Showing posts with label Cuba hotels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cuba hotels. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

HAVANA CITY CUBA

Havana Cuba 1950's Vintage American Cars
 HAVANA CUBAN ARCITECTURE
 Havana City is the most populated city in Cuba and has 6 times as many Cubans as the country's next biggest city, Santiago de Cuba. Havana is a city and a much higher class by itself when it comes to Cuba. No other historical city in the Americas has so many contradictions that characterize Havana Cuba, especially since the opening of the Caribbean Hotel resort and tourist market that saw the opening of mass tourism and the introduction of a dual currency system in the capital Havana.
 Havana's growing middle class, most of whom have made their money through family members living abroad and the opening and influx latest wave of tourism, shop in the brand-new Cuban shopping malls, while just down the road lineups of Cubans holding their monthly ration cards form outside the local shops.

HAVANA ARCHITECTURE
Restoration of Havana architectural projects have revitalized some of the finest colonial architecture in Havana and the Caribbean to its original Spanish splendor, even as other poverty stricken Havana overcrowded and dirty neighborhoods wait for their first coat of paint since the early 1990s. There is a sense that Havana is on the move, with tourist money pouring in, new nightspots appearing regularly and an increasing variety of products in shops that not long ago either didn't exist or stood empty. Yet on the other hand, time stands still, or even goes backwards, in a city where 1950s Chevrolet, Buick's and Oldsmobile's ply the roads, locals fish from fishing boats floating near the aging Malecon and many people seem to spend most of the day in the street or on their crumbling nineteenth-century doorsteps. Havana City is one of Cuba's must visit attractions.

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Friday, May 1, 2009

OLD HAVANA CUBA



HABANA VIEJA CUBA
According to the historical tradition, Havana was the last of the first seven villages founded by order of Diego Velázquez. One of his deputies, Pánfilo de Narváez, founded it on July 25 th of 1514, baptizing it with the name of San Cristobal de La Havana, for the saint of the day and the indigenous district of Havana, where was established the village.

Some time later, apparently for the insalubrious of the place, part of the neighbors requested from Velázquez the permission to emigrate toward the northern coast, where they settled this time next to the Casiguaguas River, today know as Almendares.

On November 16 of 1519, took place the establishment of the village in the current place that today occupies what is called Old Havana in the current Cuban capital. As curiosity, we can mention that Havana founded by Narváez, was not completely abandoned by its residents, so during an uncertain time, the two Havanas coexisted, one in the north and the other in the south.

On the XVII century, Old Havana received two Royal Graces, when being declared in 1634 by Royal Decree, as Key of the New World and Safeguard of the Western Indies, and in 1665, the right to use its own shield, where were represented, with tree turrets, the castle (Castle of La Real Fuerza, Morro and La Punta) that then defended the city.

English: The Hotel Inglaterra in Havana, Cuba
Image via Wikipedia
In the pages of our site you will find details about the history of Old Havana, interesting information and facts about its buildings, fortresses, convents, the cathedral, museums, traditions, and more. In our picture galleries you will find images of every interesting and beautiful place in Old Havana. We believe that you will enjoy our site. Additionally in our site you could reserve Hotels & Hostels in Old Havana.
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Havana










HAVANA CUBA
Havana or "La Habana" as the Cubans  call it,  is a one-off. Sitting pretty as the Caribbean’s largest and most vivacious city, its romantic atmosphere and infectious energy are the stuff of legend. Where else do you find vintage American cars running off Russian Lada engines, ration shops juxtaposed against gleaming colonial palaces, and revolutionary sloganeering drowned out by all-night parties?

Habaneros (inhabitants of Habana) love their city and it’s not difficult to see why. Amid the warm crystalline waters of the sparkling Caribbean, over 500 years of roller-coaster history have conspired to create one of Latin America’s most electric and culturally unique societies. The stomping ground for swashbuckling pirates, a heavily fortified slave port for the Spanish and a lucrative gambling capital for the North American Mafia, Habana has survived everything that has been thrown at it and still found time to innovate. At the forefront of modern Latino culture, Habana has spawned salsa and mambo, Havana Club rum and Cohiba cigars, mural painting and Che Guevara iconography… And the list goes on.

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