Calle Zulueta, Havana: Difference between revisions

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→‎References: ==External links== * [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLpmtIM25j0 Por Calle Zulueta hasta el Bacardì - La Habana]
→‎History: Calle Zulueta, whose official name is Calle Agramonte...
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==History==
==History==
[[File:Calle Zulueta Puesto de fritas y ostiones .Bar Internacional, Havana, Cuba.jpg|thumb|left|Calle Zulueta Puesto de fritas y ostiones .Bar Internacional, Havana, Cuba]]
[[File:Calle Zulueta Puesto de fritas y ostiones .Bar Internacional, Havana, Cuba.jpg|thumb|left|Calle Zulueta Puesto de fritas y ostiones .Bar Internacional, Havana, Cuba]]


Calle Ignacio Agramonteis was the official name of the street given in 1909, the locals still call it by the name it received in 1874: Calle Zulueta.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://aboutbasquecountry.eus/en/2020/11/23/the-havana-street-that-still-in-practice-bears-the-name-of-a-basque-slave-trader/|title=The Havana street that still (in practice) bears the name of a Basque slave trader|access-date=2022-03-03}}</ref>
Calle Zulueta, whose official name is Calle Agramonte, runs north to south from the intersection with Calle Cárcel to the [[Havana Central railway station]] on Calle Arsenal Street. Calle Zulueta follows the line of the old defense wall of Havana, so its route suffers several inflections along the way: from running from its source with a slight incline to the southwest, it heads south at the intersection with Calle Neptuno, then inclining to the south southeast at Calle Dragones.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.fotosdlahabana.com/calle-zulueta-agramonte-habana-vieja-cuba/|title=¿Por qué se llama calle Zulueta? (Calles de La Habana)|access-date=2022-03-03}}</ref>Calle Ignacio Agramonteis was the official name of the street given in 1909, the locals still call it by the name it received in 1874: Calle Zulueta.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://aboutbasquecountry.eus/en/2020/11/23/the-havana-street-that-still-in-practice-bears-the-name-of-a-basque-slave-trader/|title=The Havana street that still (in practice) bears the name of a Basque slave trader|access-date=2022-03-03}}</ref>


==Places of interest==
==Places of interest==

Revision as of 19:16, 3 March 2022

Calle Zulueta
Ignacio Agramonte
FromCaller Arsenal

Calle Zulueta marks one of the limits of the Parque Central|, passes by the Plaza hotel, and by the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes (Trocadero, between Zulueta y Monserrate), Sloppy Joe's bar.


==History==
Calle Zulueta Puesto de fritas y ostiones .Bar Internacional, Havana, Cuba

Calle Zulueta, whose official name is Calle Agramonte, runs north to south from the intersection with Calle Cárcel to the Havana Central railway station on Calle Arsenal Street. Calle Zulueta follows the line of the old defense wall of Havana, so its route suffers several inflections along the way: from running from its source with a slight incline to the southwest, it heads south at the intersection with Calle Neptuno, then inclining to the south southeast at Calle Dragones.[1]Calle Ignacio Agramonteis was the official name of the street given in 1909, the locals still call it by the name it received in 1874: Calle Zulueta.[2]

Places of interest

Gallery

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ "¿Por qué se llama calle Zulueta? (Calles de La Habana)". Retrieved 2022-03-03.
  2. ^ "The Havana street that still (in practice) bears the name of a Basque slave trader". Retrieved 2022-03-03.

External links

Calle Zulueta, Habana Q111082807