Cerro de TeĂșl
Continuously inhabited for 1,600 years, there's nothing like the ancient and windswept view from high above the lower Tlaltenango valley.
Continuously inhabited for 1,600 years, there's nothing like the ancient and windswept view from high above the lower Tlaltenango valley.
Some of the most dramatic historic ruins high in the Zacatecas mountains, it's a fascinating look into the past and one of the most visually stunning parts of northern Mesoamerica.
A fantastic historic market and exhibition center, today it's among the most accessible of the central pink stone Zacatecas monuments.
Part market, part neighborhood, it's a fantastic labyrinth of crooked streets and bright arcades full to the brim with food, sound, legend, and story, and right in the heart of the capital.
One of the most dramatic and costly conflicts of the Revolution in the North is represented in stunning detail with evocative, resonant, and critical acumen.
The spectacular second-city of Zacatecas has everything on the capital, plus a deep claim to intellectual rigor, working-class bonafides, and some fantastic places to eat!
The premier museum in the capital district of Zacatecas, and a treasure of history, visual and material culture that resonates with meaning and depth even centuries later.
An important traditional pilgrimage site opens up for all kinds of visitors all over, and decades of experience welcoming the faithful pays off in lots of surprising new ways.
A fantastic stone town in a landscape of cliffs, canyons, and agave fields, alive with promise, it's also the perfect weekend getaway, and a hidden corner even on the open plain.