Back in December, I visited my aunt and uncle for a few days. While in the Central Valley we took a trip to Cartago. Cartago was one of the places in Costa Rica I had been most excited to visit, because it´s name shares roots with Cartagena (see note below). Cartago, the former capital of Costa Rica is a beautiful city filled with stories and traditions dating back to the pre-Columbus era.
One important story about Cartago is the story of the ruins (seen above). The ruins are the remains of several building attempts (therefor they are not actually ruins by definition) to build a cathedral on this one plot of land. Locals will tell you about how an earthquake in 1910 and a few other earthquakes later in the 20th century each destroyed attempts to build on this site. After a few attempts, they decided to abandon their efforts and leave the area as a park.
The other highlight of Cartago is the Basílica de Nuestra Señora de Los Ángeles. Every year on the 2nd of August thousands of Ticos (and I assume some foreigners) make a pilgrimage to the Basílica. The Basílica is well known for the legend that surrounds it. Legend has it that a young girl found a small object that looked like Mary holding baby Jesus. She brought it home and left it at her house. The next day she was wandering and found the same object. Again, she brought it home and locked it in her box. She went back to the area where she found the object a third time, and a third time it was there. She then brought it to her pastor and explained what had happened. Legend has it that this "Black Madonna" was repeatedly found on the spot where the Basílica now stands.
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Cartagena is a city in Spain. It is the 2nd largest city and formerly the main city of the Autonomous Region of Murcia (where I studied in 2007). Cartagena is a beautiful seaport city that had such a claim to be the sede of the province over Murcia that the administrative part of the government is actually in Cartagena.
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