• Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Recamara de Carlota
    Leonardo Hernández / INAH-Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Baño de Carlota
    Leonardo Hernández / INAH-Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
    Juan Carlos Gómez de la Fuente / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Patio del Chapulín
    Omar Dumaine / INAH-Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Escalera principal
    Leonardo Hernández / INAH-Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
    INAH
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Sala de Emplomados
    Omar Dumaine / INAH-Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Sala de estar, Alcazar
    Leonardo Hernández / INAH-Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
    Juan Carlos Gómez de la Fuente / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Fachada poniente del Museo
    Leonardo Hernández / INAH-Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
    Juan Carlos Gómez de la Fuente / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
    Fabián González / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

    Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
    Juan Carlos Gómez de la Fuente / INAH-Mediateca

Visit us

Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

Opening hours
Tuesday to Sunday from 09:00 to 17:00 h
Fee
$100.00
Buy tickets
Adress

Paseo de la Reforma Avenue and Calzada Gandhi, First Section of Chapultepec Forest, no number, Miguel Hidalgo district, Zip Code 11560, Mexico City, Mexico.

Access

Nearest Metro stations: Auditorio and Chapultepec.

Services
Library
Cloakroom
Boosktore
Information module
Toilets
Shop
Guided tours
Important
  • Sundays free for mexican citizens
  • Free entrance for Mexicans under 13 years old
  • Free entrance for Mexican students and teachers
  • Free entrance for Mexican senior citizens
  • No smoking
  • No entry with food
  • Pets not allowed
  • No flash

Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec
Museo Nacional de Historia Castillo de Chapultepec

The former residence of viceroys, presidents and an emperor, Chapultepec Castle was the site of a major encounter during the Mexican-American war of 1847, and contains a splendid collection of historical artifacts.


Chapultepec Castle is a magnificent late-eighteenth century construction (1785-1787) designed and built as a stately home at the behest of the Viceroy of New Spain at the time, Bernardo de Gálvez. Over the years, however, the building has been adapted several times for different uses. It was the headquarters of Mexico’s military academy, the site of battles fought during the US invasion, residence of Emperor Maximilian and Empress Carlota, and of a number of Mexican presidents. President Lázaro Cárdenas eventually issued a presidential decree in 1939 for the Castle to be used as a museum housing the collections and personal effects of Mexico’s leading historical figures. The building, standing at the highest point of Chapultepec Park, opened its doors as a museum in September 1944.

The National Museum of History—undoubtedly one of the most important exhibition spaces in Mexico—offers visitors a comprehensive view of national history, from the Conquest and the founding of New Spain until the dawn of the twentieth century. On display are more than 65,000 objects including paintings, sculptures, furniture, clothing, coins, musical instruments, silver and ceramic utensils, flags, carriages, and documents.

In the former military academy the galleries’ exhibits date from the time of the Conquest until the 1910 Revolution. Visitors to this part of the museum can also admire mural paintings created by leading artists between 1933 and 1970, notably Jorge González Camarena’s “La fusión de dos culturas” (“Fusion of Two Cultures”) and “La Constitución de 1917” (“1917 Constitution”); Juan O’Gorman’s “El retablo de la Independencia” (“Independence Altarpiece”), “El feudalismo porfirista” (“Porfirian Feudalism”) and “Sufragio Efectivo, no Reelección” (“Effective Suffrage, No Reelection”); José Clemente Orozco’s "La Reforma y la caída del Imperio" (“The Reform and the Fall of the Empire”), and Siqueiros’s “Del Porfirismo a la Revolución” (“From the Dictatorship of Porfirio Díaz to the Revolution”).

The ground-floor rooms in the building known as the Alcázar (“Fortress”) are decorated with furniture, domestic items, jewelry, paintings and various objects related mainly to the imperial era of Maximilian and Carlota, while the top floor contains the furniture, paintings and other belongings of President Porfirio Díaz and his wife Carmen Romero Rubio.

Chapultepec Hill and the Chapultepec Castle’s National Museum of History have their own history. In pre-Hispanic times, Moctezuma had his pools and baths here, as well as a shrine and living quarters; it is also known that Moctezuma I ordered the construction of the aqueduct to carry water from Chapultepec to Mexico-Tenochtitlan, and that Nezahualcóyotl, Lord of Texcoco, was responsible for the actual building work.

Construction on this hilltop took place between 1785 and 1787; the residence was commissioned by Viceroy Bernardo de Gálvez, who died before seeing it completed. Due to the building’s exorbitant cost, the Spanish crown tried to sell it but there were no buyers and it fell into disuse.

The Mexico City government acquired the property in 1806, but at the outbreak of the War of Independence it did not make any further use of it. It was not until 1833 that a decree was issued for it to be converted into a military academy and, after a period of alterations, it began to operate as such in 1844. On September 12 and 13, 1847, it resisted bombardment from the US army, which nevertheless caused it serious damage. After its reconstruction, the military academy reopened and Miguel Miramón, a former pupil and survivor of the Battle of Chapultepec in 1847, ordered the construction of some rooms on the second floor of the Alcázar. However, its current appearance dates from the time when Maximilian and Carlota decided to make it their imperial residence, and their team of Austrian, French, Belgian, and Mexican architects transformed it. At the end of the Second Mexican Empire, the building was abandoned once again.

From 1878 to 1883 it briefly became an astronomical, meteorological and magnetic observatory, until the military academy returned, and the Castle itself was converted into a presidential residence, providing a home successively for Porfirio Díaz, Francisco I. Madero, Venustiano Carranza, Álvaro Obregón, Plutarco Elías Calles, Emilio Portes Gil, Pascual Ortiz Rubio and Abelardo Rodríguez. On February 3, 1939, it was declared the National Museum of History.


 

  • Dirección
    Salvador Miguel Rueda Smithers
    salvador_rueda@inah.gob.mx
    +52 (55) 4040 5210
    Administración
    Asgard Torres Esperanza
    asgard_torres@inah.gob.mx
    +52 (55) 4040 5200, ext. 3113
    Subdirección Técnica
    Erandi Rubio Huertas
    erandi_rubio@inah.gob.mx
    +52 (55) 4040 5200, ext. 3162
    Protección y Resguardo de Bienes Culturales
    Edmundo Crisóstomo Mendoza
    edmundo_crisostomo@inah.gob.mx
    +52 (55) 4040 5213
Antecomedor

Pantry Room

Behind the scenes: In addition to its distinguished residents, the Alcázar housed dozens of servants whose work ensured that the palace functioned smoothly and the needs of its occupants were met.

Antesala de Acuerdos

Council Antechamber

Presidents and their councils: A working visit to the presidential residence was generally reserved for only the most pressing matters of public life.

Baño de Carlota

Carlota’s Bathroom

Health and hygiene habits: Maximilian’s intent to “bring Mexico into the advancements of civilization” led him to modernize public services, including the replacement of traditional water carriers with piped potable water, drainage systems for the Valley of Mexico, paved streets,

El Caballero Alto

The High Tower

The tower of the Alcázar of Chapultepec—known in military architecture as the “High Knight” or “Caballero Alto”—was built on the highest point of the natural promontory, rising some 45 meters above the level of Mexico City.

Dos continentes aislados

Two Isolated Continents

For millennia, the peoples of Europe and the land that would later be called America remained unaware of each other, separated by the vast Atlantic Ocean. It wasn’t until 1492 that these two worlds came into contact, ushering in a new era in global history.

El visitador del Rey

The King's Inspector

Over three centuries, the foundations of what would become modern Mexico were laid. The fusion of various ethnic groups, cultural traditions, languages, and levels of societal development gave rise to a unique new people.

La Iglesia en tiempos de los Borbones

The Church in the Bourbon Era

As important as military, technological, or artistic conquest was the evangelization of the Indigenous peoples—often referred to as the “spiritual conquest.” In the early years, this task was led by members of the Franciscan, Dominican, and Augustinian orders, later joined by Jesuits and the secu

El juego de los intercambios

The Game of Exchange

By around 1804, Mexico City boasted over 100 "pulperías"—general stores selling a rich variety of global goods: wines from Castile, La Rioja, and Málaga; Castilian vinegar; olives from Seville; Ceylonese cinnamon; cocoa from Caracas; cloves from the Philippines; along with buttons, candles, fine

La edad de la razón

The Age of Reason

By the late 17th century and throughout the 18th, the Enlightenment introduced a bold new way of thinking about life and nature. Reason and science took precedence. Observation and experimentation challenged long-standing truths once accepted without question.

Las huellas de Miguel Hidalgo

The Legacy of Miguel Hidalgo

In 1808, when news arrived in New Spain of Napoleon’s invasion of the Iberian Peninsula and the forced abdications of Spanish kings Charles IV and Ferdinand VII, the Mexico City council recalled a royal decree that had originally united New Spain with the Crown of Castile, along with Charles V’s

La joven nación (1821-1867)

The Young Nation (1821–1867)

Gaining independence was not enough to forge a united nation. The early governments of independent Mexico faced deep challenges in building a stable and respected political system.

Hacia la modernidad

Toward Modernity

The liberal republican project ultimately triumphed over the Second Empire and solidified its hold in the following decades, until it was seriously challenged again in 1910.

Escalera de leones

Stairway of the Lions

In 1878, as the terrace of Chapultepec Castle was expanded to accommodate the National Astronomical, Meteorological, and Magnetic Observatory, a new access point to the upper floor was opened. This upper level would later house the institution's scientific instruments.

Escalera Púrpura

The Purple Staircase

"The comfort of home." Opened during the presidency of Manuel González (1880–1884), this staircase played a key role in turning the Alcázar into a more comfortable and accessible residence.

Contacto

difusion.mnh@inah.gob.mx
+52 (55) 4040 5200
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