JAC-2
The colonial temple declared as Cultural Interest Good in 2005, its presumed to be the fourth oldest in Caracas. Located at the southeast of the valley of Caracas, in the antique Hato Baruta founded in 1568 by Alonso Andrea de Ledesma, as a flourishing farm where wheat and cereal was produced, such as cattle and pigs, the church is inserted within the sixteen foundational blocks that give structure to the historical center of Baruta facing plaza Bolívar, the main public space opened to the original plot of the town. The Plotting of Nuestra Señora del Rosario is done simultaneously with plaza Bolívar, between the years 1633 and 1643, when the founding of the town is formalized. Inside the simple church, consisting of a nave with a gable roof, walls supported by buttresses and a bell tower, lies the statue of Virgen Nuestra Señora del Rosario, considered the oldest in the country. The church with the parochial house and plaza Bolívar, are the main patrimonial structures of the town. The square, colonial testimony from 1630, retains its traditional pattern pavement with diagonal English-as-a flag, with a sculpture of Bolívar stand on a central pedestal.
JAC-3
JAC-1