The Cercado de Lima ('Walled Lima'), Damero de Pizarro ('Pizarro's Checkerboard'), or Lima Cuadrada ('Squared Lima') is an area of the historic center of Lima (capital of Peru) located within the old walls of the city.[1]

Map of Lima in 1750.

Location and history edit

The area of the Cercado de Lima corresponds to the original layout of the city. Its current boundaries within the city are the Rímac River to the north, Abancay Avenue to the east, Colmena Avenue to the south and Tacna Avenue to the west.

Its name derives from it being the oldest and most central part of the city and because its urban layout maintains the classic Spanish style of streets and perpendicular avenues that form homogeneously square blocks.[2]

The area contains the main historical monuments of the city and several of the public buildings of the government of Peru including the Government Palace and the Cathedral of Lima.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ "Historical Centre of Lima City". Viaja Perú. E-Latin Travel. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  2. ^ Martín, Eva María; Nieto, Aurelio (2014). "Sudamérica". Territorio y Turismo Mundial (in Spanish). Madrid: Editorial Universitaria Ramón Areces. pp. 395–397. ISBN 978-84-9961-160-0. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  3. ^ Augustin, Reinhard (2017). El Damero de Pizarro: El trazo y la forja de Lima (in Spanish). Lima: Municipality of Lima. pp. 395–397. ISBN 978-9972-726-13-2. Retrieved November 3, 2017.