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Los orígenes de la Casa de Trejo en la Manzana Jesuítica

Los orígenes de la Casa de Trejo en la Manzana Jesuítica2017

José E. Ortega, Marcelo Bernal

About this book

In 2000, the former 38-ha ensemble of the Jesuit Block of the city of Cordoba and the five estancias (rural farming and manufacturing establishments) in the province of Córdoba, comprising 17th and 18th century religious and secular buildings were inscribed in 2000 as UNESCO World Heritage. This book covers, in a bilingual edition and mainly through a selection of images, the heritage legacy of the Casa de Trejo, (the house of Fernando de Trejo y Sanabria (1554-1614), Bishop of Tucumán and the founder of the University of Córdoba), the main building of the Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. It is Argentina's oldest university of studies and is nicknamed "La Docta" in the city of Cordoba, because it was the only one in the country for more than two centuries and constitutes a unique aspect of the identity of the people of Cordoba. Highlights of this edition include the Jesuit Collection, the Collection donated by Dr. Enrique Ferrer Vieyra de Elzevirianos, and incunabula and printed editions and the collection of cartographies, engravings and books (16th to 20th centuries), donated by the Juri Family. In 2000, the former 38-ha ensemble of the Jesuit Block of the city of Cordoba and the five estancias (rural farming and manufacturing establishments) in the province of Córdoba, comprising 17th and 18th century religious and secular buildings were inscribed in 2000 as UNESCO World Heritage. This book covers, in a bilingual edition and mainly through a selection of images, the heritage legacy of the Casa de Trejo, (the house of Fernando de Trejo y Sanabria (1554-1614), Bishop of Tucumán and the founder of the University of Córdoba), the main building of the Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. It is Argentina's oldest university of studies and is nicknamed "La Docta" in the city of Cordoba, because it was the only one in the country for more than two centuries and constitutes a unique aspect of the identity of the people of Cordoba. Highlights of this edition include the Jesuit Collection, the Collection donated by Dr. Enrique Ferrer Vieyra de Elzevirianos, and incunabula and printed editions and the collection of cartographies, engravings and books (16th to 20th centuries), donated by the Juri Family.

Details

First published
2017
OL Work ID
OL31854267W

Subjects

HistoryJesuit architectureArchitecture jésuiteJesuitsUniversidad Nacional de Córdoba

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.