| Santiago
de Cuba.
See
also: Rooms
rent directory in Santiago de Cuba City
Santiago
de Cuba was founded in 1515 by Governor Diego Velázquez.
The King of Spain made it the capital of the island in 1522,
and it remained the capital until 1553.
This
is the Cuban city with the greatest Caribbean flavor, and
it hosts many popular festivities. It is also distinguished
by having been the scene of important events in Cuba's history
and by being the place where the Virgen de la Caridad del
Cobre (Our Lady of Charity of El Cobre), Cuba's patron saint,
is venerated with the most fervor.
Santiago
de Cuba has the infrastructure needed for conference and
congress tourism. The adjacent mountains and sea are ideal
for ecotourism and adventures, water sports, cruise ship
tourism and health tourism.
When visiting Santiago de Cuba, be sure to stroll through
its streets, to see the friendship and contagious enthusiasm
of the people who live here. Either of its two main arteries,
Enramada and Aguilera Streets, will take you from the Plaza
de Marte (parade ground) to Céspedes Park, the heart
of the city.
Magical
Santiago de Cuba was the birthplace of the bolero, the conga
and the son. Several cultures blended in this city to give
it a distinctive culture of its own. Racial mixing-Spanish,
black and French-is more clearly seen here than in the rest
of the country. The city has around 15 museums and many
other places related to folklore.
Its
transcendental historic and cultural values and the well-known
hospitality of its people, of happy and noisy character,
are two of the characteristics of that distinguish the southeastern
province of Santiago de Cuba, considered the authentic capital
of the Caribbean because of its geographic position and
ethnic origins.
The
foundation of its original urban center "located next
to a large pocket bay, well protected and surrounded by
mountains" dates back to 1514. During its ulterior
process of expansion, the city adapted perfectly well to
the irregularity of the surface of the region.
Initially,
the mining of gold and copper and the cultivation of coffee
(introduced after the inflow of French immigrants) were,
in the colonial times, the main economic activities of the
a city, sieged by pirates, corsairs and the enemies of the
Spanish metropolis; which required intense fortification
work. The most important of its forts, Castillo de San Pedro
de la Roca, was declared World Heritage by UNESCO in 1997.
People
from Santiago just call it El Morro and they know that,
together with Castillo de La Estrella and the battery of
La Socapa, it is part of the largest and most complete example
of European Renaissance military engineering, applied to
the conditions of the Caribbean by a colonial power.
Santiago
de Cuba grew under the protection of this kind of forts.
Its historic center keeps in its splendor valuable examples
of colonial architecture (of strong Andalusian and Moorish
tradition) with the outstanding house of Diego Velázquez,
considered the oldest one in the island, and the Metropolitan
Cathedral, both of them located very close to the most well
known arteries of the city: the streets of Enramada and
Padre Pico.
Céspedes
Park is, without a doubt, the heart of the only Hero City
of the Republic of Cuba, scenario on July 26 of 1953 of
the attack on the Moncada Garrison, action that set the
start of the last stage of the national liberation war.
This is also the place where the remains of the National
Hero, José Martí, lay in an impressive funeral
monument of the Cemetery of Santa Ifigenia.
Around
15 museums, including Bacardí –the first one
built in the country; the paternity of two popular and transcendental
musical rhythms: Son and Bolero; the prestigious institution
of Orfeón Santiago; the fidelity to artistic expressions
like Contredanse (which is said came as French and became
Cuban), and the best carnival of the island; are cultural
treasures jealously preserved, but also pleasantly shared
with visitors, because Santiago is, above all, a city of
open and cordial people.
The
peaceful Cayo Granma (Key Granma), in the middle of the
bay, is another attraction that has earned the preference
of those who frequently visit a city that has become an
important commercial venue in the region. The city organizes
every year a meeting of business men and the EXPOCARIBE
trade fair, a meeting followed by the Fiesta del Fuego (Party
of Fire), where the treasures of the Caribbean culture are
shown in their splendor.
Beyond
the limits of the city, visitors can find several attractions,
among which the Sanctuary of La Virgen de la Caridad del
Cobre, Patroness of Cuba, built in 1927, is one of the most
well-known.
The
Natural Protected Landscape of La Gran Piedra is one of
the most beautiful places in the province. This enormous
rock sits more than 1100 meters above the sea level and
the estimate of its weight is about 70 000 tons, and constitutes
an exceptional lookout from where you can enjoy the splendid
landscape of La Sierra Maestra. Besides, very close from
there you will be able to find important ruins of FrancoHaitian
coffee plantation settlements were recently declared Heritage
of Humanity by UNESCO.
A
little further, the Great Natural Park of Baconao, located
in the Biosphere Reserve equally named, calls for a tour
on the Promenade of Sculptures, the Prehistoric Valley (a
true Caribbean Jurassic Park), the Dolphins Pool, or enjoying
a good portion of the beaches of the province. Its coasts
are fed by the warm waters of the Caribbean Sea and protected
by the hills of the most important Mountainous Region in
the country.
There
are in total 70 Scuba Diving Sites all along the 150 kilometers
of the coasts of Sigua, Daiquirí, Bucanero and Sierra
Mar. In these sites, besides the untouched natural beauty
of the sea bottom, it is possible to see the remains of
sunken ships that date back to the XIX century. The fact
that each of these four spaces has its own attractions turns
Santiago de Cuba into an excellent alternative site to enter
the Caribbean domains of Neptune.
Those
who visit the capital of the Caribbean also have the opportunity
of visiting the Turquino National Park, with the highest
peaks in the island: Turquino itself (1 974 meters), Pico
Cuba (1 872 meters) and Pico Suecia (1 734). Visitors will
also have the chance of getting acquainted with an ideal
place for ecotourism, El Saltón, where the are also
reserves of mineral-medicinal waters suitable for the treatment
of neuralgia, rheumatism, dermatosis, traumas, allergies
and respiratory affections, among others.
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