Museo Arqueológico de Tepeapulco
The museum is housed in the Franciscan convent founded in 1528. The great scholar of Nahuatl, Fray Bernardino de Sahagún lived and worked here. The museum displays material on his life and work, on pre-Hispanic society from the earliest times and a collection of religious art of New Spain.
Local
About the museum
The Fray Bernardino de Sahagún Museum in the former Monastery of San Francisco in Tepeapulco was founded in 1959. This historic building, founded by the first Franciscan evangelizers in 1528, was where Fray Bernardino de Sahagún, the founder of anthropology on the American continent lived and worked. After learning to speak fluent Nahuatl, he began interviewing a large number of informants in the Valley of Mexico, collecting sufficient material to write his highly important Historia General de las Cosas de la Nueva España (General History of the Things of New Spain). Tepeapulco was the site where he wrote the section known as “Primeros Memoriales.”
The first guardian of the monastery was Fray Andrés de Olmos. As in so many other cases a considerable indigenous labor force worked on the construction. A chapel to Jesus Nazarene was added to the monastery. Various of the building’s walls have important fresco paintings on religious themes.
Four galleries feature explanations and objects from the pre-Hispanic world and the history of the district in viceregal times. The first gallery houses temporary exhibitions. Gallery 2 looks at Mesoamerica in Preclassic times, with clay objects influenced by the cultures of Tlatilco and Copilco, and also the Classic period with Teotihuacan culture material from the lookout of Xihuingo. Gallery 3 features an archeological exhibition with part of the monks’ hydraulic system from the sixteenth century, as well as oil paintings, including one of San Francisco of Assisi and another of the Good Death of Saint Augustine. This gallery also provides information on the Postclassic with Mexica ceramic objects and stone artifacts such as the Tonatiuh solar disc. Gallery 4 is dedicated to the Preclassic period and it highlights the importance of Mexica religion, with representations of Tlaloc, the rain god, Chicomecoatl, the corn goddess and Xiuhtecutli, god of the year. It also displays a “four movements” Nahui Ollin monolith, one of the symbols of the sun present in the Mexica calendar.
The first guardian of the monastery was Fray Andrés de Olmos. As in so many other cases a considerable indigenous labor force worked on the construction. A chapel to Jesus Nazarene was added to the monastery. Various of the building’s walls have important fresco paintings on religious themes.
Four galleries feature explanations and objects from the pre-Hispanic world and the history of the district in viceregal times. The first gallery houses temporary exhibitions. Gallery 2 looks at Mesoamerica in Preclassic times, with clay objects influenced by the cultures of Tlatilco and Copilco, and also the Classic period with Teotihuacan culture material from the lookout of Xihuingo. Gallery 3 features an archeological exhibition with part of the monks’ hydraulic system from the sixteenth century, as well as oil paintings, including one of San Francisco of Assisi and another of the Good Death of Saint Augustine. This gallery also provides information on the Postclassic with Mexica ceramic objects and stone artifacts such as the Tonatiuh solar disc. Gallery 4 is dedicated to the Preclassic period and it highlights the importance of Mexica religion, with representations of Tlaloc, the rain god, Chicomecoatl, the corn goddess and Xiuhtecutli, god of the year. It also displays a “four movements” Nahui Ollin monolith, one of the symbols of the sun present in the Mexica calendar.
Map
An expert point of view
Carlos Hernández Reyes
Centro INAH Hidalgo
Practical information
Tuesday to Sunday from 09:00 to 14:00 hrs. and from 16:00 to 18:00 hrs.
Free entry
La visita a los espacios eclesiásticos depende de que las actividades eclesiásticas lo permitan
Hidalgo s/n,
Colonia Centro, C.P. 43970,
Tepeapulco, Hidalgo, México.
Colonia Centro, C.P. 43970,
Tepeapulco, Hidalgo, México.
Services
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+52 (771) 714 35 20
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FACEBOOK
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Delegado Centro INAH Hidalgo
Héctor Alvarez Santiago
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+52 (771) 714 35 20, ext. 228013
Asistente de dirección
Andrea Aldama Galicia
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+52 (771) 714 35 20, ext. 228002
Administración
Jaime Arzate Pelcastre
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+52 (771) 714 35 20, ext. 228003