MANZANA DE LAS LUCES


Manzana de las Luces

Córdoba owes much of its intellectual heritage to the Jesuit order, whose Belgian architect Philippe Lemaire solved the problem of roofing the Iglesia de La Compañía (Obispo Trejos and Caseros) by adapting the shipbuilding techniques of French architect Philibert Delorme. Beams of Paraguayan cedar, imported from the Paraguayan missions, sit atop the austere stone walls—more than 1.5 meters thick—while solid wooden doors provide access to the interior’s carved Baroque altarpiece.

Immediately south of the church, the Rectorado de la Universidad Nacional de Córdoba (Obispo Trejo 242) is a direct descendent of the Seminario Convictorio de San Javier, the continent’s second university (the first was in Lima, Peru). The building’s walls and vaults date from Jesuit times, but the rest of the building has undergone substantial, if tasteful, modification over the centuries. Immediately south of it, dating from 1782, the Spanish Renaissance Colegio Nacional de Monserrat (Obispo Trejo 294) is a prestigious high school whose alumni include three Argentine presidents, as well as educator Joaquín V. González and poet Leopoldo Lugones.


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