Espada Cemetery

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Established1806
Location
CountryCuba
Coordinates23°08′27″N 82°22′31″W / 23.140853°N 82.375349°W / 23.140853; -82.375349
Espada Cemetery
Details
Established1806
Location
CountryCuba
Coordinates23°08′27″N 82°22′31″W / 23.140853°N 82.375349°W / 23.140853; -82.375349
TypePublic

The Espada Cemetery was located in the Barrio of San Lazaro approximately a mile west of the city walls of Havana, Cuba, near the cove of Juan Guillen and close to the San Lázaro Leper Hospital.[1] In use from 1806 to 1878, the Espada Cemetery was the first public burial place designed and constructed in Havana; prior to the cemetery, the Havana custom had been to bury the dead in the vaults of the churches such as Iglesia del Espíritu Santo in Habana Vieja.[1] It was named after the bishop incumbent at the time of design, José Díaz de Espada y Landa.[1] Its boundaries included the present streets of San Lázaro, Vapor, Espada, and Aramburu. Despite being officially called Campo Santo, the people of Havana referred to the cemetery as El Cementerio de Espada. The cemetery was closed in 1878 and demolished in 1908; only a small wall remains of the original structure.[2]

Espada Cemetery. 1806
Havana map of 1900 showing Hospital de San Lazaro, the San Dionisio mental asylum, Espada Cemetery, La Casa de Beneficencia y Maternidad de La Habana, the Caleta de S. Lazaro and the San Lazaro quarry to the east where Jose Marti was briefly imprisoned.

The site of Espada Cemetery was between present-day Calle Espada to the east and Calles Vapor and San Lazaro. The main cemetery entrance was on Calle San Lazaro, most of the funeral processions went down Calle San Lazaro. The Hospital de San Lazaro had its entrance pediment facing present day Calle Marina, the area was the edge of the city originally known as Barrio San Lazaro. The Torreón de San Lázaro built in 1655 is located at the intersections of Calles Vapor and Marina. The San Dionisio hospital, created by the initiative of Captain General Francisco Dionisio Vives and by Bishop Espada, was exclusively for mentally ill men and located between the hospital of San Lazaro and the General Cemetery. In the same area was also a room of the Real Casa de Beneficencia, intended exclusively for demented women, but this had its front to Calle Belascoaín. The quarry of San Lazaro where Jose Marti had been imprisoned in 1870, was to the east. In front of the Casa de Beneficencia was the Batería de la Reina which was named after the Count of Santa Clara, Juan Procopio Bassecourt, governor of Cuba, who built the battery between 1797 and 1799.

Design

The Espada cemetery was a garden type, a single wall 2.5 meters thick which contained the crypts. The design and construction were directed by an architect with the surname of Aulet. The cemetery had a central courtyard, the walls were approximately 6 meters tall (4 crypts) with an elaborate stone coping for protection from the elements. The paintings that adorned the building entrance pavilion were by the Venetian Giuseppe Perovani (1765–1835). The cemetery was officially inaugurated on February 2, 1806. Only a small section of the original wall remains. Archived 2019-01-02 at the Wayback Machine

History

Notes

References

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