We went to the Recoleta Cemetery today, which was surrounded by an open market with lots of artwork. But we also stumbled into the Recoleto Cultural Center. I’ll just do some cemetery pictures today without much commentary, because we have an early morning flight tomorrow.
The cemetery is like a little city of houses of the dead. Lots of Argentine history here.
Dr. Manuel Florence Mantilla (above).
This Argentine boxer was known as The Bull of the Pampas.
Augustine De Elia was once president of the Jockey Club.
And Here’s Evita. We wouldn’t have found her, but I asked someone who turned out to be a funeral director from Columbia and he and a small group of funeral folks were getting a tour of the cemetary from an older local who knew it all well. So we tagged along. Her grave did have something of a crowd around it, flowers, and, we discovered there’s a map at the entrance. But she’s listed under her family name - Duarte.
After Evita we passed by this statue and grave that was unlike anything else there. Liliana died at 25 when an avalanche hit an Austrian ski lodge she was in with her husband and dog. Here’s a Wikipedia page ab out her in Spanish. But you can cut and paste it into Google translate and get a pretty good English version.
I’ve got to finish packing and get to bed. We’re supposed to be at the airport at 6am! But it’s the airport for flights inside Argentina, so it’s not too far.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments will be reviewed, not for content (except ads), but for style. Comments with personal insults, rambling tirades, and significant repetition will be deleted. Ads disguised as comments, unless closely related to the post and of value to readers (my call) will be deleted. Click here to learn to put links in your comment.