Culture Explorer Profile picture
Jul 2 23 tweets 8 min read Read on X
Latin America holds some of the most stunning architecture in the world.

Most of it was built by Europeans on top of Indigenous empires.

These 20 buildings reveal a continent shaped by beauty and conquest.

And the first three will leave you speechless. 🧵 Templo de Santo Domingo - Oaxaca, Mexico Credit: @kobe_sylvester
1. Las Lajas Cathedral – Colombia

It’s not built on a canyon.
It’s part of it.

Bridging cliffs like a miracle frozen in stone.

Built after a woman claimed the Virgin Mary appeared inside the gorge. Image
2. Church of San Francisco – Quito, Ecuador

500 years old.
Baroque on the outside.
Moorish on the inside.

And built by the hands of indigenous artisans during Spanish rule. Image
3. Palacio de Bellas Artes – Mexico City

Art Nouveau on the outside.
Art Deco on the inside.

A stage that’s hosted Maria Callas and Pavarotti under a Tiffany glass curtain.
4. Teatro Amazonas – Manaus, Brazil

In the middle of the Amazon rainforest stands a French-style opera house.
Why?

Because rubber barons wanted to show off.
Even the dome mimics the Brazilian flag.
5. Capitolio de la Habana – Cuba

It looks like the U.S. Capitol.

But Havana’s version is older, taller, and topped with one of the world’s largest indoor statues.
Built as a symbol of independence—and pride.
6. Basilica de la Merced – Lima, Peru

Baroque done right.
The facade is pure drama.

The inside? Covered in gold and devotion.
Once home to monks, martyrs, and miracle legends. Image
7. San Francisco Church – La Paz, Bolivia

Where Spanish Baroque meets Aymara soul.
The fusion style is called “Mestizo Baroque.”

It’s Bolivia’s architectural identity in one church. Credit: Wikimedia Creative Commons
8. Cusco Cathedral – Peru

The Spanish built it atop an Inca temple.
It mixes Gothic style with Andean symbols.

Look closely: the Last Supper painting includes a roasted guinea pig. Image
9. Metropolitan Cathedral – Mexico City

Took 240 years to finish.
Built on Aztec ruins.

Larger than life and heavier than the ground beneath it.
It’s sinking. Slowly.
10. San Francisco Church – Santiago, Chile

Santiago’s oldest building.
Stood through dozens of earthquakes.

Plain at first glance but it holds layers of resilience. Credit: By Fjvamicn - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.
If you're enjoying this thread and want more stories about history, art, and architecture.

Join my free weekly newsletter:


You’ll get deep dives, forgotten gems, and global wonders—straight to your inbox. newsletter.thecultureexplorer.com/subscribeCartagena, Columbia
11. Teatro Juárez – Guanajuato, Mexico

Columns like Athens.
Ceilings like an Arabian palace.

It’s one of Mexico’s grandest theaters—and a monument to cultural fusion. Credit: Guanajuato México
12. Palacio de la Inquisición – Cartagena, Colombia

Pretty on the outside.
Torture inside.

This colonial mansion hosted inquisitors hunting heresy.

Now it’s a museum—of the truth it once tried to silence. Credit: @OrlandoDeavilaP
13. La Merced – Antigua, Guatemala

A Baroque facade that looks like it’s made of buttercream.

But it survived quakes, invasions, and time.
Its soft curves hide a tough history. Image
14. Teatro Solís – Montevideo, Uruguay

Opened in 1856.
Elegant Neoclassical style.

Still in use today.
You walk in—history speaks. Image
15. Catedral Metropolitana – Santiago, Chile

A mix of Neoclassical calm and Baroque grandeur.

It anchors the heart of Santiago—and has watched centuries pass from its stone steps. Credit: By Felipe Restrepo Acosta - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0
16. Convento de San Francisco – Lima, Peru

It has secret tunnels.
Library with 25,000 ancient texts.

And a bone-filled catacomb beneath the floor.
Faith—and fear—live here. Image
17. Palacio de Gobierno – Lima, Peru

The seat of power since 1535.

Spanish bones, French dressing.
A palace that blends conquest and elegance. By Felipe Restrpo Acosta - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0
18. Templo de Santo Domingo – Oaxaca, Mexico
Walls soaked in gold.

Art carved with precision.

A jewel of Mexican Baroque—and a museum of faith.
19. Zacatecas Cathedral – Mexico

A stone facade so intricate, it looks like lace.

This is peak Churrigueresque—a Spanish Baroque style made to stun. Credit: @TheUntranslated
20. Casa Rosada – Buenos Aires, Argentina

Why pink?
Some say it was painted with cow’s blood.

Others say it was a political compromise between red and white factions.
Either way, it’s Argentina’s most iconic building. Credit: @feguz77
Latin America has built a beautiful architectural story.

What masterpiece did we miss?

Drop your favorite below and let’s add more to this map of wonders.

Follow @CultureExploreX for more hidden gems. Basilica del Voto Nacional, Quito, Ecuador Credit: @archi_tradition

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Culture Explorer

Culture Explorer Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @CultureExploreX

Jul 1
We talk about globalization like it’s new.

But 2,000 years ago, merchants were already trading silk, spices, and stories from China to Italy.

Not through the internet.
Through deserts, mountains, and war zones.

Here are the 16 cities that shaped the Silk Road. 🧵 The Ark of Bukhara Credit: @fopminui on X
It began in Xi’an, China.

Not just the home of the Terracotta Army but the launchpad of the world’s most ambitious trade route.

Silk, porcelain, and even Buddhist monks left from here.

Every empire west of here would feel it. Credit: @archeohistories
Next stop: Lanzhou.

Sitting on the Yellow River, this city wasn’t just scenic, it was strategic.

If you controlled Lanzhou, you controlled the gateway west.

And everyone wanted it. Image
Read 19 tweets
Jun 30
What makes Russian literature unmatched?

It doesn’t escape pain.
It sits with it. Names it, breaks it open, redeems it.

Before War and Peace, Russian writers had already turned suffering into sacred text.

Let’s walk through it. Then we’ll get to Tolstoy. 🧵 Chekhov and Tolstoy, 1901
Dostoevsky doesn’t flinch.

In The Brothers Karamazov, Ivan demands justice from God.
A child is tortured. A murderer walks free.
There is no easy answer.

Faith isn’t comfort.
It’s a decision you make in the presence of unbearable truth. Image
Pushkin gave us beauty with blood underneath.

Eugene Onegin is a mirror held to wasted youth, pride, and regret.
Tatiana offers love. Onegin rejects her.
Years later, he begs for it. Too late.

In Russian fiction, the cost of love is always real. The pistol duel between Onegin and Lensky. Watercolour by Ilya Repin (1899)
Read 16 tweets
Jun 28
They look alive.

But every one of these sculptures is made of stone.

18 masterpieces that shatter the line between reality and illusion.

You won’t believe they’re real. 🧵👇 Modesty (La Pudicizia) by Antonio Corradini
1. Pietà – Michelangelo, 1499

She doesn’t weep.
She endures.

Michelangelo gave us a Madonna so full of sorrow, the marble itself seems to grieve.
2. The Abduction of Proserpina – Gian Lorenzo Bernini, 1622

Look at the hand.
The fingers sink into her thigh.

Look at the face.
Do you see the tear under the eye?

Stone isn’t supposed to do this.
Bernini was able to make marble scream. Image
Read 21 tweets
Jun 27
If you lived during the Renaissance, you'd never call it a Golden Age.

Plague, political murder, censorship, and the Inquisition ruled the day.

Yet, behind the chaos was a cultural explosion.

Here’s the dark side of the Renaissance you were never taught: 🧵 Top left: The Death of Socrates by Jacques-Louis David (a Neoclassical work inspired by classical ideals) Top center: Michelangelo’s David, symbolizing human strength and beauty Top right: The Creation of Adam by Michelangelo, detail from the Sistine Chapel ceiling Middle left: Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci, the most famous portrait in history Middle right: The Birth of Venus by Sandro Botticelli, celebrating mythological beauty Bottom left: The School of Athens by Raphael, a tribute to classical philosophy and Renaissance humanism Bottom center-right: The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci,...
Florence was the beating heart of the Renaissance.

But it wasn’t just a city of art, it was a ruthless power game.

Behind every fresco and statue was a family trying to control the future. Duomo of Florence Credit: Travel Destinations, Tips & Inspiration
The Medici family didn’t just fund art, they ran Florence like a mafia.

Their “generosity” bought influence over artists, bankers, popes, and even kings.

Refuse their favor? You’d be erased. Medici Chapel in Florence
Read 17 tweets
Jun 26
When I first read about Icarus, I thought it was a warning against arrogance.

But it’s not that simple.

He didn’t fall because he was proud.
He fell because he wanted more and reached for it.

That’s what Greek myths are about.
Not fantasy.
But hard truths. 🧵 Ícaro y Dédalo by Rebeca Matte  After Icarus fell into the ocean and drowned, Daedalus retrieved Icarus's body and buried it.
The Greeks didn’t tell these stories to escape the world.
They told them to face it.

Why does love fall apart?
Why do the good suffer?
Why do we ruin what we build?

Here are 5 myths that don’t just survive, they still give our life meaning. Apollo and Daphne by Bernini Credit: @Archaeologyart on X
1. Prometheus

He gave fire to humans—against Zeus’s will.

It gave us heat, tools, speech, and survival.

In return, Zeus chained him to a mountain.
An eagle tore out his liver daily.

He never apologized. Image
Read 16 tweets
Jun 25
Castles matter because they weren’t built for comfort, they were built to control.

Walls were a warning. Gates told us who ruled.

To walk through one today isn’t escapism. It’s remembering how power worked.

Here are 20 castles in the UK that you should know. 🧵⤵️ Arundel Castle, West Sussex - Ancestral home of the Dukes of Norfolk  The Normans built the first structure on the Arundel Castle site after William the Conqueror’s invasion in 1066.
1. Edinburgh Castle – Scotland

In 1314, Thomas Randolph led a midnight raid, scaling the cliffs to recapture the castle.

A legendary moment in the fight for Scottish independence.
2. Stirling Castle – Scotland

In 1543, a six-day-old baby was crowned queen.

Mary, Queen of Scots began her life at Stirling Castle. Her story? Beautiful, tragic, and unforgettable.
Read 23 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(