In a country that is almost all prairie, Minas is the exception of stone and hill: and it's no coincidence that its name comes, precisely, from what was extracted from those stones. Before being a city, the area was a territory of prospectors and adventurers who traveled the Cuchilla Grande looking for metals, and that mining work left it its name forever. Few places in Uruguay carry their geography inscribed so literally in their own place name.
The city of Minas was founded in 1783, in the times of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, in the hilly region of the east of the Banda Oriental. Its settlement responded to the Spanish crown's policy of settling the interior of the territory to secure control against the Portuguese presence and to organize rural life around cattle-raising and the incipient economic activity of the area.
The city's name comes from the mining operations that gave the region its character from the mid-18th century, when the presence of adventurers and prospectors traveling the Cuchilla Grande and the hilly valleys in search of metals was already documented. In the hills and sierras of the surroundings, extraction work was carried out that, though modest at first, was enough to fix the place name. Thus, unlike much of flat, cattle-raising Uruguay, Minas was born marked by its hilly terrain and by the wealth of its subsoil, traits that still identify it.
The landscape of hills, caves and streams —so different from the rest of the country— made the area a singular place within the Oriental geography. The Sierras del Este, part of the Cuchilla Grande, offered a setting of woodland, water and stone that over time would be one of the great attractions of the department.
Beyond the origin of the name, mining activity was a sustained economic reality in the area for much of the 19th and 20th centuries. The hills of Lavalleja are rich in copper, gypsum, marble, clay and granite, minerals that were exploited with varying intensity depending on the era and the demand, giving work to quarries and small operations that dotted the hilly landscape.
The granite of Minas, in particular, gained recognition for its quality and was used in constructions and works throughout the country, while the marble quarries and other stone materials supplied the construction industry for decades. This extractive vocation coexisted with the development of a powerful farming economy: during the 19th century, the region also established itself as an important center of wool production and cattle-raising, in the fields surrounding the valley where the city sits.
As the 20th century went on, traditional mining activity gradually lost relative weight compared to other economic activities, but it left a deep mark on the landscape —quarries, roads and hills modified by extraction— and on the identity of a city that, to this day, carries mining in its name and in its history.
Minas holds a prominent place in the history of Uruguayan independence. The city is the cradle of Juan Antonio Lavalleja, one of the great caudillos of the Oriental liberating feat and a central figure of the Liberating Crusade of the Thirty-Three Orientals, the landing and campaign of 1825 that sought to free the Oriental Province from Brazilian rule and unite it with the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata.
In recognition of the figure of Lavalleja, the department to which Minas belongs bears his name. The memory of the caudillo and of the events of independence is very present in the city, through monuments, street names and the appreciation of his historical role. Minas is proud of that past, which links it directly with the birth of the Uruguayan State.
The hilly region, for its geography of hills and natural refuges, was also the scene of troop and party movements during the 19th-century wars, in an era of constant clashes between the political factions and the neighboring powers. That past of civil and patriotic struggles is part of the historical identity of the department of Lavalleja.
The devotion to the Virgin of Verdún has a precise and documented origin. The hill, known by that name since 1801 after the surname of its first owner, a French Basque named Juan Bautista Berdún, rises about 350 meters six kilometers from the city. In 1900, the priest José De Luca, parish priest of Minas between 1891 and 1906, conceived the idea of crowning the hill with a statue of the Virgin.
The inauguration, scheduled for 19 April 1901, had to be postponed a day because of the rain and was finally held on Sunday 21 April, with a massive pilgrimage arriving from Montevideo by express train: more than 3,000 faithful. The following year, Pope Leo XIII granted the pilgrims of Verdún the Plenary Indulgence, consolidating the religious prestige of the nascent sanctuary. On 18 November 1909, a new pilgrimage by express train brought from France the current image of the Virgin, 3.15 meters tall, and on 19 April 1910 the shrine that crowns the hill to this day was inaugurated.
Since then, every 19 April, the pilgrimage to Verdún became one of the Marian devotions of greatest popular roots in Uruguay, drawing tens of thousands of people from all over the country. In 2014, the sanctuary was declared the National Sanctuary of Our Lady of Verdún, a recognition that confirmed its central place in Uruguayan religious life and in the identity of Minas and its department.
Over time, Minas consolidated two traits that make it famous throughout Uruguay: its religious tradition, already established around Verdún, and its sweet-making production. The city is famous for its sweets, candies and confections, an artisanal and traditional industry that is part of the local identity and that visitors usually take home as a memento. The Minas patisseries are a classic, and the city's name became associated in the Uruguayan imagination with the sweetness of its products.
In recent decades, Minas also established itself as one of the great nature-tourism destinations in the country. The Arequita and Verdún hills, the Salto del Penitente, the caves, lagoons and streams of the sierras of Lavalleja draw hikers, lovers of adventure tourism and families seeking the contrast of the hilly landscape with the pampa plain. The closeness to Montevideo —a little over two hours— made the hilly region a usual destination for weekend getaways.
Today Minas combines seamlessly its mining and cattle-raising past, its weight in the history of independence, the strength of its Marian sanctuary and its growing tourist vocation, consolidating as the gateway to the most singular hilly landscape in Uruguay.