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Lima province

Province of Peru


Province of Peru

FieldValue
nameLima
settlement_typeProvince
image_flagFlag of Lima.svg
flag_linkFlag of Lima
image_shieldCoat of arms of Lima.svg
shield_size65
shield_linkCoat of arms of Lima
image_mapLima Province in Peru (zoom).svg
mapsizeframeless
map_captionLocation of Lima in Peru
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_namePeru
subdivision_type1Department
subdivision_name1Lima
parts_typeDistricts
p1Ancón
p2Ate
p3Barranco
p4Breña
p5Carabayllo
p6Chaclacayo
p7Chorrillos
p8Cieneguilla
p9Comas
p10El Agustino
p11Independencia
p12Jesús María
p13La Molina
p14La Victoria
p15Lima
p16Lince
p17LosOlivos
p18Lurigancho-Chosica
p19Lurin
p20Magdalena del Mar
p21Miraflores
p22Pachacámac
p23Pucusana
p24Pueblo Libre
p25Puente Piedra
p26Punta Hermosa
p27Punta Negra
p28Rímac
p29San Bartolo
p30San Borja
p31San Isidro
p32San Juan de Lurigancho
p33San Juan de Miraflores
p34San Luis
p35San Martín de Porres
p36San Miguel
p37Santa Anita
p38Santa María del Mar
p39Santa Rosa
p40Surco
p41Surquillo
p42Villa El Salvador
p43Villa María del Triunfo
established_titleFounded
established_dateJanuary 18, 1535
seat_typeCapital
seatLima
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameRafael López Aliaga
unit_prefMetric
area_total_km22672.28
population_footnotes
population_total11,321,000
population_as_of2023
population_density_km2auto
timezone1PET
utc_offset1-5
websitewww.munlima.gob.pe
blank_name_sec1UBIGEO
blank_info_sec11501

Lima (), also called Metropolitan Lima (), is a province of the department of Lima, Peru. Located in its central coast, it operates under a quasi-autonomous special regime, and is thus not under the jurisdiction of the department's regional government. Its capital is Lima, which is also the nation's capital.

Despite its small area, this province is the major industrial and economic powerhouse of the Peruvian economy. It concentrates almost one-third of the country's population and 50% of Peru's GDP in 2012.

History

The province was created in 1821, as Peru's territory was divided into departments, provinces, districts and parishes. The province was part of the department of Lima, which was formed by the territories of present-day Lima, Callao and Ica regions, and the provinces of Casma, Huarmey and Santa, which later would be part of the La Costa Department.

The department was further subdivided as time passed but the province of Lima kept being part of it. Due to the massive migration from other areas of the country, the need to separate the province from the rest of the department was forecast by experts.

In 2002, the new regionalization law passed by President Alejandro Toledo made the province a quasi-autonomous entity, as it was not under the jurisdiction of the newly created Regional Government of Lima.

Politics

The province of Lima is administered by the Metropolitan Municipality of Lima, equal in status to a regional government, which also administers Lima District.

List of mayors

Since 2023, the incumbent mayor is Rafael López Aliaga (2023–2026).

Subdivisions

The province is divided into 43 districts. Each of them is headed by a mayor, although the Metropolitan Municipality of Lima (Municipalidad Metropolitana de Lima), led by the mayor of Lima, also exercises its authority in these districts. These districts are grouped together into four sectors: Central Lima, North Lima, East Lima, and South Lima.

All the districts of Lima province are fused together in a continuous urban area, with the exception of the beach resort of Ancón and Santa Rosa in the north and Punta Hermosa, Punta Negra, San Bartolo, Santa Maria del Mar and Pucusana in the south.

Geography

Boundaries

  • North: province of Huaral
  • Northeast: province of Canta
  • East: province of Huarochirí
  • South: province of Cañete
  • West: province of Callao and the Pacific Ocean.

Climate

From April to December, Lima is often covered in coastal fog and mist, while in January to late March, the weather is generally sunny.

Culture

Tourism

Lima has various tourist destinations and activities, including pre-Inca period pyramids, museums and modern shopping malls. There are many restaurants, some of which specialize in fresh seafood, bars and nightclubs. There are many beaches for sunbathing, swimming and fishing.

Notes

References

References

  1. Toledo, Alejandro. (2002-07-17). "Ley N° 27783: Ley de Bases de la Descentralización".
  2. (2021-03-16). "Ley Nº 31140: Ley que modifica la Ley 27783, Ley de Bases de la Decentralización, precisando el ámbito territorial de competencias de nivel regional en el Departamento de Lima". [[El Peruano]].
  3. "Estadística Poblacional - Ministerio de Salud del Perú".
  4. [http://www.lonelyplanet.com/peru/lima Lima Travel Information] from [http://www.lonelyplanet.com Lonely Planet Travel Guides and Travel Information]. Retrieved August 2009.
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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