Founded in 1557, is a typical Spanish city of sixteenth century, following the guidelines established urban by the King of Spain, Charles V. Always thinking about a city practice where parliamentary and administrative buildings were available to everyone around the main square with easy access to major places of economic activity in each city.
Capital of the province of Azuay, Cuenca is the third largest city in Ecuador. The historic center is part of a World Heritage Site by UNESCO established in 1999.
Among the attractions of the city include two cloistered monasteries that once formed part of the main structure of the cathedral of Cuenca, and now stand as great architectural works of the passage of the city.
The convents dating from the eighteenth century, while the other most important historical buildings belong to projects started sometime in the nineteenth century.
The Church of All Saints, rebuilt in the nineteenth century, is one of the oldest sites of Cuenca, and exhibits a statue of Santa Ana that marks the spot where the first Mass was held after the arrival of the Spanish.
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