in whose niche there is an image of the "Lord of Mercy", flanked by a century painting of the "Assumption of Mary" and a sculpture of the Virgin Mary carrying the baby Jesus.
During the century, the original bench of the side altarpiece was lost, so in 1964 another bench made by Miguel Ángel Soto was placed), commissioned by the Diocesan Commission of Order and Decorum. The right altarpiece seems to be integrated into the main one, but was mutilated in the century. tabernacle and which was later dismantled.[79].
There is not yet enough documentation to give an idea of the interior decoration that it presented between 1641 and 1684, but on the other hand, abundant ornaments and goldwork are recorded in the inventories of 1632, 1649, 1654 and 1669, giving clues about what was there.
The furniture it houses today is from the last third of the century: cabinets and drawers in balsam wood that faithfully adhere to the precepts formulated in this regard by Saint Charles Borromeo, cardinal and archbishop of Milan, in his instructions for the factory and ecclesiastical trousseau of 1577.
Juan de Viera comments that at the head of the sacristy there were “two Chinese mahogany tables, black as jet, where the chalices prepared for the sacrifice are placed, their boards being one piece two yards wide and two and a half yards long.” And he goes on to point out that the “caxonera” is made of “exquisite wood from Saongolica and others, with its gilded locks distributed in proportion, cupboards with doors of the same wood... and on the circumference... next to the distant drawers two rods, chairs with arms of the same mahogany.” These drawer units were recently altered due, apparently, to operating problems.
Manuel Toussaint's 1948 book still photographically records the trousseau of chairs with cape legs and a credenza with drawers with curved skirts, cape and claw legs, as well as phytomorphic reliefs.
The cupboard for chalices, originally located on the west wall under the Virgin of the Apocalypse by Cristóbal de Villalpando, housed a large number of gold chalices and vessels of the same metal adorned with very fine stones and other sacred vessels and vessels, candlesticks, pedestals, silver on gilt acheros and cruisers. He has five gold and diamond custody alone, without a new one that cost 116,000 pesos. The inventory of 1662 gives an account of the ewers, one of them the work of the silversmith Ena.
In 1957 the wooden perimeter floor and platform were changed to a stepped stone one; A grille twin to that of the Chapter House (adapted by the architect Antonio G. Muñoz) was placed to vestibule the space, creating an ante-sacristy. Miguel Ángel Soto also altered the original proportions of some of the chests of drawers, the continuous chest of drawers was cut from the front wall and a mahogany oratory with a hybrid taste was placed in the center.
Finally, the canvas of the Virgin of Guadalupe with donor, a work by Francisco Martínez made in 1747 that remained for a long time in the basement, now presides over the Guadalupana room of the old building of the Curia of the Virgin of Guadalupe.[68][69][30][79][93].
In 1787, the architect José Damián Ortiz de Castro was appointed, after a competition in which he won over the projects of José Joaquín García de Torres and Isidro Vicente de Balbás), to direct the construction works of the bell towers, the main façade and the dome. For the construction of the towers, the Mexican architect Ortiz de Castro designed a project to make them effective against earthquakes; a second body that appears to be openwork and a shaped top. of bell. His direction in the project continued until his death in 1793.
On December 17, 1790, during the remodeling of the Plaza Mayor "Plaza de la Constitución (Mexico City)"), promoted by Viceroy Juan Vicente de Güemes, the "Sun Stone" (erroneously known as the "Aztec calendar") was located, and it was moved to the west side of the western tower of the Cathedral. In 1792 the perimeter wall was replaced by a set of pillars joined by chains, and pedestals with crosses in the corners; while the "Mañozca Cross" was taken to another site.[30].
In 1793, after the death of Ortiz de Castro, he was replaced by Manuel Tolsá, architect and sculptor who promoted the Neoclassical, who came to the viceroyalty in 1791. The task for the new construction director was to definitively conclude the cathedral. Perhaps Tolsá's greatest contribution has been to achieve the harmony of the set of elements that make up the main façade and to do so it was necessary to underline the central module, placing an enormous volume integrated by the clock case, in such a way that it was in line with the start of the towers.
He reconstructed the dome, which was low and disproportionate, and designed a project that consisted of opening a larger ring on which he built a circular platform, to raise a much taller lantern from there. He also designed and built a series of balustrades, flameros and rosettes that helped homogenize the diverse style of the temple's façade. On the cube of the clock he places the sculptures that symbolize the three theological virtues (Faith, hope and charity), designed and sculpted by him. On August 15, 1813, with Archbishop Francisco Javier de Lizana y Beaumont and Viceroy Félix Calleja, in a public ceremony that included the ringing of the bells, the Metropolitan Cathedral of Mexico City was formally declared completed; At that time José María Morelos y Pavón already commanded the insurgent army and the Congress of Anáhuac was about to take place in Chilpancingo.[30].
In this concluding stage, there were also works inside, highlighting the monumental fresco in the dome, which represented the assumption of the Virgin Mary "Mary (mother of Jesus)"), the work of Rafael Ximeno y Planes.[37][38][39].
This was circular in plan; Only in the lower part he planned four altar tables, on top of which there is a stand, which served to place the candelabras that were placed in solemn functions, interrupted by eight pedestals for as many saints; Above said gallery was the plinth of the body; this had a niche in each of the four fronts, and eight Corinthian pedestals on the eight vertical axes that dominated the total elevation; Eight columns of the same Corinthian order rested on the plinth and body, and the corresponding cornice with a parapet on which eight pedestals of as many saints are outlined; Within the floors of the intercolumnia, there was the one with four pilasters that forms the large niche for the monstrance, composed of four arches and a spherical vault; The second body rested on the four pilasters, which consisted of a plinth on which the niche for the image of Jesus Christ was formed, with four walls decorated with angular pilasters, finished as the monstrance niche by four arches and a spherical vault, crowning everything with a cornice on which the group of the invocation of the Assumption rests. The sculptures of the saints were distributed as follows: in the first body were Saint Joseph, Saint John the Baptist, Saint Peter, Saint Paul, Saint Philip of Jesus, Saint Rose, Saint Hippolytus and Saint Cassian; in the second, Saint Dominic, Saint Francis of Assisi, Saint Ignatius of Loyola, Saint Philip Neri, Saint Augustine, Saint Bernard, Saint Camillus and Saint Cajetan.[43][44].
When José Lázaro de la Garza y Ballesteros was Archbishop of Mexico, he spoke out against the Reform Laws and the Constitution of 1857. In March 1857, he declared during a sermon that the new laws were "hostile to the Church." On April 17, he sent a circular to all the priests of his diocese "preventing that the faithful who had sworn to the constitution should not be absolved without prior public retraction." His position was heard by many employees who refused to swear the Magna Carta, who were removed from their positions by the Mexican government. In different parts of the country, different statements and armed uprisings were made under the cry of "Religion and jurisdictions".[45].
Consequently, Mexican society was divided into two factions. The liberals who supported the reforms to the Constitution and the conservatives who detracted from it supported the clergy. The Reform War broke out in Mexican territory, establishing two governments. On the one hand, the Constitutional one by Benito Juárez and the one promulgated by a Board of the Conservative Party "Conservative Party (Mexico)") under the command of Félix María Zuloaga. On January 23, 1858 the conservative government was formally established, the liberal government had to escape from the capital. The Archbishop celebrated a mass in the cathedral and to celebrate the event the Te Deum was sung. On February 12, De la Garza sent a letter to interim president Zuloaga to officially congratulate his government and provide his support.[46].
For a good part of the centuries, a series of diverse factors influenced a partial loss of its artistic heritage; Added to the natural deterioration of time were generational changes in taste, fires, thefts, but also the lack of a regulatory framework and awareness for the conservation of the property and its properties, this of course, by both ecclesiastical and government authorities. In this way, both entities made use of artistic treasures to solve the consequences of the political and economic instability of the country. For example, silver lamps and lecterns, as well as gold vessels and other jewelry, were melted down to finance the mid-century wars.
On June 12, 1864, it was part of the lavish reception in Mexico City of the Emperors Maximilian of Habsburg and Charlotte Amalie, who attended a thanksgiving mass that day in the building.[47]
In 1881 the area of the atrium was reduced by replacing the fence pillars with a new fence, this time with latticework and stonework, while the area adjacent to the atrium of the main façade was planted with trees; However, the crosses at the corners of the previous enclosure remained in their same location until 1886 when they were moved to the corners of the new enclosure; This perimeter border is the one that remains to this day.
Around 1885, by orders of the then president Porfirio Díaz, the remains of the insurgents were removed from the cathedral and then, again, they were taken in procession to the cathedral grounds, but this time, the procession was led by the president of the Republic, the Ministers and Secretaries of the City Council, civil authorities, popular organizations, Mexican flags and secular banners that reflected the character of the time. Once again, the "Jubilee Gate" saw the heroes of the Homeland parade, although this time without Morelos. They were then placed in the chapel of Saint Joseph. That same year, the "Sun Stone" was removed and taken to the National Museum, installed since the time of Maximilian, in the annex building of the National Palace "Palacio Nacional (Mexico)") where the Mint was located.[14][30].
The construction of the cathedral on unstable ground led to problems from the beginning of the work. The cathedral, along with the rest of the city, sinks into the lake bed from the beginning of its construction. This process was accelerated as a result of the overexploitation of underground aquifers by the enormous population that lives in the place. Although since the end of the century, intervention work was carried out in the areas affected by differential subsidence, especially vaults and walls, these were only corrective works, which did not address the degrading process of the progressive descent of the structure, increased by its weight (including foundations) of 127,000 tons.
• - Paintings and photographs of the cathedral in the 19th century.
• - Painting by Ignacio Serrano c. 1850.
• - Painting by Pedro Gualdi c. 1850.
• - View of the cathedral, photograph c. 1860.
• - View of the cathedral between 1880 and 1887, when the Stone of the Sun was moved to the Museum on Moneda Street.
• - Image of the Zócalo during most of the second half of the 19th century.
In 1968, with the work on the Mexico City Metro, the Bartolomé de las Casas fountain was removed from "Seminario" street and moved to the esplanade on the eastern façade of the cathedral. In 1978, while excavation work was being carried out in the archaeological ruins located by Manuel Gamio in 1913, the monolith of Coyolxauhqui was discovered, which pre-Hispanic records and chronicles located at the base of the steps of the Templo Mayor. This confirmed the real location of the ancient Mexica enclosure and discarded the myth of the cathedral built on it; In this way, the hypothesis is opened that the Mexica basements found beneath the cathedral belong to secondary temples such as that of Quetzalcóatl or Xitle.
In 1976, as a result of the damage caused by the remodeling of the drainage system in 1968 and the construction of the subway in 1969, adaptation work began on the foundation of the building. By then the structural behavior of the temple was quite worrying and that is why the engineer Manuel González Flores, inventor of the "De-Cimbrar-Cimbrando" procedure and the control pile system, was turned to to cement or re-cement buildings. The engineer proposed the installation of 280 control piles for the Cathedral, under the assumption that the differential subsidence was linear with a maximum value on the south façade; Later, the number of piles was increased when also considering the Tabernacle, which required 129 additional piles. These works were completed in 1982 and for several years it was considered that they would have solved the problem of differential subsidence. All of the above proved that the control pile system, so effective in multiple applications, in this case had not had the originally planned effect.
On January 26, 1979, for the first time in history, "Visits of John Paul II to Mexico"), a supreme pontiff of the Catholic Church, Pope John Paul II, received a visit, who in the midst of a massive event, offered a historic mass in which he would pronounce one of his famous phrases: "*Mexico always faithful!"[51].
On the night between January 17 and 18, 1967, a short circuit in the sacristy of the "Altar of Forgiveness" generated a major fire in the cathedral. At the altar of forgiveness, most of the structure and decoration were lost, as well as the paintings "The Holy Face" by Alonso López de Herrera, "The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian" by Francisco de Zumaya") and "The Virgin of Forgiveness" by Simon Pereyns. In the choir, 75 of its 99 seats were lost, a painting by Juan Correa "Juan Correa (New Spain painter)") and many books that Four years after the fire, in 1972, restoration work on the cathedral began to restore its appearance. original, the work was carried out by Miguel Ángel Soto Rodríguez.[26].
The Altar of Forgiveness was completely restored with the same original style, both in the conformation of the altarpiece and the ornamentation; Several paintings were added to replace the burned ones, "The Flight from Egypt", "The Divine Face" and "The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian", all works by Pereyns, as well as "Saint Mary Magdalene" attributed to Juan Correa. In addition, 51 paintings were found, works by Nicolás and Juan Rodríguez Juárez, Miguel Cabrera "Miguel Cabrera (painter)") and José de Ibarra, hidden behind the altar. In 1975 the organs were dismantled and sent to the Netherlands where they were repaired in a process that lasted until 1977; However, it was not until the beginning of the century that they were completely repaired for normal operation. The choir was rebuilt in 1979; The stalls were fully restored, although due to lack of budget the gilding characteristic of the sculptures was not added; In the upper stands outside, some of the statues were repaired or replaced with replicas due to damage caused by pollution. At the altar of the kings it was impossible to recover the tonality of the affected paintings, but the ampullae of the altarpiece could be repaired, as well as the sculptures and reliefs on the columns rescued. During the work, the tomb of President Miguel Barragán was found in the wall of the central arch of the cathedral; and inside one of the organs a 1529 copy of the appointment of Hernán Cortés as governor of New Spain was found.[26].
The seismic movements and the subway works increased the original problem of the cathedral, the irregular floor of its settlement. This fact caused the collapse at different rates in different sections of the cathedral, thus, the bell towers presented a dangerous inclination in the 1970s. After the 1985 earthquake, in which there was no major damage, the small cracks in the vaults widened with the rains of April 1989, causing the fracture of one of them.
In 1990, work began to stabilize the cathedral, although it was built on a solid foundation,[26] this was in turn located on a soft clay soil that was a threat to its structural integrity, since it suffered subsidence into the lower water tables, causing damage to the structure. For this reason, the cathedral was included in the World Monuments Fund as one of the hundred sites at greatest risk. After the stabilization and completion of the work, the cathedral was removed from said list in 2000.[18] Before beginning the sub-excavation, precautions were taken to safeguard the structure against any unforeseen movement in the foundation. A roof shoring structure was placed in the part that is supported by the columns; this, based on towers and arches formed by steel tubes, provided with mechanisms that allow their height to be adjusted and control the load that varies due to the settlements of the floor that are produced by under-excavation. Additionally, braces were placed to restrict the possible opening of the arches and vaults of the main nave and the processional naves. Considering the particularly critical situation for some columns subject to axial loads and high collapses, a strap made of steel elements was placed in seven of them to protect them from any accidental overload during the process. Once the preparatory work was completed, sub-excavation began in August 1993 and was completed in May 1998.
Underexcavation consists of lowering the highest parts at the base of the building in a slow and controlled manner, by extracting soil in the most compressible strata beneath them. 32 ports were excavated, starting from the level of the crypts and a depth of 20 m, distributed in the areas where it was necessary to generate subsidence under the cathedral and the tabernacle. Wells were dug under the cathedral and concrete shafts were placed to provide a more solid foundation for the building. This did not stop the sinking but it did ensure that it was uniform. Additionally, the tilt of the towers was corrected.
The purpose was not only to eliminate part of the differential subsidence, but also to produce movements that favored the structural stability of both buildings. The maximum difference in level that existed between points on the cathedral floor was 240 cm. This was reduced by 83 cm, which represents a correction of 34%.[52][53].
Along with the structural rescue of the building, remodeling, conditioning and rescue work on the interior of the architectural complex also began, highlighting among others, that of the Altar of the Kings, which was carried out in collaboration with the government of Spain; the consolidation of the cracks in the walls and vaults, paying special attention to that of the Metropolitan Tabernacle, which was the one with the greatest deterioration; and the interior reinforcement of the columns with reinforced seams. The intervention project led by engineer Sergio Zaldívar Guerra"), then general director of National Heritage Sites and Monuments, became a permanent program of monitoring, diagnosis and emergent care of the cathedral site, through monitoring and control systems for seismic movements, subsidence and variations in the structure to guarantee the stability of the building.[54][55][56].
• - Photographs of the cathedral in the 20th century.
• - Lighting for the festivities of the centenary of independence in 1910.
• - The Plaza, the Cathedral and the Palace in 1916.
• - Concentration in the Plaza with the Cathedral in the background in 1928.
• - Cathedral in 1958, during the works to place the concrete slab in the Zócalo.
• - Cathedral during the demonstrations of the 1968 movement.
The third (and final) stage of this intervention had as its purpose the reinstallation of the three sculptures of the "Theological Virtues", removed after the 2017 earthquake, this concluded on February 27, 2024. The first of them, "La Esperanza", the only one that fell due to the earthquake, was completely restored, while "La Fe" and "La Caridad" had only superficial repair work and cleaning; Ornamental elements lost over two centuries were replaced with all three and would finally be definitively fixed, remembering that originally they were only superimposed.[61].
The sphere of the eastern tower was used as a time capsule, in 2007, during the restoration work of the cathedral, it was opened and a lead box was discovered inside with religious medals, coins of the time, a reliquary, a palm cross, various images of saints and prayers and testimonies authorized by the cathedral chapter. Under the sphere, in the highest part of the tower, the inscription "May 14, 1791. Tibursio Cano" was found carved into the stone.[76].
In 1962, the Second Vatican Council prohibited the priest from celebrating Mass with his back to the faithful, so the high altar table was no longer used. In front of it, and in order to carry out the worship ceremonies, a provisional wooden table was placed, decorated with geometric and gold-tone motifs, which nevertheless served for 40 years, except during the mass of John Paul II in 1979 when a more ornate one was used, which is currently located in the "Chapter Room", next to the chair used by the Supreme Pontiff on that occasion.[79].
On the occasion of the Jubilee of the year 2000, a new high altar table was made to replace the previous one. This was built in modernist style by the architect Ernesto Gómez Gallardo Argüelles and was premiered at the Christmas Eve mass. It is made of bronze, weighs a ton, and the design consists of a set of spherical triangles in movement, which generate curved volumes in tension. The two triangles, one in front and one in the back, symbolize the mystery of redemption, as one is descending and the other ascending. Between the altar and the table is the archbishop's chair, which consists of an oak chair, upholstered in leather with the coat of arms of the archdiocese on the back, and above it, as a finishing touch, a metal carving of the archbishop's miter "Mitra (religious clothing)") with the crossed "Keys of Saint Peter" and above them the pallium "Palio (religious clothing)"). diocesan.[81][82][68][69].
• - Choir grille flanked by the upper stands.
• - Set of stalls in the choir and lectern.
In the center there is an ancient wooden crucifix known as the "Lord of Health", who is invoked against diseases and is considered protector of the city in cases of epidemics; It was brought from the Church of the Santísima, where it was the titular image of the brotherhood of apothecaries and surgeons, which is why it is highly venerated by those dedicated to health sciences and by the sick. The last time the image was taken to the streets in a procession and transferred to the altar of forgiveness was in 2009, on the occasion of the 2009 influenza A (H1N1) epidemic "Influenza A (H1N1) outbreak of 2009"); The image had not been taken since 1850,[90] when there was a plague epidemic in the city. For its part, in 2020 the image was displayed in the "Altar of the Kings" to ask for the end of the coronavirus pandemic.[91].
A small side altarpiece is dedicated to the birth of Jesus, and comes from the Franciscan temple of Zinacantepec. This chapel was consecrated in 1661 to the guild of hat makers and silk makers, that is, hat makers and silk artisans; which were based in a hospital in the city that was dedicated to these saints, said clinic had been founded by Juan de Zumárraga, so it is likely that the decision to honor the patron saints of doctors, sick people and twins with a chapel is due to this.[79].
Third chapel of the west wing, its vault is also star-shaped in the Gothic style, although its arch, like that of all the chapels, is semicircular (an element not used in the Gothic); The building was located between 1653 and 1660. Its main altarpiece is baroque, coming from the old church of "Our Lady of Montserrat" and has in the center the image of Saint Joseph with the baby Jesus, surrounded by saints, among which Saint Brigid of Sweden stands out. The side altarpiece is a composition of baroque paintings, consisting of "The Triumph of Faith", "The Transfiguration", "The Circumcision" and "The Assumption".
There is an ancient seated Ecce homo, popularly called the "Lord of Cocoa". It is a Mexican sculpture made of corn cane from the first cathedral, and highly revered by the indigenous people during the colony, who, lacking coins, deposited cocoa seeds as an offering, which in pre-Hispanic times were considered valuable pieces of exchange. Nowadays it is common for children to leave offerings in the form of candy.
In this chapel were the remains of Miguel Hidalgo, Ignacio Allende, Juan Aldama, Mariano Jiménez, José María Morelos, Francisco Javier Mina, Mariano Matamoros and Hermenegildo Galeana since July 29, 1885. They were originally in the crypt of the cathedral since 1825, but they were taken to the chapel to be honored by the public; From here they left for the Independence Monument on September 16, 1925.[79].
Completed around 1660, it has a star vault, which, however, was not part of the original structure, as it was covered in wood, while the structure was used as a formwork in the work of the cathedral; The chapel is dedicated to the Virgin of Soledad. It is dedicated to the protection of the construction workers who participated in the construction of the cathedral. The main altarpiece is made up of two bodies and a top, in it you can see the Solomonic columns with Corinthian capitals that separate the streets.
The sculpture of the "Virgin of Solitude" is a copy of a Spanish image. The altarpiece can be located in the decade of 1670-1680 thanks to the paintings with the theme of the "Passion of Christ" made by the painter Pedro Ramírez. In the left side altarpiece is a painting of "Our Lady of Constantinople"; In the right altarpiece there are paintings by Andrés de la Concha, José María Vásquez, Luis Suárez, Alonso López de Herrera, José Juárez, Baltazar Echave Rojas and Nicolás Rodríguez Juárez.[79].
It was opened on December 8, 1648, and was dedicated to the guild of silversmiths who placed two solid silver images in it, one of the "Purísima Concepción" and another of San Eligio or Eloy. Originally this chapel was dedicated precisely to the invocation of the Immaculate Conception, later when the silver figure was moved to the main altar, it took the name of San Eligio. Finally, in 1867, it took the name of Christ's invocation of the "Lord of the Good Office", because the date of its inauguration coincided with that of the religious festival of this denomination. The sculpture was flanking one of the north doors of the cathedral, which were closed when the altarpiece of the "Divine Savior" was placed there; However, between 1861 and 1867, without an official dedication, the chapel was presided over in its center by an oil painting by Blessed Bartolomé Gutiérrez").
This is perhaps the chapel with the greatest number of changes in its ornamentation, since historical records indicate that, on at least two occasions, the altarpieces were removed or completely modified; Given that many silversmiths in the city offered gifts to the cathedral that were deposited in its honorary chapel, most of the pieces that were sold or melted came from this place to finance adaptations of the cathedral or political affairs of the curia during the century.
It is covered by a hollow vault, similar to those of the side and central naves, although with a different distribution of the moldings; It lacks altarpieces, since its decoration is in the neoclassical style, and belongs to the second half of the century; instead it has three altars on each wall; in the central one the one of its dedication, on the left wall an image attributed as the "Virgin of Tears", which however only replaces the original that does correspond to that dedication, and which ended up sold; it is flanked by St. Joachim "Joachim (father of Mary)") and St. Augustine (replacing a lost figure of St. Anne "Anne (mother of Mary)"); while on the right wall are the Virgin of Sorrows (replacing a disappeared "Ecce homo"), accompanied by Saint Anthony of Padua (replacing a lost figure Saint Joseph) and Saint John of the Cross.[79].
This chapel and the previous one not only share the neoclassical style in their decoration, but are the chapels that flank the door of the west façade, which faces "Monte de Piedad" street; Its star vault with more complex moldings than the previous ones, similar to that of the sacristy, denotes its antiquity above the majority; However, it also shares the uniqueness of its constant modification. Completed around 1600, it was dedicated to the arch-confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament, which sumptuously decorated it with a small altarpiece that contained a painting of "The Last Supper", in 1651 the altarpiece was renovated with an even larger one; It was called for a long time «Chapel of the Supper» and was subject to various changes in its ornamentation, it was even planned to cover it with stone carved in the times of Manuel Tolsá, however, the prioritization of its work abroad and the lack of money led to its cancellation. It was dedicated to the Virgin of Sorrows when the sculpture, the work of Clemente Terrazas, was placed on the central altar. This image was in the chapel of the National Palace "Palacio Nacional (Mexico)") during the time of Maximilian I of Mexico. The three altars of the chapel are flanked by Corinthian columns and are topped by a broken semicircular pediment.[79].
The Chapel of San Felipe de Jesús was completed in the first construction stage of the cathedral, in 1615; Its vault was closed in quarry stone with Gothic style ribs, since it is one of the oldest roofs of the temple. In this chapel there is a sculpture, dating from the last third of the century, allusive to the first Mexican saint: San Felipe de Jesús. This work, in the opinion of many art critics, is the best-made stewed, carved and polychrome sculpture in Latin America. However, initially this space was dedicated to another worship, since the New Spain martyr was beatified in 1627, and it was not until 1636 that he had his first worship space in the "Chapel of the Supper", although the presentation of his wooden carving in the premises took place in the "High Altar". In 1638, after several complaints from some faithful and authorities to return the main altarpiece of the "Chapel of the Supper" to its place, the image of San Felipe de Jesús was moved to its current space.
The modality of the altarpiece is anástilo; The front wall has a body with four pilasters with a mixed capital, in the center of the east in order from bottom to top are a cross-shaped niche with the sculpture of San Felipe de Jesús, a statue of the Virgin Mary and a painting of the "Apotheosis of San Felipe de Jesús", in which the saint is represented carrying a cross standing on an eagle, and allegorical figures from America and Spain, the painting and the finish with a curved pediment were disproportionate, since They permanently blocked the window that gave natural lighting to the premises. On the sides of the body, six paintings narrate the life, mission and martyrdom of the character. On the left wall there is an altarpiece with the image of Saint Rose of Lima in the center, surrounded by paintings that narrate her life.[79].
On the right wall there was originally an altarpiece dedicated to San Carlos Borromeo, which was removed in 1838 to make room for the urn with the remains of Agustín de Iturbide. Later in 1964, a neoclassical style pedestal was built to place the urn in the niche, at the foot of a portrait of the monarch. Among the elements protected by the chapel is a relic with the martyr's incorrupt finger, the throne used by Iturbide at his coronation, the baptismal font in which Felipe de Jesús received said sacrament and an urn with the heart of Anastasio Bustamante.[92].
It was built between 1610 and 1615 dedicated to the "Holy Christ of the Conquerors" with a star vault and is located on one side of the sacristy, making it the first chapel in the eastern wing of the cathedral, starting from the apse (the last if it starts from the main façade). It is also called "Chapel of Relics" due to the famous remains and vestiges kept in the baroque altarpieces. According to some historians, the image of the crucified Christ known as the "Holy Christ of the Conquerors" (s. o) was a gift from Emperor Charles V, others maintain that it is a work carried out in these lands, the truth is that it already received great veneration in the first cathedral.
In the central altarpiece the paintings and sculptures stage moments of the passion of Christ, uniting to this theme the passion or torment of the holy martyrs; In the center of the complex is the aforementioned Holy Christ in a cross-shaped niche; the sculpture of the “Santo Entierro”, which is located at the foot of the altar in an urn, is used every year in the Good Friday procession; in the side niches lie the sculptures of the Dolorosa, John the Evangelist, Saint Peter and Saint Mary Magdalene, in the finials are Saint Veronica "Veronica (saint)") and María Salomé "Salomé (disciple)"); most of these sculptures attributed to Manuel de Nava"). The altarpiece on the left has in the center a Virgin of Guadalupe "Our Lady of Guadalupe (Mexico)"), by José de Ibarra, before whom she was sworn to this invocation as the "General and Universal Patroness" of all the kingdoms of New Spain on December 4, 1746, and which preserves a relic of Juan Diego's ayate Cuauhtlatoatzin; paintings of the chronology of the Guadalupan apparitions complement the set. The altarpiece on the right is in the Quito style, in the center it has a sculpture of the Virgin Mary carrying the Child Jesus, she is known as "Virgin of Confidence", however the origin of the veneration in this chapel of this dedication is unknown, since there are no references to it on American soil; Alexandria and is complemented by sculptures of Saint Joachim "Joachim (father of Mary)"), Saint Anne "Anne (mother of Mary)") and Saint Joseph with the Child Jesus.
The relics in this chapel are of the first degree, that is, parts of the body or remains of it, and of the second degree, objects that were in contact with the saints or elements of the Holy Land; These are exhibited annually on All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day (November 1 and 2), since most of the year, many of them are found behind the oil paintings that cover the altarpiece. According to tradition, this chapel houses relics of, among others, Saint Vincent of Zaragoza, Saint Vitus, Saint Úrsula, Saint Gelasius, Saint Vital of Milan, as well as a splinter of the True Cross "True Cross (Christianity)") and a thorn from the crown of Jesus.[79].
The main altarpiece in the center is dedicated to honoring the life of the holy apostle and was built around 1670. The guidelines of the early Baroque can already be seen in it, in which Mannerist elements such as lacework reliefs, corbels and pinjantes can still be observed. The altarpiece is made up of three bodies, the last of which is integrated into the architectural space, leaving the window opening in the center. The altarpiece deserves a special mention for its general decoration in which the various vegetal and inanimate motifs typical of the Baroque stand out. As for the paintings on this altarpiece, it has not been possible to know with certainty who the authors were, these are works whose theme is the life of Saint Peter, and in one passage the martyrdom of the apostle is remembered who asked to be crucified upside down "because he was not worthy to die like his master."
The altarpiece on the left is dedicated to Saint Teresa, with her sculpture in the center and oil paintings on the sides with the narration of her life. The altarpiece on the right is dedicated to the "Sagrada Familia". The three altarpieces are from the 19th century, replacing others whose characteristics are not recorded; Among the characteristics of its ornamentation are the Solomonic columns and the gilding in the decorative details with floral and plant motifs; Most of the paintings are attributed to Baltazar Echave Rioja").[79].
Built between the decades of 1640 and 1660, without a specific inauguration date, it has a lowered vault, similar to the processional naves; The original baroque altarpiece was removed to adapt the chapel to the neoclassical style; The little information we have about it before the 19th century confirms the versions about its use as a wine cellar or even as a meeting room of the "Archicofradía del Santísimo Sacramento." It is consecrated to the Marian dedication of the same name, and on the neoclassical main altar, the work of Juan de Rojas (1718), there is a copy of the image of the Virgin of Antigua, the original of which is in the cathedral of Seville. This image of Byzantine influence was highly revered by the Spanish population of Mexico City during the colonial period.
Under the image of the virgin there is a magnificent Sevillian sculpture of the Child Jesus, original from the first half of the century and attributed to Juan Martínez Montañés. It is popularly known as "The Captive Holy Child", because it remained in Algiers with Francisco Sandoval de Zapata, rationer of the cathedral, who was taken prisoner by pirates from North Africa in 1622, when he was taking the sculpture to Mexico.[79].
It was roofed during the third stage of the building's enclosure, between 1653 and 1660, and used before the second cathedral consecration, first as a baptistery and then as a meeting room for the arch-confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament and Charity.
It had altarpieces from the century assembled between 1670 and 1675, which were renovated in 1754 through a contract between the arch-confraternity and José Joaquín de Sáyago), including the altarpiece of Guadalupe and the sides dedicated to Saint John the Baptist and canvases of Christ Our Lord. In 1807 it was decided to intervene again on these altarpieces because the deterioration and age were not, in the opinion of those responsible from then, worthy of the Archiconfradía. The work is carried out between 1807 and 1809 (in accordance with the opinion of the Royal Academy of San Carlos), by José Martínez de los Ríos"), with the collaboration, for seventeen sculptures, of Clemente Terrazas").
Three altars were worked: the central one continued dedicated to the Guadalupana, flanked by San Joaquín "Joaquín (father of Mary)") and Santa Ana "Ana (mother of Mary)"); the left one dedicated to Saint John the Baptist, with his parents Saint Zechariah "Zechariah (father of John the Baptist)") and Saint Elizabeth "Elizabeth (mother of John the Baptist)"); and the right that changed its dedication in 1809, previously with canvases of Christ linked to the Blessed Sacrament and later dedicated to the Jesuits San Luis Gonzaga, San Estanislao Kostka and San Juan Francisco Regis.[79].
When its vault was completed during the construction period of 1624-1648, it originally had a reticulated altarpiece on its front, with Solomonic supports dating back to the last third of the century dedicated to Saint Anne "Ana (mother of Mary)" and with six panels by Juan Sánchez Salmerón). Only two paintings placed in the chapel of Divina Providencia are preserved in the church: the "Annunciation to Saint Anne" and "The Betrothal of the Virgin". The paintings dedicated to "La Purísima with San Joaquín and Santa Ana", "The Apparition of the Archangel to San Joaquín" and "The Birth of the Virgin" are now located in the Viceroyalty Museum.
On July 21, 1752, Canon Joaquín Zorrilla") gave the chapel an important silver lamp that was melted in 1847. The senior sacristan, bachelor Ventura López"), was not far behind and also donated a niche of mercury glass, inside which there were two waxes of Agnus and some relics; plus a "Holy Child" reclining on a wooden cross, with two gilded silver chapetas, as well as emeralds and fine pearls. The fate of these pieces is unknown.
Archbishop Labastida y Dávalos – who decided on his new dedication – ordered the first remodeling of the chapel, placing a neoclassical alabaster altar from the “Hacienda de los Negros” in Guadalajara, and which was shared with the Chapel of San José. Finally rebuilt, it was sent to the Temple of the Assumption in the Industrial neighborhood, where it disappeared in 1985.
In the middle of the century the chapel again obtained a baroque altarpiece of the anástila style (without columns), that of the Altar of San José located first on the east wall of the north doorway. This altar contains works by Simón Pereyns, Baltasar de Echave Orio and José de Ibarra.
A half century point representing Jesus in glory and a painting of the Assumption of the Virgin by José Ibarra disappeared from the chapel, in addition to the representative sculptures of Saint Anne, Saint Joachim, Saint Anthony of Padua, Saint Lorenzo, Saint Nicholas Tolentino and two holy children.
The main altarpiece has in the center a sculpture of the Immaculate Conception and ten paintings of different dimensions that narrate the episodes of the birth and life of the Virgin Mary.[79].
The devotion of the Spanish royal family to San Isidro Labrador, to whom they credited a miracle that saved Philip III, allowed a person of recent sainthood to have his own chapel in this enclosure. This shared with its neighbor the "Chapel of the Virgin of Granada" the difficulty of its construction, since the soil here was more unstable than in the rest of the spaces, which is why its construction was mostly with tezontle; It also shared a passage with its neighbor, since it was initially used as a baptistery and both spaces were to receive parishioners for the impartation of said sacrament.
Known for many years as the "Chapel of the Holy Black Christ, El Señor del Veneno", it was completed between 1624 and 1627. It internally connects the cathedral with the "Metropolitan Tabernacle", due to the fact that the Chapter decided to open an access that converted it into a simple passage in 1768. It has a Churrigueresque baroque façade in gray quarry, the work of Lorenzo Rodríguez (late 1767 and early 1768); There are no records that an altarpiece ever existed on the central wall, before the opening of the door. The aforementioned image of Christ, around which different legends and anecdotes revolve due to its antiquity, was an original piece from the Dominican church of Porta Coeli, closed in 1935, and taken to the Cathedral in 1945; In 1960, due to its popularity, the image was placed in this Chapel, replacing a painted canvas representing the order of the Sisters of Charity that had been in the right niche since the 19th century. After the restoration of the “Altar of Forgiveness” was completed in the 1980s, the Lord of Poison was taken there, which is its current location.
On the right wall, the image of San Isidro Labrador lies at the top of a small altarpiece in the anastil baroque style, while in the lower part is San Antonio de Padua. On the left wall, a neoclassical style altar contains a niche with a baroque altarpiece, in which there is a painting of the "Lord of Poison" reminding that this was its original space, and next to it a sculpture of San Ramón Nonato.
The lowered vault of this space is the only one with ornamentation work unrelated to the moldings of its design, as it is covered with plasterwork illustrations, which in each section represent "Faith, Hope, Charity and Justice."[79].
The chapel is located under the seat of the oldest tower of the temple, therefore the first in the eastern wing, it was roofed between the years 1624 and 1627, and was originally used as a sacristy. The chapel has a medieval style, with a fluted vault and two Churrigueresque-style altarpieces. In its right side altarpiece it has an oval painting from the 19th century, the work of the Flemish painter Martín de Vos, "Saint Raphael, Archangel and the Young Tobias". At the top of this altarpiece there is a painting of the "Virgen del Carmen" and above this another painting of the "Last Supper".
The front altarpiece that presides over the chapel, is in the Churrigueresque style, uses the retabilistic supports of stipes and niche pilasters, and is presided over by a painting of the «Virgen de las Angustias de Granada "Our Lady of Angustias (Granada)")»; It presents four sculptures arranged in niche pilasters in its single body; It consists of a table, bench, sotabanco, and a large top. Among the elements of the altarpiece there are two medallions with the figures of Saint Peter and Saint Paul; The window frame, as in some other chapels, is integrated into the ornamentation.
The left altar is one of neoclassical style in whose niche there is an image of the "Lord of Mercy", flanked by a century painting of the "Assumption of Mary" and a sculpture of the Virgin Mary carrying the baby Jesus.
During the century, the original bench of the side altarpiece was lost, so in 1964 another bench made by Miguel Ángel Soto was placed), commissioned by the Diocesan Commission of Order and Decorum. The right altarpiece seems to be integrated into the main one, but was mutilated in the century. tabernacle and which was later dismantled.[79].
There is not yet enough documentation to give an idea of the interior decoration that it presented between 1641 and 1684, but on the other hand, abundant ornaments and goldwork are recorded in the inventories of 1632, 1649, 1654 and 1669, giving clues about what was there.
The furniture it houses today is from the last third of the century: cabinets and drawers in balsam wood that faithfully adhere to the precepts formulated in this regard by Saint Charles Borromeo, cardinal and archbishop of Milan, in his instructions for the factory and ecclesiastical trousseau of 1577.
Juan de Viera comments that at the head of the sacristy there were “two Chinese mahogany tables, black as jet, where the chalices prepared for the sacrifice are placed, their boards being one piece two yards wide and two and a half yards long.” And he goes on to point out that the “caxonera” is made of “exquisite wood from Saongolica and others, with its gilded locks distributed in proportion, cupboards with doors of the same wood... and on the circumference... next to the distant drawers two rods, chairs with arms of the same mahogany.” These drawer units were recently altered due, apparently, to operating problems.
Manuel Toussaint's 1948 book still photographically records the trousseau of chairs with cape legs and a credenza with drawers with curved skirts, cape and claw legs, as well as phytomorphic reliefs.
The cupboard for chalices, originally located on the west wall under the Virgin of the Apocalypse by Cristóbal de Villalpando, housed a large number of gold chalices and vessels of the same metal adorned with very fine stones and other sacred vessels and vessels, candlesticks, pedestals, silver on gilt acheros and cruisers. He has five gold and diamond custody alone, without a new one that cost 116,000 pesos. The inventory of 1662 gives an account of the ewers, one of them the work of the silversmith Ena.
In 1957 the wooden perimeter floor and platform were changed to a stepped stone one; A grille twin to that of the Chapter House (adapted by the architect Antonio G. Muñoz) was placed to vestibule the space, creating an ante-sacristy. Miguel Ángel Soto also altered the original proportions of some of the chests of drawers, the continuous chest of drawers was cut from the front wall and a mahogany oratory with a hybrid taste was placed in the center.
Finally, the canvas of the Virgin of Guadalupe with donor, a work by Francisco Martínez made in 1747 that remained for a long time in the basement, now presides over the Guadalupana room of the old building of the Curia of the Virgin of Guadalupe.[68][69][30][79][93].