Centro Storico di Goiás (XVIII sec.): l’autentica città coloniale dell’oro nel cuore del Brasile (Goiás, Brasile)

Colonial townscape of Goiás (Goiás Velho), Brazil — terracotta-roofed 18th-century houses on cobblestone streets in the former gold-rush capital
Centro storico di Goiás (Goiás Velho), Brasile. Photo: LabAm / Wikimedia Commons.
Goiás, Brasile · XVIII sec. · UNESCO 2001

Centro Storico di Goiás (XVIII sec.): l’autentica città coloniale dell’oro nel cuore del Brasile

Nell’entroterra brasiliano, a 300 chilometri da Brasília, la città di Goiás — popolarmente detta “Goiás Velho” — preserva uno dei centri storici coloniali del XVIII secolo meglio conservati d’America. Fondata dai bandeiranti portoghesi negli anni 1720 durante la corsa all’oro del Cerrado, fu capitale dello Stato di Goiás fino al 1937. Le sue chiese barocche, case di pietra e calce, strade acciottolate e una vivente tradizione di arte sacra l’hanno resa Patrimonio UNESCO nel 2001, testimonianza eccezionale della colonizzazione portoghese nell’interno sudamericano.

At a glance

The historic centre of the town of Goiás (known as Goiás Velho, “Old Goiás”) is a small colonial settlement in west-central Brazil in the state of Goiás. Founded in the 1720s as a gold-prospecting camp by the Portuguese bandeirante (explorer) Bartolomeu Bueno da Silva, it grew rapidly and became the capital of the captaincy (later state) of Goiás. The town preserves its 18th-century layout and vernacular architecture — low whitewashed stone houses with ochre terracotta roofs, baroque churches on cobblestone squares — virtually unchanged. UNESCO inscribed it in 2001 as an “outstanding example of a living urban ensemble created during the Portuguese colonial period.”

Key facts

  • UNESCO: World Heritage since 2001 (Historic Centre of the Town of Goiás, ref. 993)
  • Founded: 1725 by Bartolomeu Bueno da Silva Jr. (“Anhanguera”)
  • State capital: capital of Goiás state 1749–1937; replaced by Goiânia in 1937
  • Architecture: 18th-century vernacular Portuguese colonial — stone, lime, terracotta
  • Festival: Fogaréu (Semana Santa) — dramatic Holy Week torch procession through the old streets
  • River: Rio Vermelho runs through the historic centre; floods occasionally but shapes the urban character

History

In 1725, the Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Bueno da Silva Jr. — known as Anhanguera (“Old Devil”) after his father who had first explored the region — discovered gold along the Rio Vermelho. The camp that grew around his find was called Vila Boa de Goiás and officially designated the capital of the captaincy of Goiás in 1749. At its 18th-century peak, Goiás was a prosperous colonial capital: its baroque churches, convents, prisons and governors’ palaces were built in the local style — stone foundations, mud-and-lime walls, hand-fired clay tiles.

When the gold ran out in the early 19th century, Goiás declined. The state capital moved to the newly built Goiânia in 1937, and the lack of investment inadvertently preserved the old town exactly as it was. By the time its value was recognised, the colonial fabric was largely intact. The 1970s floods damaged some structures but UNESCO inscription in 2001 brought funding for restoration. Today Goiás Velho is a living town of about 20,000 people — not a museum, but an inhabited colonial city.

What you see

The historic core is compact and walkable. Key landmarks: the 18th-century Church of São Francisco de Paula (the most refined baroque church); the Palácio Conde dos Arcos (the colonial governor’s palace, now a museum); the Igreja de Nossa Senhora da Boa Morte (housing works by the sculptor Veiga Valle); the colonial jail and the market square. Streets are paved with rounded river stones; facades are whitewashed or ochre; heavy wooden window frames with iron bars characterise every block.

The Fogaréu — a torchlit Holy Week procession of hooded figures through the dark streets — is one of Brazil’s most haunting religious spectacles, described as unchanged since the 18th century.

Practical information

  • Access: 300 km west of Brasília by road (BR-070 then BR-158); no rail; bus from Goiânia (2 hrs)
  • Best time: April (Fogaréu/Easter week) and June–August dry season; avoid January–March (flood risk)
  • Stay: pousadas in the historic centre; limited luxury options
  • Palácio Conde dos Arcos: open Tuesday–Sunday; the best introduction to colonial history

Getting there

By bus from Goiânia (2 hrs) or Brasília (4 hrs). By car: 336 km from Brasília via BR-060 and GO-070. The nearest airport is Goiânia (Santa Genoveva). GPS: 15.93° S, 50.13° W.

Nearby

  • Goiânia — the state capital, a modernist city with excellent museums, 130 km south-east
  • Chapada dos Veadeiros (UNESCO) — the extraordinary tablelands national park with waterfalls and cerrado, 220 km north-east
  • Brasília (UNESCO) — the modernist federal capital, 300 km east

Sources

  • UNESCO World Heritage Centre — “Historic Centre of the Town of Goiás” (ref. 993)
  • Encyclopaedia Britannica — Goiás (city)
  • IPHAN (Instituto do Patrimônio Histórico e Artístico Nacional) — Goiás Velho documentation

Hero image: Centro histórico de Goiás, LabAm / Wikimedia Commons. Editorial text © Cultural Heritage Online, 2026.

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