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Veracruz Travel Guide

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232km (145 miles) E of Mexico City; 109km (68 miles) SE of Xalapa

Veracruz has a reputation as a town with a rich history but little to show for it. True enough, because much of that rich history involves sackings by pirates, heavy bombardment by three different foreign powers (including the wonderfully named French Pastry War), and epidemics of malaria, yellow fever, and cholera. One might not necessarily want to preserve such a history, even when those same events didn't destroy artifacts. For this reason, and for the character of the natives, Veracruz (unlike Puebla) is better suited to cafe-goers than to museum-goers. With the exception of the old fort of San Juan de Ulúa and perhaps the aquarium, the museums can be missed. You come here for the feel of the tropics, the balmy air, and the carefree attitude of the locals.

Veracruz brings to mind other Gulf and Caribbean port cities -- part New Orleans, part Maracaibo. Even more than in the rest of Mexico, things such as schedules are managed rather loosely. If you expect punctuality and order, you'll just be banging your head against a wall. Here, you relax: you get your coffee in the morning at the Café de la Parroquia, you stroll down the malecón (boardwalk) in the evening, you take in the party scene at the zócalo (town square) at night. The city attracts a lot of Mexicans, who come to take a break from the social constraints of their hometowns. In many parts of Mexico, for instance, a woman walking into a bar by herself would be frowned upon; not here.

Music is important to Veracruz. Specific to the port city are marimba, danzonera, and comparsa (carnavalesque) music. Just south of the city begins the Jarocha region of the state, whose music is rhythmic, with sexually suggestive lyrics that depend on double meanings. This is the home of "La Bamba," popularized by Ritchie Valens. In the northern part of the state is the Huasteca region. Its music, the huapango huasteco, involves a violin, a couple of small strumming guitars, and harmonized singing. Xalapa, the state's highland capital, is home to the largest and best music school in the country.

Cortez first landed a bit north of where the port is now, and his name for the place gives you an idea of what was on his mind: Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz ("Rich town of the true cross"). In colonial times, the Spanish galleons sailed for Spain from here, loaded with silver and gold. Pirates repeatedly attacked, and on occasion captured, the city. The citizens defended themselves, eventually constructing a high wall around the old town and a massive fort, San Juan de Ulúa. The walls surrounding the city are gone now, but the fort remains.

©2005, Wiley Publishing, Inc.

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