Lima (Peru) - geography.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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home to a wide range of museums, many focusing on Peru’s indigenous heritage.
These include the National Museum of Anthropology and Archaeology, the GoldMuseum of Peru, the Museum of the Central Reserve Bank, and the Rafael Larco Herrera Museum, which specializes in pre-Hispanic ceramics.
Art and history museumsare also found in metropolitan Lima, including the National Museum of the Republic, the Museum of Peruvian Culture, and the Museum of the Inquisition, in the buildingwhere colonial Catholic officials questioned and tortured those suspected of heresy or witchcraft.
Except for small urban plazas, Lima has few parks or open green spaces.
In the summer the city’s beaches attract many residents, but the coastline is increasinglypolluted by untreated city sewage poured into the Pacific.
Those who can afford to often travel to outlying resort towns in the foothills of the Andes (Chaclacayo andChosica) or along the coast (Ancón).
As in other Latin American cities, soccer is a popular sport.
Two significant archaeological sites are found in the area of Lima.
Pachacamac, about 30 km (18.5 mi) to the south along the coast, was an important religious shrinesite as early as AD 200.
Initially established by people of the Lima culture, it was later occupied and modified by the Huari (also spelled Wari), Rímac, and Inca cultures. Cajamarquilla, about 15 km (9 mi) inland, was a large urban center from about 200 to 700, occupied by the Lima and Huari cultures.
V ECONOMY
Almost all of Peru’s heavy industry is located in the Lima area.
To satisfy national demand for consumer goods, Lima’s industries produce textiles, clothing, andprocessed foods, as well as some machinery and vehicles.
Lima also dominates the nation’s service sectors, including trade, finance, and retail and wholesale business.The national government has traditionally been a major employer, but has cut jobs drastically in the 1990s.
The vast majority of the nation’s imports and exports move through the city’s port of Callao, possibly the best natural harbor on South America’s west coast.
Nationaland international air carriers provide daily passenger connections through the Jorge Chavez International Airport, on the northern end of the city.
Both the Pan-American Highway, which runs along the Pacific coast, and the Central Highway into the Andes connect Lima with the rest of the country.
One railroad serves Lima,running from the Desamparados train station in the downtown area to the cities of Huancayo and La Oroya in the central Andes.
VI GOVERNMENT
The Lima area is composed of 33 municipal districts, each with an elected mayor and city council, a central plaza and municipal building, and a city governmentproviding a range of services.
The government of the province of Lima unites the municipal districts and coordinates some urban functions.
Its mayor and provincialcouncil are also elected and operate from the municipal building on Lima’s historic Plaza de Armas.
The port of Callao is the country’s only constitutional province,permitting it some independence from Lima’s political dominance.
It also is governed by locally elected officials.
VII CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
Lima’s rapid population growth has brought severe problems to the metropolitan area.
Basic public services, especially drinking water and sewer systems, areinadequate or absent in many areas, especially the sprawling squatter settlements.
Many Lima residents find themselves in dire economic straits because of bothunemployment, which may range as high as 10 percent, and underemployment, which has been estimated to affect more than 50 percent of the labor force.
Much of the city has a grimy look, caused by pollutants from vehicle exhausts and a lack of rain to wash them away.
Lima’s streets are often clogged with traffic.
Thecity has no mass rapid-transit system and only one freeway, the Paseo de la Republica, which runs about 10 km (6 mi) from the city center south to Miraflores andBarranco.
Nearby coastal waters are severely polluted by sewage piped into the ocean.
VIII HISTORY
Lima was founded by Pizarro in January 1535 and named Ciudad de los Reyes (City of the Kings), for the Christian Feast of the Epiphany, which celebrates the biblical account of the Three Kings’ visit to the Christ child.
After Pizarro’s conquest of the great empire of the Inca, Lima became the capital of the Viceroyalty of Peru, anadministrative region covering most of Spain’s territory in South America.
During nearly three centuries of colonial rule, most of Spain’s trade with South America wasfunneled through Callao.
Lima boomed as the commercial, cultural, and governmental center of Spanish-ruled South America, growing wealthy from the vast gold andsilver resources of the Andes.
Lima’s importance declined somewhat during the end of the colonial period.
During the wars for Latin American independence, it was a stronghold of royalist forces whoopposed separation from Spain.
General José de San Martín, one of the leaders of the independence movement, took over the city in 1821, and five years later itbecame the capital of the independent nation of Peru.
Lima maintained its position of dominance nationally and as a major South American capital during the 19thcentury.
From 1881 to 1883 it was occupied by Chilean troops during the War of the Pacific, which forced the Peruvian government to flee into the Andean highlands.
Dramatic population growth since the 1950s has made Lima ten times larger than Peru’s next largest city.
Large slums have grown up around the city and house nearlyone-third of its population.
During the 1980s and early 1990s the city experienced bombings, assassinations, and other attacks by the terrorist group Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path).
In December 1996, another revolutionary group, the Tupac Amarú Revolutionary Movement (MRTA), took over the Japanese ambassador's residence inLima during a holiday party, taking nearly 500 people hostage.
During a four-month-long siege, the rebels demanded release of imprisoned members of the group andimproved prison conditions, while releasing all but 72 hostages.
The incident ended in April 1997 when Peruvian soldiers stormed the residence, killing all the MRTAmembers and freeing the hostages, although one hostage died.
While Lima is still a major South American city, it has been eclipsed by Buenos Aires, São Paulo, and Rio de Janeiro, and its luster has been tarnished by uncontrolledgrowth, pollution, crime, and social disorder.
Contributed By:Robert B.
KentMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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