Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Antigua Guatemala' has mentioned 'Earthquake' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 Population 2 History 2.1 17th-century events 2.1.1 Saint Hermano Pedro 2.1.2 Royal and pontifical University of San Carlos Borromeo 2.2 18th-century events 2.2.1 San Miguel Earthquake 2.2.2 San Casimiro earthquake 2.2.3 Santa Marta earthquake 2.3 19th-century events 2.3.1 After the capital moved to La Ermita 2.4 20th-century events 3 Antigua Guatemala in the 21st century 4 Economy 5 Language schools 6 Sports 7 Cuisine 8 Health 9 Ecology 10 Tourism 10.1 Spanish Colony monuments 10.2 Holy Week 11 In films 11.1 The New Adventures of Tarzan (1935) 11.2 The Border: 1982 12 Climate 13 Geographic location 14 See also 15 Notes and references 15.1 References 15.2 Bibliography 16 External links
This primitive chapel was destroyed in 1575 by an earthquake and during the next ten years collections were made to build the new complex, two blocks from the previous one.
San Miguel Earthquake[edit]
Main article: 1717 Guatemala earthquake
A church damaged by an earthquake
Early afternoon earthquakes were minor, but at about 7:00xc2xa0p.m. there was a strong earthquake that forced residents to leave their homes; tremors and rumblings followed until four o'clock.
The San Miguel earthquake damaged the city considerably, to the point that some rooms and walls of the Royal Palace were destroyed.
San Casimiro earthquake[edit]
On March 4, 1751, the San Casimiro earthquake destroyed the city of Santiago de Guatemala once more.
[22] In fact, a period of prosperity began after the San Casimiro earthquake, as the city saw major improvements such as street embellishment and the introduction of a tap water system.
[31] His book is an objective description of the terrible conditions the road and the ruins used to be in: "For some little way outside Guatemala City it was a fairly decent car ride, but then the roads began developing sand drifts, and later, rockfalls of tumbled stone as two years earlier, the country had been devastated by a powerful earthquake and government corruption made the recovery impossible".
There were other churches, such as Nuestra Sexc3xb1ora del Carmen and the Society of Jesus, that endured the 1773 earthquake relatively well, but they were abandoned and the earthquakes from 1917xe2x80x9318 and 1976 destroyed them.
This eventually protected the structure from significant damage in the 1976 earthquake.
"[12] The structure remained in relatively good condition after the 1773 earthquake, but it was eventually destroyed by the 1917xe2x80x9318 and 1976 earthquakes.
The initial earthquake sequences from the Jack Nicholson film The Border were filmed in Antigua Guatemala, specifically in La Recoleccion Architectural Complex.
The relocation transfer of the capital after the 1773 earthquake and the abandonment of the area by most of its population permitted the preservation of many of its monumental Baroque-style buildings as ruins.