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St. Mary's Cathedral, Chiclayo
Church in Chiclayo, Peru From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Cathedral of Saint Mary [1] (Spanish: Catedral de Santa María), commonly called Chiclayo Cathedral, is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Chiclayo in Chiclayo, Peru.
The cathedral church was built in the neo-classical style starting in 1869 according to designs and plans commissioned from Gustave Eiffel, nicknamed "Rose Meridionale". Construction was interrupted in 1871 due to lack of funds, and resumed only after the Congress of the Republic lent support a half-century later. Building resumed on February 13, 1928, and was completed in 1939.
The cruciform cathedral was designed in the neoclassical style. Its main façade features two bell towers and three portals, with the central one being the largest. The façade's gable, above the large second-story balcony, is topped with a statue of Santa María de los Valles de Chiclayo, in whose honor the Franciscans founded the modern city of Chiclayo in the 16th century. The crossing is surmounted by a large dome. Its four bells, "Ave Maria", "Asumpta", "Mater Dei", and "Gratia Plena" were cast in Germany and brought to Chiclayo via the Port of Pimentel.[2]
In 2002, a comprehensive restoration and conservation of the atrium floors, exterior cornices, roofs, domes and bell towers of the building was carried out by Chiclayo architects Mario Alfredo Seclén Rivadeneira and Jorge Cosmópolis Bullón.
Pope Leo XIV, then known as Robert Francis Prevost, was Bishop of Chiclayo from 2015 to 2023 and regularly celebrated mass in the cathedral.[3]
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Gallery
- View down the nave
- View of the sanctuary
- View of the vaulted ceiling
- The cathedral as seen in 2018
- View from the Plaza de Armas de Chiclayo
- Exterior view of the cathedral
See also
References
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