Now lost in the sprawl of Mexico City north of the Basilica of Guadalupe, Atzacoalco once enjoyed a unique place in history. Named in the Aztec Codex Siguenza, Atzacoalco was a lakeside community, the site of an ancient barrier or dike that held back the brackish waters from Lake Texcoco. The site was employed during the Conquest by Hernán Cortés to house the boats for his historic assault on Tenochtitlan (las Atarazanas)
An early Franciscan mission dedicated to Santiago was established there in 1531, later ceded to Carmelites (1586) and then to the Augustinians (1607?). Finally, it was secularized in 1750.
The 16th century church front was later blocked by a new, inappropiate, facade although the old lateral entry remains.
The Cross
Formerly in the cemetery but now in plaza?, this venerable carved cross is similar to the Guadalupe cross in style (see previous post), altho smaller, and possibly by the same hand.
The beautifully modeled, melancholy head of Christ stands at crossing with two crowns; one on the brow and another, larger, limper one draped around the neck of the cross, over a priest's stole.
Streaming Wounds with large spikes occupy the outer arms as at Guadalupe.
The finely carved and integrated composition of shaft reliefs include a banded pillar with rooster atop and below, a substantial chalice with the Host emerging, here inscribed with a cross and IHS initials. Sun & Moon can be seen on the sides along with several other Instruments & Passion symbols, including a scimitar severing Malchus' ear.
Abbreviated or damaged petaled finials cap the arms.
Old photographs show a florid INRI crest with pomegranates and cherubs heads, as at Guadalupe. This is now missing.
©2025 Richard D. Perry. color photo by the author
Dear R. Perry, I am very interested in your two blogs on colonial Mexico (and your book Mexico's Fortress Monasteries). I am a French PhD student in art history, and I would like to ask for your permission to use some of your images and photographs in my dissertation manuscript, with full credit and acknowledgment of your work. Would this be possible? Thank you in advance.
ReplyDeleteyou are welcome to use my images as proposed. let me know which ones, since many of them are not mine.
ReplyDeleteRichard
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ReplyDeleteno, I didnt get your response. Please repeat
DeleteHie, sorry for the delayed response and thank you for your positive reply. I am interested in a large number of images, I hope that won't be a problem. Here is the list of images I would like to see included in my thesis:
ReplyDelete-The picota of Zempoala
-Three murals in Cholula : The Annunciation, St Francis in front of Christ, and Francis kneeling to present the Rule
-St Francis and St Anthony of Padua mural of Atlixco
-Two murals in Huatlatlahuca : Sts Francis and Dominic, and St Augustine as Protector of the Order
-The Mass of St Gregory in Cuernavaca
-The Cross of Alfajayucan
-The North Wall mural of the Dream of St Dominic with St Francis, in Teitipac
-The mural of the Twelves in Tlalmanalco
-The plan of Apocalypse murals in Tecamachalco
-The plan of the processional route inside church and The Descent from the Cross in Huejotzingo
- The three Calvary crosses mural in Cuauhtinchan
-The Last Judgment in Acolman
-The Cuauhxicalli in Cuernavaca
Thank you very much for your interest
Morgane Thro