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Cienfuegos, Cuba’s Pearl of the South

Located at the end of a wide pocket bay, Cienfuegos has a unique charm that has inspired poets and artists, as well as a valuable architectural and cultural heritage.

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  • OnCuba Staff
    OnCuba Staff
February 7, 2023
in OnCuba Media, Society
0
Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.

Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.

To the south of the central region of Cuba, more than 200 kilometers from Havana, is Cienfuegos. It is not the largest city on the island, nor the most populated, but it is one of the most beautiful and hospitable, a city bathed by the Caribbean Sea and with a valuable architectural and cultural heritage.

The so-called “Pearl of the South” is the only city founded by French colonists in Latin America under the Spanish crown. This happened more than 200 years ago, on April 22, 1819, when it was initially baptized as Fernandina de Jagua. However, it would later change its name in honor of Don José Cienfuegos, governor of Cuba at the time of its foundation.

Government Palace in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.

Located at the end of a wide pocket bay, Cienfuegos has a unique charm that has inspired poets and artists. There are not a few who have sung to her beauty, to her warm and jovial people, although perhaps no work in its honor is as famous as the one popularized by the legendary singer Benny Moré.

Although Benny was not born there, but in the nearby town of Santa Isabel de las Lajas, he never hid his love for the city of Cienfuegos. In his famous song of the same name, he cataloged it as “the city that I like the most,” a phrase that would remain for posterity.

Sculpture of Benny Moré, the work of artist José Villa Soberón, located in the Paseo del Prado in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.

There are many buildings and places that distinguish the “Pearl of the South.” From Martí Park, with its arbor and its statue of the National Hero of Cuba, to its iconic Cathedral and the famous Tomás Terry Theater. From the Paseo del Prado, with the bronze sculpture of Benny Moré, to the Malecón and the modern Boulevard.

Buildings such as the Ferrer Palace, the Cienfuegos Club, the Jagua Hotel and the Valle Palace are other jewels of Cienfuegos architecture that any visitor can discover on a tour of the city. And they are not the only ones. Not surprisingly, its preserved historic center was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.

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Valle Palace, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.

Almost three years after its bicentennial, and despite the impact of the pandemic and the economic crisis, Cienfuegos continues to be one of the most photogenic cities in Cuba. This week our correspondent Otmaro Rodríguez visited it and brings us closer with his images to several of its most emblematic sites.

Monument to José Martí, in the park of the same name, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Martí Park’s arbor, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Martí Park’s Arc de Triomphe, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
José Martí Park, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Rosette that marks the starting point of the layout of the first founding block of Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Rosette that marks the starting point of the layout of the first founding block of Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Bust of Antonio Hurtado del Valle, “The son of Damují,” in Martí Park, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
José Martí Park, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
San Lorenzo College, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Sailboats in the Bay of Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Cienfuegos Bay. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Sculpture of Benny Moré, the work of artist José Villa Soberón, located in the Paseo del Prado in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Bust of Enrique Edo y Llop, Spanish writer and historian, in the Paseo del Prado, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
A family walks along the Paseo del Prado, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Prado Movie Theater, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Ferrer Palace Museum of Arts, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
La Union Hotel, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Tomás Terry Theater, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Statue of Tomás Terry, at the entrance to the theater that bears his name. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Cafe Teatro Terry, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Cienfuegos Boulevard. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Cienfuegos Boulevard. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Flower seller near Cienfuegos Boulevard. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Santa Isabel Street, in Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Cienfuegos’ Malecón. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
House on Cienfuegos’ boardwalk. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
Casa Villa Elena, facing the bay of Cienfuegos. Photo: Otmaro Rodriguez.
  • OnCuba Staff
    OnCuba Staff
Tags: Cienfuegoscuban architectureCuban culture
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