Harman Patil (Editor)

St. John the Baptist Cathedral, Carora

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Location
  
Carora

Denomination
  
Roman Catholic Church

Country
  
Venezuela

St. John the Baptist Cathedral, Carora

Architectural styles
  
Renaissance architecture, Sicilian Baroque

The St. John the Baptist Cathedral (Spanish: Catedral de San Juan Bautista de Carora) or simply Cathedral of Carora, is the name given to a religious building belonging to the Catholic Church and is located in the San Juan street between Bolivar and Lara Avenues of the city of Carora, in the municipality of Pedro León Torres, in the Lara state in the west central part of the South American country of Venezuela.

It is a temple that follows the Roman or Latin rite and is completely decorated in white, and has a great religious, historical, heritage value and is a major tourist spot. It serves as the seat of the Catholic Diocese of Carora (Dioecesis Carorensis) which was established on July 22, 1992 with the papal bull Certiori christifidelium of Pope John Paul II.

The temple is located in the colonial area, opposite the Bolivar Square. Its construction lasted about a hundred years. It is the colonial baroque style with elements of Renaissance architecture. Built in the early 1600s, the building was already active in 1658, in 1745 the high altar was created and in 1825 was damaged by a fire so it had to be rebuilt.

It is officially the cathedral since November 11, 1992.

References

St. John the Baptist Cathedral, Carora Wikipedia


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