Introduction to the Episcopal Church of Santiago: The Catedral de Santiago was built in 1748. The original Episcopal Church did not have a bell tower. In 1780, the bishop at the time recommended the Roman architect Joaquín Toes to the Spanish royal family. Ka carried out renovations on the facade of the cathedral and chapel, and the church was given a neoclassical style. The two bell towers were completed at the end of 1800, a year after his death.
There are three arched corridors in the cathedral, each of which is more than 90 meters long. The remains of Chilean archbishops are preserved here. The wooden statue of San Francesco Sarullo in the church and the 17th-century silver lamp weighing more than 20 kilograms are both worth seeing. The "Last Supper" picture where the holy relics are placed is also worth seeing. On the south side of the cathedral is the Cathedral Museum, which has three exhibition halls displaying sacred tools, religious paintings, etc.

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