MUSEO ALBERTO HENRIQUEZ
Read moreThis former colonial house dating back to 1741 was chosen by UNESCO for its religious heritage. It is home to the country's first synagogue and one of the oldest in the continent. Amazing particularity, the soil consists of sand from the Médanos médanos. The building also houses art exhibitions.
CORFALTUR (CORPORACION FALCONIANA DE TURISMO)
Read moreYou receive a smile, and booklets on various information, the services and services offered in the region, will be issued. The cards they offer are not excellent but rather promotional.
MUSEO DE LA CERÁMICA
Read moreA sheltered wooden balcony, from which the owners (the Arcaya) could see the fighting during the civil wars of the th century, characterizes this beautiful ochre house of two floors. We owe this pleasant residence to the Rossillo family, and his name to Don Ignacio Luis Díaz de Arcaya, born in Spain in 1714, married to Coro in 1752, and whose grandson, Mariano, presided over the Union of Notables in 1821. Now restored, it has become a museum that houses, ceramics from Portugal (Berardos), Spain (Seville) and even De! As well as tiles from the pre-prehispanic era to nowadays, archaeological remains such as fossils and Chinese porcelain.
CEMENTERIO JUDÍO
Read moreThe oldest new New World cemetery still in operation is not so old that it! The first falls in fact only to 1832. Many Jews were expelled by the Inquisition in America. As the Inquisition was also in Venezuela, they settled in the Netherlands Antilles and settled on the continent only after Independence and thus the end of the Inquisition. Among them, Don José Curiel, buried here, was one of the first to trade with the new Bolívar Republic.