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In your Private vehicle and visit the Archaeological Zone of Tula. Here, you can see the Atlanteans, which are something like statues of 5 meters of warriors and related to Atlantis. It is a ceremonial center from the 8th century. Before the Mexicas, the people of Tula were considered the best architects of antiquity. Unfortunately, they disappeared because of the invasions of the cultures of the north of the country.
Your tour continues with a visit to the convent of the order of the Jesuits: Tepotzotlán. This is the best example of the conquest of Mexico. See the San Francisco Javier Chapel, which is a very impressive construction, as it is part of the Mexican Baroque-style exhibits. The whole church is covered with gold leaves
After taking in a great history of Mexico, we will return to Mexico City to your hotel.
The National Museum of the Viceroyalty is a museum complex in Mexico located in the old Colegio de San Francisco Javier in Tepotzotlán. It is dedicated to the exhibition, dissemination and investigation of the Viceroyalty of New Spain.
This complex was built by the Jesuits starting in the 1580s. Three learning centers were founded here: a school to teach indigenous languages to Jesuit evangelists, a school for indigenous children and the Colegio de San Francisco Javier, to train to the Jesuit fathers. The complex is made up of three sections: the school area, with bedrooms, library, kitchen, chapel, etc .; the Church of San Francisco Javier; and the Church of San Pedro Apóstol.
Tula Known as "Place of tules-Near the place of the jicotes" Great City near the Xicoc hill was the capital of the Toltec state, which developed in central Mexico during the early postclassic period of Mesoamerica. In this city the The main political power of the valleys of Mexico and Puebla-Tlaxcala between the 10th and 12th centuries of our era. Its influence reached as far away as the Yucatan Peninsula, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua. It should not be confused with the mythological site called Tōllān , whose identification with Tollan-Xicocotitlan has been questioned in recent texts.
The first evidences of the occupation of the Tollan-Xicocotitlan site correspond to the end of the Early Classic Period (II-VIII century AD). At this time, the city of Teotihuacan - the main political and economic center of central Mesoamerica - began its process of decline, yielding its hegemony to other city-states that flourished during the Epiclassic
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7 hours