How is Christmas celebrated in the heart of Mexico? Discover a wide variety of Mexican traditions and customs, which include a wide range of seasonal cuisine. The Christmas special times bring magic to Zacatecas. Together with the professional local guide, you will visit the most beautifully decorated places. You will feel spellbound by the charming atmosphere in the streets which you can feel only this time of the year! The visit to sights and craft markets is essential in this tour; There you will find all kinds of Christmas decorations, foods, artisan products, and souvenirs.

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Included

  • Professional local tour guide

Excluded

  • Museo Zacatecano Admission Fees
  • Museo de Arte Abstracto Manuel Felguerez Admission Fees
  • Museo Rafael Coronel Admission Fees

Route & Duration

Duration
Duration
2 hours
  • 1

    Museo Zacatecano

    Museo Zacatecan, or Zacatecan Museum, is located in the city's historic center and was the headquarters of the Zacatecas Mint, which was founded in 1826. Federico Sescosse Lejeune, a Zacatecan celebrity who dedicated his life to defending and maintaining the cultural legacy of Zacatecas, founded the museum in 1995. Its collection is divided into three thematic lines: Huichol Culture and Art, an encounter with a living ancestral culture that is part of today's cultural diversity in Mexico; Popular Religious Imaginary of the Nineteenth Century, an approach to popular religious iconography that is a relic of an artistic past; and Colonial Forged Irons, notable examples of applied arts.

  • 2

    Catedral Basílica de Zacatecas

    The primary temple of the Diocese of Zacatecas is the Zacatecas Cathedral, which is dedicated to the Virgin of the Assumption. Located in the city's historic core and designated by UNESCO as a Cultural Heritage of Humanity. There were two temples before the current structure. The earliest was constructed in 1568 as a tiny parish of the city. In the place of the old temple, a second temple was erected, which was consecrated in 1625. Everything that had been erected was removed in order to create a larger temple befitting of the city of "the silver aristocracy" and with greater room, and the walls of the existing edifice were raised in its stead. The building's nave is shaped like a Latin cross. There are three naves, the main one and two smaller side ones. It has two lateral access covers, worked in a quarry, and with no fewer features than the first, the last, of the greatest and most polished Baroque art detail in the country. The old dome was replaced with the current one, which is reminiscent of the Temple of Loreto in Mexico City. This is an octagonal structure with a lantern and a wrought iron cross on top. The outside is clad in pink quarry stone, and the gates and towers are extremely detailed, in contrast to the interior, which is sober neoclassical.

  • 3

    Museo de Arte Abstracto Manuel Felguerez

    The Manuel Felguérez Abstract Art Museum was founded by a visionary and philanthropist. The Museum of Abstract Art, housed in the old Pursima Concepción Seminary (19th century) and later a prison for part of the 20th century, has among its collections a large anthological exhibition of Manuel Felguérez, as well as an important collective collection of artists' Abstracts ranging from the Generation of La Rupture (the 1950s) to the present day, providing an important testimony of the development of this plastic current in Mexico. The museum has 15 permanent rooms featuring paintings and sculptures by Mexican and foreign abstract artists, as well as temporary, solo, and group exhibits by artists with distinguished careers.

  • 4

    Museo Rafael Coronel

    The Museo Rafael Coronel, housed in the ancient San Francisco Convent, houses an impressive collection of Mexican folk art, centered on the primary exhibit "The Face of Mexico," which includes over 5,000 Mexican masks. This museum also displays a portion of the Rosette Aranda Company's colorful puppet collection, an intriguing exhibition of pre-Columbian pots and vases, various drawings, sketches, and architectural projects by Diego Rivera, terracotta figurines from colonial Mexico, and other pieces from various pre-Hispanic, colonial, and contemporary times.

Meeting Point

The gate of Plaza de Armas, Zona Centro, 98300 Juan Aldama, Zac., Mexico

Cancellation Policy

You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.