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[personal profile] sue_n_julia
I started the day with great expectations that I would spend a quiet day at the university libraries, getting research done. Then I found out the truth – that most university libraries are closed on Sunday. Even the library of the biggest university in the country (which *isn’t in Managua) closes by 2:00 – on which more later.

But discovering this fact left me free to do what I really wanted to do, which was go to León. León and Granada are the great historical rivals in Nicaraguan history. Managua became the capital as a way to finally settle the “debate.”

Granada currently has a reputation as the more attractive tourist location, no doubt because it’s located on the shores of Lake Nicaragua. It’s got a booming gringo real estate market, and more tourist oriented services than you can shake a stick at. However, for a place famous as the oldest city in Nicaragua, there’s a disturbing lack of colonial buildings, or indeed of buildings before the mid-nineteenth century. The reason is clear: William Walker, the southern adventurer who came to Nicaragua, finished his time there by burning Granada to the ground.

León, on the other hand, has a wealth of very old buildings, including the eighteenth century Cathedral, a monastery turned hotel whose bones date to the sixteenth century, and a lovely old home turned into a museum of both historic and modern art. It also has the major university, but by the time I found out that the Managua libraries were closed, got there and ate lunch, it was too late to do anything there. The end result? I have foresworn any love for Granada, and made León my new darling. Seriously, it’s a truly wonderful place.

So, where does the liberal part come in? Well, the colonial rivalry was between conservative Granada and liberal León. My liberal roots are showing....

June 2012

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