Iglesia de Jesús de Miramar

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File:2007 august Cuba 199.jpg
Side View (taken August 2007)
File:Organ miramar.jpg
Organ in poor condition (taken August 2007)
Interior of the church looking north

Iglesia de Jesús de Miramar is the second largest church in Cuba. It is located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Cristobal de la Habana.

It was begun in 1948 and inaugurated on May 28, 1953. It is constructed in the Romanesque-Byzantine style. Its architect was Eugenio Cosculluela y Barreras (1893–1978). The church is located at Quinta Ave esquina a 82 (5th avenue at the corner of 82nd street), Miramar, La Habana, Cuba.

Interior

The murals in the church were painted by the Spanish painter, Cesareo Marciano Hombrados y de Onativia (1909–1977) between the years 1952 and 1959. There are more than 266 figures represented in the 14 large murals. His model for the Virgin Mary was his wife, Sara Margarita Fernandez y Lopez (born August 5, 1927 in Havana, Cuba). The writer Carlos Eire, in his book: Waiting for Snow in Havana, says: "What a church that was, so full of murals depicting the passion of Jesus of Nazareth. Huge, colorful murals, most of them densely packed with crowds and people. The oddest thing was that many of those who had paid for the murals had been included in these crowd scenes." (page 225)

The largest pipe organ in Cuba (with 5000 pipes) was inaugurated on November 22, 1956 in the church. Parts of the organ were brought from Spain and the rest was constructed in the Church by the Spaniard Guillermo de Aizpuru Egiguren.

Grounds

In the gardens of the Church grounds is a copy of the Grotto of the Virgin of Our Lady of Lourdes, France, designed by the architect Max Borges Jr. and inaugurated on May 13, 1958.

File:2007 august Cuba 195.jpg
Interior of Church looking south towards the altar

References

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