Mexico // Veracruz

La Antigua, Cempoala and Cardel

Heading north from Veracruz, there’s a short stretch of toll highway as far as Cardel, at the junction of the coastal highway and the road up to Xalapa. La Antigua, site of the second Spanish settlement in Mexico (it’s often incorrectly described as the first – Villa Rica is further north), lies 2km off this road, 20km north of Veracruz. Although it does see an occasional bus, you’ll find it much easier and quicker to take one heading for Cardel (about every 30min from the second-class terminal in Veracruz) and get off at the toll booths. From here it’s about twenty minutes’ walk up a signed road.

For all its antiquity, there’s not a great deal to see in La Antigua; however, it is a beautiful, cobble-streeted tropical village on the banks of the Río La Antigua (or Río Huitzilapan). At weekends it makes a popular excursion for Veracruzanos, who picnic by the river and swim or take boat rides. In the semi-ruined centre of the village stand some of the oldest surviving Spanish buildings in the country: on the plaza are the Edificio del Cabildo, built in 1523, which housed the first ayuntamiento (local government) established in Mexico, and the Casa de Cortés, a fairly crude stone construction, which, despite the name, was probably never lived in by Cortés and is now a ruin. Nearby is the tranquil Ermita del Rosario, the first Christian church built in New Spain, which also dates from the early sixteenth century, though it’s been altered and restored since. On the riverbank stands a grand old tree – the Ceiba de la Noche Feliz – to which it is claimed that Cortés moored his ships. A pedestrian suspension bridge crosses the river near the tree, and on this stretch of the bank are lanchas offering river trips and a little row of restaurants with waterside terraces. There’s good food at Las Maravillas, in the middle of the row, distinguished by its bright pink paint and tablecloths.

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  • Cempoala