National Palace (Guatemala)
History
Since the beginning of Spanish colonization, a governmental seat was needed. In 1528, the first Government House was built in Santiago de Guatemala in the Valle de Almolonga. Then, in 1549, President Alonso López de Cerrato moved the "Audiencia de los Confines" from Gracias a Dios in Honduras to Santiago de Guatemala. In 1761 President Alonso Fernández de Heredia began the construction of a new seat, under the direction of Spanish Captain and engineer Luis Diez de Navarro.
Construction
In celebration of the first century of independence in 1919, President Manuel Estrada Cabrera placed the first stone for a future palace next to the Plaza de Armas. The Italian architect Guido Albani was charged with designing the palace, but it never came to pass due to the collapse of the government soon thereafter. Two years later, in 1921, President Carlos Herrera, with the Centenary very close, ordered the Palacio del Centenario to be built in only three months time with a small budget and few resources. It became popularly known as the Palacio de Cartón (Cardboard Palace). However, in 1925 it was destroyed by a fire.
In 1927 President Lazaro Chacón declared a contest for the design of a new palace. The contest was won by the artist Agustín Iriarte, but this project again never came to be. Finally, in 1932, President General Jorge Ubico published the basis for the design and construction of the palace, and on July 4, 1937, the first stone was placed. The National Palace was built between January 1939 and 1943. On November 10 of that year, the birthday of President Ubico, the present-day Palace was opened.
1976 earthquake
The building survived the earthquake of February 4 of 1976, a magnitude 7.5 on the Richter scale.
1982 coup and special jurisdiction tribunals
On March 23, 1982, young officers from the Guatemalan Army deposed President Fernando Romeo Lucas García and replaced him with General Efraín Ríos Montt, who had been director of the Guatemala Military Academy while those young officers were cadets.
On June 30, 1982, Ríos Montt, in a speech called "We are willing to let honesty and justice reign" ("Estamos dispuestos que reine la honestidad y la justicia"), told the Guatemalan people that the government had realized that there were many Guatemalans that were afraid of being killed and that therefore did not apply for the amnesty his government issued in late March. Because of that, he said, the government was going to fight communist guerrillas by any means they wanted, but that they also were going to use open trials. Rios Montt said that in order to accomplish that he had set up "special jurisdiction tribunals" which would judge leftist criminals and that they were going to apply capital punishment to those proven guilty.
These secret tribunals, whose members were appointed by the president but were unknown to the Guatemalan people, performed fast and drastic trials, in parallel to the judiciary system of the country. In the end, 15 people were executed less than a month after they had been captured.
The special tribunals were directly under control of the Defense Secretary, general Óscar Humberto Mejía Víctores, and had their headquarters in the National Palace and lasted until Mejia Víctores himself led a coup d'état that deposed General Ríos Montt on August 8, 1983.
See also
Notes and references
References
- ^ "Palacio Nacional se convirtió en centro cultural | Siglo21.com.gt". Archived from the original on 2016-03-08. Retrieved 2016-02-25.
- ^ Hernández 2013.
Bibliography
- Hernández, Oswaldo (2013). "Tribunales de fuero especial: La justicia que fue de los generales". Plaza Pública (in Spanish). Guatemala. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
Further reading
- Arévalo Bermejo, Juan José (1998). Despacho Presidencial. Obra póstuma (in Spanish). Guatemala: Tipografía Oscar de León Palacios.
- Barnoya García, José (1979). Historia de la Huelga (in Spanish). Guatemala: Calabaza.
- Brolo, Javier (2012). "20 de octubre de 1944: Carta de los 311" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 20 August 2014.
- Cardoza y Aragón, Luis (1994). La Revolución Guatemalteca (in Spanish) (2. ed.). México: Talleres de Ediciones Don Quijote.
- Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes (2009). "Reseña histórica del Palacio Nacional de la Cultura" (PDF). Gobierno de Guatemala (in Spanish). Guatemala.]
- Móbil, José Antonio (2010). La Década Revolucionaria 1944-1954 (in Spanish). Guatemala: Serviprensa Centroamericana. ISBN 978-9929-554-42-9.
- Núñez, Rogelio (2013). "Los crímenes ocultos de la guerrilla en Guatemala". INFOLATAM (in Spanish). p. 17. Archived from the original on 31 October 2014. Retrieved 24 October 2014.
- Perspectiva Militar (2007). "Datos de Historia Militar de Guatemala, Parte VII, 1978-1982" (in Spanish). Retrieved 10 October 2013.
- Sabino, Carlos (2007). Guatemala, la historia silenciada (1944-1989) Tomo I: Revolución y Liberación (in Spanish). Guatemala: Fondo de Cultura Económica. ISBN 9789992248522.
- Villagrán Kramer, Francisco (1993). Biografía política de Guatemala: Los pactos políticos de 1944 a 1970 (in Spanish). Guatemala: FLACSO.
External links
- Media related to Guatemala National Palace at Wikimedia Commons
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