The remains of a mid-16th century church known as the Temple of Santiago is visible from the surface of the Grijalva River (Picture: AP/David von Blohn)

No biggie, but a Colonial-era church has emerged from receding waters in Mexico.

Leonel Mendoza fishes every day in a reservoir surrounded by forest and mountains in the southern Mexico state of Chiapas.

But in recent days, he has been ferrying curious passengers out to see the remains of a colonial-era church that has emerged from the receding waters.

Pretty impressive, right?


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The church also goes by the Temple of Quechula (Picture: AP/David von Blohn)

A drought this year means the level of the Grijalva River, which flows into the Nezahualcoyotl reservoir, has dropped by 25 meters (82 feet).



It is the second time a drop in the reservoir has revealed the church since it was flooded when the dam was completed in 1966. In 2002, the water was so low visitors could walk inside the church.

‘The people celebrated. They came to eat, to hang out, to do business. I sold them fried fish. They did processions around the church,’ Mendoza recalled.

The church was built over 400-years ago (Picture: AP/David von Blohn)

The church near Quechula was built by a group of monks headed by Friar Bartolome de la Casas, who arrived in the region inhabited by the Zoque people in the mid-16th century.

The church is 61 meters (183 feet) long and 14 meters (42 feet) wide, with walls rising 10 meters (30 feet).

The bell tower reaches 16 meters (48 feet) above the ground.

‘The church was abandoned due the big plagues of 1773-1776,’ said architect Carlos Navarete, who worked with Mexican authorities on a report about the structure.

The structure probably never had a dedicated priest (Picture: AP/David von Blohn)

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It depended on the nearby monastery of Tecpatan, founded in 1564. Navarrete believes that based on architectural similarities, it is the work of the same builder at very nearly the same time.

Its importance was derived from its location on the King’s Highway, a road designed by Spanish conquistadors and still in use until the 20th century.

‘At that time we still found the wood from the chorus loft and the roof beams,’ he said. ‘Also a large ossuary of the victims of the plague that depopulated the area.’

‘It was a church built thinking that this could be a great population center, but it never achieved that,’ Navarrete said.

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