Templo de las Rosas
Popularly known as the Convento de Las Rosas, this church has an astonishingly high altar with four lateral altarpieces and the refined splendor of the religious art of the time. On the side adjacent to the convent, the railings of the nuns’ confessionals open like windows. One can walk along the cloisters of the convent –now a music conservatory– listening to the music or to the strains of the Morelia children’s choir.
Palacio Clavijero
The old parliament of Michoacán, the popular Palacio Clavijero is now a museum that was once the biggest religious building in Morelia. Founded by the Jesuits at the end of the 17th century with the specific name of San Francisco Javier Clavijero, the building is a splendid example of the tablerado, or Morelia Baroque style.
In another era
The old wash basins at the Templo de las Rosas took their running water from the aqueduct, which also supplied public fountains and the homes of the powerful and wealthy.More than a church.
The Palacio Clavijero has always had several functions: it has been a church; it was the University of San Nicolás, a seminary, a public library, a cultural center…and is a reference point for all the people of Morelia.