The
Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary of Cuernavaca
(
Spanish:
Catedral de la Asunción de
María) is the
Roman Catholic
cathedral church of the
Diocese of Cuernavaca,
located in the city of
Cuernavaca,
Morelos,
Mexico. The church and its
surrounding monastery is one of
the early 16th century monasteries in
the vicinity of the Popocatepetl volcano, built
initially for evangelization efforts of indigenous people
after the
Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire.
By the 18th century, the church of the monastery began to
function as the parish church of the city and in the late
19th century, it was elevated to the rank of a cathedral.
Unlike many cathedrals in Mexico, this one does not face the
city’s main square, but rather is located just to the south,
in its own walled compound, which it shares with a number of
other structures. Unlike the other monastery structures from
its time, the importance of this church provoked a number of
renovation projects, the last of which occurred in 1957.
This one took out the remaining older decorations of the
interior and replaced them with simple modern ones. This
renovation work also uncovered a 17th century mural that
covers 400 square metres (4,300 sq ft) of the interior walls
and narrates the story of
Philip of Jesus and twenty three other missionaries who
were crucified in Japan.