| Chiloé: nature, mythology, culture and faith... |
![]() “I arrive here, where no other has come before, Don Alonso de Ercilla, was the first in a small light boat with only ten passed the drain, the year fifty and eight entering, over one thousand five hundred, at two in the afternoon, the latter day returning to the company that was left.” Alonso de Ercilla y Zúñiga ![]() That is how Alonso de Ercilla described his passage through the Chacao Canal the day he arrived to the Isla Grande de Chiloé, the moment that the story of this unique Land, full of magic, mythology, landscapes
and culture, unlike any other in our Chile, was put down in writing. Wood is an element that has accompanied the “Chilota Culture” since remote times: their houses, stables, boats, fences and churches are still admired by all visitors to the island. So much that 16 of its churches were declared UNESCO World Heritage sites. They are: the churches of Achao, Quinchao, Nercón, Chonchi, Ichuac, Rilán, Vilupulli, Aldachildo, Tenaún, San Juan, Detif, Colo, Castro, Caguach and Chelín. However, the weather has been one of the elements that has produced the most damage. Winds, on occasions, of over 150 kilometers per hour, added to the island´s intense rainfall has provoked damage to beams and panelling of the steeples mainly. The structures have been there for almost 300 years and are now some of the oldest standing wooden structures on earth. In order to preserve them, these buildings were declared National Monument in 1993 and the Fundación Cultural Amigos de las Iglesias de Chiloé submitted 16 of these temples as candidates to become UNESCO World Heritage sites, a title they received
at the 24th World Meeting for the UNESCO Heritage Committee, held in Cairs, Australia in the year 2000.
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