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  • 21 Aug, 2019

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Guatemala City General Cemetery

The Guatemala City General Cemetery was built in 1880, during general Justo Rufino Barrios presidency. Ruined by 1917–18 earthquakes, it never recovered its old splendor; originally it was exclusive for the elites and presidents, but gradually the eight Mayan hills that form it were invaded without any urban plan, like what happened with Guatemala City itself after the 1917–18 and 1976 earthquakes.

History

Venancio Barrios tomb.
Justo Rufino Barrios monument and tomb on Hill #1. It was built by his widow in 1892.

The General Cemetery was built in a place that was known as "Potrero de Garcia", which was purchased by the government of Justo Rufino Barrios in 1878. It was opened to the public in 1881 even though it was not completed yet. Within the cemetery there are eight Mayan hills that were part of Kaminal Juyú, separated from the rest of that Mayan city by a ravine. The hills surrounded and old field that might have been used to play ceremonial ball, although its space seems too long and narrow based on other ball fields found in different Maya cities.

When it was almost ready to open in 1881 most of the bodies from the San Juan de Dios Cemetery were transferred to the new one; once most of the remains had moved, the new cemetery was officially opened to the public. Originally, the cemetery was built with perfect symmetry and it had an area of 20.000 m not counting its annex, "La Isla". It had perfectly aligned streets bordered by lines of fine wood trees and luxurious tombs were built by the most important sculptors of the time. The cemetery was one of the first public buildings to have electric lights and the niches were in a solid front wall that had seven hundred and fifty meters in length.

In 1882, a report presented by the secretary of the San Juan de Dios Hospital, which was in charge of the cemetery said that the hills were going to be used as a labyrinth surrounded by an outer street where the most exclusive tombs would be built.

Hill #1 was chosen by friends and family of president Justo Rufino Barrios to build his majestic tomb, which was unveiled on 2 April 1892, the seventh anniversary of his death. The inside of the Mayan hill was emptied to form the tomb. On 30 June 1894, the remains of general Miguel García Granados – former president of Guatemala – were transferred to this cemetery from his humble tomb in the old one; his new resting place was inside a majestic monument in his honor. House representative and public speaker Rafael Spinola pronounced the official speech prior to the solemn ceremony.

In 1896 La Ilustración Guatemalteca published an article about the General Cemetery on November 1, Día de los Muertos; they described several tombs of famous characters of the time. Among the ones mentioned in that article that have survived earthquakes and other natural disasters are: Venancio Barrios tomb, which has a sculpture of the general, recently killed by enemy fire while an angel looks into the distance; general Miguel García Granados tomb and monument; and the tomb of Agripina de Sánchez, mother of former Secretary of Public Education of Justo Rufino Barrios, Delfino Sánchez. At the end of their article, they describe the tomb of general Justo Rufino Barrios, which was built by his widow and children in 1892.

La Ilustración also talks about a curious tomb guard by an Augustine monk who read avidly a Holy book; they only mentioned that it belong to a Belgian immigrant that made a large fortune after arriving to Guatemala.

1917–1918 earthquakes

"La Isla" ("The Island"), annex that was used for the poor citizens. This is how it looked like before the 1917–18 earthquakes.
"La Isla" after the earthquakes.
Tomb described by La Ilustración Guatemalteca in 1896. It was completely destroyed by the 1917–18 earthquakes as shown in this photograph.

The earthquakes started on 17 November 1917 and continued on December 25 and 29 and then on 3 and 24 January 1918. In 1920, Prince Wilhelm, Duke of Södermanland arrived to Guatemala as part of a trip he was making through Central America; he visited Antigua Guatemala and Guatemala City where he witnessed that both cities were in total disarray after their destruction by earthquakes in 1773 and 1917–18, respectively. While Antigua Guatemala ruins were mostly abandoned since the 18th century, and were then partially inhabited by poor Indian families, Guatemala City was still filled with debris and dust from the recent earthquakes; the dust was so fine that it was impossible to avoid it from going into ones clothes, mouth, nose and even skin pores. Visitors like himself developed respiratory diseases until their bodies got used to this dust. Streets did not have any pavement left and only one in three house were inhabited as the rest had been partially ruined.

Public buildings, schools, churches, the theater, museums were all in the hopeless state of desolation in which they were left by the earthquake. Bits of roof hanged down the outsides of the walls and the footway was littered with heaps of stucco ornaments and shattered cornices. A payment of some hundred dollars would secure that a house that had been marked as unsecure with a black cross was then dimmed as done with its necessary repairs, allowing the owners to leave the houses empty and in ruins. But it was at the cemetery that the utter devastation was most evident: all was demolished on the night of the earthquake and it was said that something like eight thousand dead were literally shaken from their graves, threatening pestilence to the city and forcing the authorities to burn all of them in a gigantic bonfire. The dark cavities of the empty tombs were still opened in 1920 and no attempt had been made to restore the cemetery to its original condition. The tomb guarded by the Augustine monk mentioned by Salazar in 1896 was completely destroyed and by its unique characteristics was pictured in 1918 to illustrate the effects the earthquake had on the cemetery.

Modifications to the Mayan hills

Monument to the military cadets that were shot by order of president Manuel Estrada Cabrera in 1908 following an assassination attempt against him. Built in 1920 on Hill #2.

Hill #2 was cleverly used in the beginning, but it was gradually destroyed later when stairs were added to improve access to it and the monument of the cadets shot in 1908 following the assassination attempt on then president Manuel Estrada Cabrera was placed on top of it.

In 1960 a wing for the famous intellectuals that died overseas was built on Hill #5. Unfortunately, given the 1963 coup d'état against president Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes, the wing was slowly abandoned; only Antonio José de Irisarri –who died in New York in 1868 whose remains were brought back to Guatemala in 1968 – and poet Domingo Estrada – who died in Paris in 1901 – are interred there. Other famous writers, like Enrique Gómez Carrillo, were inscribed in a memorial on the wall given the impossibility of bringing his remains back to Guatemala. By the end of the 20th century, all the letters from the memorial had been stolen, the tombstones were marked with graffiti and the whole section was in total disarray.

2015 mudslides

On 27 May 2015 a large mudslide on the edge of the Cemetery destroyed 18 tombs, who went down a ravine which is constantly eroded by a raw sewage that flows underneath. Numerous people promptly started the procedures to move their loved ones to a different location, before they lose them in another mudslide. Among the monuments in peril of fall into the abyss is former president's Miguel García Granados.

Famous tenants

Notes and references

References

Bibliography

  • Asturias, Francisco (1902). Historia de la medicina en Guatemala (in Spanish). Guatemala: Tipografía Nacional.
  • El Periódico (10 June 2015). "El Cementerio General, otra víctima de los derrumbes". El Periódico (in Spanish). Guatemala. Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 10 June 2015.
  • Fernández Ordóñez, R. (2009). Disparos en la obscuridad. El Asesinato del presidente José María Reina Barrios (in Spanish). Guatemala: Universidad Francisco Marroquín. Facultad de Educación.
  • Gaitán, Héctor [in Spanish] (1992). Los Presidentes de Guatemala. Guatemala: Artemis & Edinter. ISBN 8489452253.
  • Hernández de León, Federico (1930). El Libro de las efemérides (in Spanish). Vol. Tomo III. Guatemala: Tipografía Sánchez y de Guise.
  • Hernández de León, Federico (30 April 1959). El capítulo de las efemérides: Golpe de Estado de 1839. Guatemala: Diario La Hora.
  • Martínez, M.B. (n.d.). "Viejos datos reverdecen la leyenda: Martí y la Niña" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 20 August 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: year (link)
  • Martínez Peláez, Severo [in Spanish] (1990). La Patria del Criollo, Ensayo de interpretación de la realidad colonial guatemalteca (in Spanish). México: Ediciones en Marcha.
  • Navarrete Cáceres, Carlos (2001). "Evidencias arqueológicas en el Cementerio General de la ciudad de Guatemala". Anales de la Academia de Geografía e Historia de Guatemala (in Spanish). LXXVI. Guatemala.
  • Palmieri, Jorge [in Spanish] (2007). "Autobiografía fotográfica". Blog de Jorge Palmieri (in Spanish). Guatemala. Archived from the original on 8 July 2014. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  • Prins Wilhelm (1922). Between two continents, notes from a journey in Central America, 1920. Londres, Inglaterra: E. Nash and Grayson, Ltd. pp. 148–209.
  • Ramírez Rodríguez, Oscar Enrique (2009). Profesora María Chinchilla Recinos: centenario de su nacimiento (2 September 1909 – 2 September 2009) (Report) (in Spanish). Guatemala: USAID. p. 56.
  • Sabino, Carlos [in Spanish] (2007). Guatemala, la historia silenciada. 1944–1989. Parte I: Revolución y Liberación (in Spanish). Guatemala: Fondo de Cultura Económica.
  • Salazar, Ramón A. (1 November 1896). "Una excursión al país de los muertos". La Ilustración Guatemalteca (in Spanish). I (7). Guatemala: Síguere, Guirola y Cía.
  • Sánchez, G.; Hernández, M. (27 May 2015). "Derrumbe en Cementerio General destruye 18 mausoleos". Prensa Libre (in Spanish). Guatemala. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  • Spínola, Rafael (1897). Artículos y discursos (in Spanish). Guatemala: Tipografía Nacional. hdl:2027/inu.30000132543574.