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Arequipa

Arequipa (Spanish pronunciation: [aɾeˈkipa]; Aymara and Quechua: Ariqipa) is a city in Peru and the capital of the eponymous province and department. It is the seat of the Constitutional Court of Peru and often dubbed the "legal capital of Peru".[1] It is the second most populated city in Peru, after Lima, with an urban population of 1,296,278 inhabitants according to the 2017 national census.[citation needed]

Arequipa
Region capital
City of Arequipa




Top:Cathedral of Arequipa, Second left:partial view of the city, Second right:Misti volcano, Third left:Monastery of Santa Catalina de Siena, Third right:Historic center of Arequipa, Fourth left:Casa del Moral, Fourth right:Church of La Compañía, Bottom:Campiña Paisajista Neighbourhood
Nickname: 
La Ciudad Blanca (The White City)
Anthem: Himno Arequipeño
Arequipa
Location in Peru
Coordinates: 16°24′S 71°32′W / 16.400°S 71.533°W / -16.400; -71.533
CountryPeru
RegionArequipa
ProvinceArequipa
Established15 August 1540
Founded byGarcí Manuel de Carbajal
Government
 • MayorVíctor Hugo Rivera
(2023–2026)
Area
 • Region capital69 km2 (27 sq mi)
 • Metro
2,923.53 km2 (1,128.78 sq mi)
Elevation
2,335 m (7,661 ft)
Population
 (2017)
 • Region capital1,008,290
 • Estimate 
()
1,214,290
 • Density15,000/km2 (38,000/sq mi)
 • Metro
1,034,736
DemonymArequipeño
Time zoneUTC-5 (PET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−5 (PET)
Postal code
040
Area code54
Websitewww.muniarequipa.gob.pe
Official nameHistorical Centre of the City of Arequipa
TypeCultural
Criteriai, iv
Designated2000 (24th session)
Reference no.1016
RegionLatin America and Caribbean

Its metropolitan area integrates twenty-one districts, including the foundational central area, which it is the seat of the city government. The city had a nominal GDP of US$9,445 million, equivalent to US$10,277 per capita (US$18,610 per capita PPP) in 2015, making Arequipa the city with the second-highest economic activity in Peru.[2]

Arequipa is also an important industrial and commercial center of Peru,[3] and is considered as the second industrial city of the country. Within its industrial activity the manufactured products and the textile production of wool of camelids. The town maintains close commercial links with Chile, Bolivia, and Brazil and with the cities connected by the South trainway, as well as with the port of Matarani.[4]

The city was founded on 15 August 1540, under the name of "Beautiful Villa of Our Lady of the Assumption" in the name of Marquis Francisco Pizarro. On 22 September 1541, the monarch Carlos V ordered that it should be called the "City of Arequipa". During the viceregal period, it acquired importance for its outstanding economic role,[3] and is characterized by the fidelismo towards the Spanish Crown,[5] which honored Arequipa with titles such as "Very Noble and Very Loyal".[6] In the Republican history of Peru, the city has been the focus of popular, civic and democratic rebellions. It has also been the cradle of notable intellectual, political and religious figures.[7] In the Republican era, it was awarded the title of "Heroic city of the free people of Arequipa".[8]

Its historical center extends over an area of 332 hectares[9] and has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[10] Historical heritage and monumental that it houses and its diverse scenic and cultural spaces turn it into a host city of national and international tourism, in its historical center it highlights the religious architecture viceregal and republican product of mixture of Spanish and autochthonous characteristics,[11] that constituted an own stylistic school called "Arequipeña School"[12] whose influence arrived in Potosí (Bolivia).[13][14]

Etymology edit

A local tradition states that Sapa Inca Mayta Cápac received a petition from his subjects to reach the valley of the River Chili. They asked him for permission to stay in the region as they were impressed by the beauty of the landscape and the mild climate. The Inca answered "Ari qhipay" (Quechua: "Yes, stay").[15] However, another similar tale states that when the first Europeans arrived to the valley, they pointed at the ground and asked for the name of the land. The local chief, not understanding the question, assumed they were asking for permission to sit down and gave an affirmation, which sounded like "Arequipa".[16]

Chroniclers Blas Valera and Inca Garcilaso de la Vega suggested that the name of the city came from an ancient Aymara phrase, "ari qquepan", supposedly meaning "trumpet sound", in reference to the sound produced from blowing into an empty conch-like seashell.[17]

Another possible origin of the city's name comes from the Aymara phrase "qhipaya ari" or "Ari qipa" (from 'ari': acute, sharp or pointed; and 'qhipaya': behind), which translates to "behind the peak", referring to the nearby volcano, Misti.[18]

History edit

 
Arequipa in 1615 by the Inca painter Guamán Poma in his work "Nueva coronica y buen gobierno". Royal Library, Denmark[19]

The early inhabitants of the modern-day Arequipa area were nomads who relied on fishing as well as hunting and gathering for survival. Later, pre-Inca cultures domesticated llamas and became sedentary with the rise of agriculture.[20] Terraces used for crop irrigation were built on both sides of the Chili River valley. The Yarabaya and Chimbe tribes settled in the city's current location, and together with the Cabana and Collagua tribes they developed an agrarian economy in the valley.[20]

When the Inca Mayta Cápac arrived in the valley of the Chili river, he didn't build cities. Instead, through the mitma policy, he forced the resettlement of his subjects to solidify control of existing territories, conduct intelligence duties, and strengthen border enclaves to control unconquered villages.[21] A Hispanic version of the events, detailed by chronicler Garcilaso de la Vega, which has been described as historically inaccurate,[22] suggests that around 1170[dubious ] Huayna Capac stopped in the Chili River valley with his army, calling the area Ari qepay which means "Let's stay here." Lands were then distributed among 3,000 families who founded communities such as Yanahuara, Cayma, Tiabaya, Socabaya, and Characato, all of which are districts in Arequipa today.[23] After their conquest of Chile the Incas resettled part of the population thousands of kilometres away in Aconcagua Valley.[24]

 
Colonial Monastery of Santa Catalina de Siena

On 15 August 1540, Spanish lieutenant Garcí Manuel de Carbajal named the cluster of Native American villages in the area "Villa de la Asunción de Nuestra Señora del Valle Hermoso de Arequipa".[25] At the time of its foundation, Arequipa already had a city council because Carbajal also led relocation efforts for an existing coastal city named Villa Hermosa de Camana. The name was shortened to Villa Hermosa de Arequipa.[26] Charles V of Germany and I of Spain gave the town a status of 'city' by Royal Decree on 22 September 1541.[27] The relocation efforts were led by Garcí Manuel de Carbajal, who was selected as the political authority for the foundation of the new town.[28] Among the first public works carried out in the city are the Main Church, the City Hall, the bridge on the Chili River and the monastery of Nuestra Señora de Gracia.[29]

 
Siege of Arequipa, 1856, Marshal Ramón Castilla enters Arequipa to gain back control of the city from the armies of General Vivanco

Since the Spanish founding of Arequipa, the mostly Spanish population retained heavy loyalty to the Spanish crown, a phenomenon called fidelismo.[30] Among its most notable proponents were Francisco de Paula Quiroz, Mariano de Rivero, Nicolás Fernández, and José Miguel de Lastarria.[31] In 1805, the Spanish Monarchy gave the city the title of Faithful by Royal Charter.[32] Because of its distance from other Peruvian cities, Arequipa was not heavily influenced by libertarian movements[30] In 1814, Mateo Pumacahua's pro-independence troops only briefly occupied Arequipa. The city would remain under Spanish control until the Battle of Ayacucho (1824), due to struggles for local political power.[33]

Arequipa's strategic location at the crossroads of the colonial silver trade route and that of the post-independence wool trade route allowed the city to emerge as an administrative, commercial, and industrial hub.[3] In the decade following Peru's 1821 declaration of independence from Spain, society in Arequipa and Peru at-large was in transition.[34] Thus, Arequipa not only became the birthplace of notable political figures[35] but also the site of key political movements[36] that helped defend the legal and economic stability of the city;[37] thus elevating Arequipa to a status second only to its rival city and the capital, Lima.[38]

On 13 January 1835, President Luis José de Orbegoso moved his government from Lima to Arequipa by presidential decree.[39] Meanwhile, in Lima, General Felipe Santiago Salaverry named himself Supreme Chief of the Republic, arguing that the country was leaderless as Orbegoso was outside the capital.[40] Orbegoso then sought support from Bolivian president Andrés de Santa Cruz against the claims of Salaverry. On 4 February 1836, Salaverry's Army of Reunification won a battle at Uchumayo. However, three days later in Socabaya, Salaverry surrendered to Santa Cruz[41] On 18 February 1836, Salaverry and his nine officers were shot in the main square of the city.[42]

 
Cathedral of Arequipa in 1884
 
Calle Mercaderes next to the Cathedral in 1926

After expressing their rejection to the Peru–Bolivian Confederation, the Chilean government sent a military expedition that arrived in Arequipa on 12 October 1837.[43] To avoid military conflict, negotiations led to a peace treaty signing in Paucarpata, a small town near Arequipa on 17 November 1837.[44] In the following years, the city was the site of uprisings and successive military coups, which ended with the victory of forces led by Miguel de San Román against the army of Manuel Ignacio de Vivanco in the Battle of Paucarpata on 29 June 1857.[45] Around this time, Arequipa gained prominence as a center of business and trade,[46] focused in agricultural products and the production of wool, sometimes through exploitation of peasants.[47][48]

 
Opening ceremony of the first railway in Arequipa. 1871.

On 31 August 1882, following the occupation of Lima during the War of the Pacific, President Lizardo Montero Flores arrived in Arequipa and declared it the capital of Peru.[49] On 22 April 1883, Montero installed a National Congress[50] which was located at Independence College, also counting military support from a local army[51][52] and important financial support from quotas and taxes coming from the economic elite and the southern agricultural districts.[51] However, on 25 October 1883, a popular uprising overthrew the government of President Montero, who managed to escape to La Paz. Four days later, with support from city authorities, Chilean troops occupied Arequipa until August 1884.[49]

The Republican Era brought many improvements to the city's infrastructure and economy. The Southern Railroad built by Henry Meiggs connected Arequipa with the port city of Mollendo in 1871 and with Cuzco and Juliaca in 1876.[53] In 1908, the first telegraph system in the Arequipa region connected Mollendo, Arequipa and Vitor. In 1914, the city built its first drinking water supply system as well as an aqueduct. In 1940, the city's international airport, Alfredo Rodriguez Ballon, was opened.

In 2000, the historic center of Arequipa was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.[54] However, on 23 June 2001, an 8.4-magnitude earthquake damaged several historical buildings.[55][56]

City symbols edit

On 22 December 1540, King Charles I of Spain elevated Arequipa to the rank of city by royal decree, awarding it a coat of arms on which a mythical animal carries a banner inscribed with Karlos V or Del Rey.[17]

Historians debate the origin of the crimson flag of the city. By 1940, several historians, most notably Francisco Mostajo and Victor M. Barriga, confirmed the royal origin of the crimson color of the flag, contrary to a blue banner which historian Victor Benavente hypothesized to be the original. This matches the color that local sports organizations use.[57] On 2 September 1940, Francisco Mostajo sent a letter to the Mayor of the City to explain his views regarding the color of the Banner of Arequipa, basing his claims on the 'Act of the Oath of King Carlos III " of 11 August 1788. On 23 September of the same year, Father Victor M. Barriga also published an important document in the Catholic newspaper El Deber that contains a description of the royal standard of Arequipa found in the "Act of 3 September 1789".[58]

The city anthem is Fourth Centenary Anthem. Lyrics and music were composed by Emilio Pardo Valle and Aurelio Diaz Espinoza, who won a 1939 contest which the city council organize to dedicate a new anthem. Since then, the song has been sung at all important civic events held in the city.

Geography edit

Location edit

The city is located at an average elevation of 2,328 metres (7,638 ft) above sea level, with the lowest part of the city at 2,041 metres (6,696 ft) above sea level in the area called Huayco Uchumayo while the highest is located at 2,810 metres (9,220 ft) above sea level.

The central part of the city is split by the Chili River from north to south; to the north and east of Arequipa are the Andes Mountains, while to the south and west are sub-ranges of the Andes. The valley of Arequipa strategically links the coastal and highland regions of southern Peru.[59]

A series of volcanic cones dominates the city skyline – Misti and the extinct volcanic groups Pichu Pichu and Chachani. The western slopes of the Andes feature thick, extensive layers of volcanic lava.[60]

Climate edit

 
Partial view of Arequipa, with Misti volcano in the background.

The climate of the city is predominantly dry in winter, autumn and spring due to low atmospheric humidity and a level of precipitation corresponding to that of a desert climate (BWk, according to the Köppen climate classification). On average, Arequipa has 300 days of sunshine each year. Typically, temperatures neither exceed 25 °C (77 °F) nor drop below 5 °C (41 °F). The wet season lasts from December to March and is marked by the presence of clouds in the afternoon and low rainfall. In winter (June and July), the temperature drops to an average of 6 °C (43 °F).

The average relative humidity is 46%, with an average high of 70% in the summer season and a minimum average of 27% during autumn, winter and spring, according to data from the Goyeneche Hospital weather station.[61]

The mountainous topography surrounding the Chili River valley affects low-pressure fronts and local winds. These winds occur mainly in the early morning and the evening. Mountain breezes typically flow northeast, and valley breezes typically flow southwest. Wind velocity fluctuates between 1.5 m/s and 2.5 m/s.[61]

Climate data for Arequipa (1961–1990, extremes 1892–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 29.5
(85.1)
29.7
(85.5)
26.6
(79.9)
26.4
(79.5)
32.0
(89.6)
26.2
(79.2)
28.0
(82.4)
26.8
(80.2)
27.0
(80.6)
26.1
(79.0)
27.8
(82.0)
27.2
(81.0)
32.0
(89.6)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 21.8
(71.2)
21.4
(70.5)
24.2
(75.6)
24.7
(76.5)
22.3
(72.1)
21.7
(71.1)
21.7
(71.1)
22.2
(72.0)
22.7
(72.9)
22.8
(73.0)
22.7
(72.9)
22.5
(72.5)
22.6
(72.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 15.3
(59.5)
15.0
(59.0)
15.0
(59.0)
15.2
(59.4)
14.3
(57.7)
13.5
(56.3)
13.3
(55.9)
14.0
(57.2)
15.9
(60.6)
16.3
(61.3)
16.4
(61.5)
16.3
(61.3)
15.1
(59.2)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 8.5
(47.3)
8.7
(47.7)
8.3
(46.9)
7.1
(44.8)
6.2
(43.2)
5.4
(41.7)
5.2
(41.4)
5.4
(41.7)
6.2
(43.2)
6.4
(43.5)
6.6
(43.9)
7.6
(45.7)
6.8
(44.2)
Record low °C (°F) 0.9
(33.6)
0.0
(32.0)
0.0
(32.0)
−2.0
(28.4)
0.0
(32.0)
−1.1
(30.0)
−3.7
(25.3)
−0.2
(31.6)
0.0
(32.0)
0.1
(32.2)
0.0
(32.0)
2.0
(35.6)
−3.7
(25.3)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 27.5
(1.08)
39.9
(1.57)
20.6
(0.81)
0.6
(0.02)
0.1
(0.00)
0.1
(0.00)
0.0
(0.0)
1.0
(0.04)
0.8
(0.03)
0.2
(0.01)
1.0
(0.04)
4.7
(0.19)
96.5
(3.80)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 4.8 5.6 4.5 0.4 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.3 0.1 0.2 1.6 17.7
Average relative humidity (%) 52 59 58 48 41 45 44 43 42 39 39 43 46
Mean monthly sunshine hours 223.2 189.3 244.9 294.0 288.3 291.0 291.4 310.0 297.0 303.8 309.0 291.4 3,333.3
Mean daily sunshine hours 7.2 6.7 7.9 9.8 9.3 9.7 9.4 10.0 9.9 9.8 10.3 9.4 9.1
Source 1: NOAA,[62]
Source 2: Deutscher Wetterdienst (mean temperatures 1949–1956, humidity 1951–1969, precipitation days 1970–1990, and sun 1931–1958),[63] Meteo Climat (record high and record low)[64]

Solar radiation edit

Solar radiation in Arequipa ranges from 850 to 950 W/m 2 (watts per square meter), one of the highest levels of radiation in South America and the highest recorded in Peru. Arequipa's proximity to the Atacama Desert and pollution contribute to the higher levels of radiation.[65]

Cityscape edit

 
French type architecture in Arequipa.
 
High rise apartments in Arequipa.

On 15 August 1540, the Spanish plan for Arequipa resembled a checkerboard made of fifty-six blocks, each one of "400 Castilian feet" (111.40 meters) per side.[26] Each block consisted of four or eight land lots, which were distributed according to the status of the new owners. Over time, some religious institutions would occupy an entire block as did the Convent of Santa Catalina and the San Francisco Monastery.[66]

Urban expansion occurred at the expense of the countryside, and this phenomenon has accelerated in recent decades. Arequipa expanded east of the historic center, and new avenues such as Parra Boulevard and Siglo Veinte Avenue were built to connect the historic center with newer neighborhoods, such as Vallecito (developed in the 1940s)[67] or with already existing towns like Yanahuara, which were absorbed by the city's expansion. Shantytowns appeared in the districts of Miraflores, Barrio Obrero, and Jacinto Ibanez. A permanent marketplace was built in a vacant lot previously occupied by the San Camilo Monastery. The Goyeneche Hospital was built between 1905 and 1910. Two theaters (Municipal and Ateneo), a hotel (Hotel de Turistas), a public library and the campus of San Agustin University were other city developments of the early 20th century. Housing projects and new neighborhoods were also built, such as Cuarto Centenario and Selva Alegre.[68]

In the late 1950s, the city rapidly grew, especially in peripheral areas.[69] Around this time, industrial operations located in areas of Barrio del Solar and Barrio Obrero,[70] near the city center, moved outwards to the industrial zone (Parque Industrial), causing the former industrial areas to become commercial zones.[71] Some educational institutions, such as the National University of San Agustin, moved out of the city center to more spacious land lots in peripheral areas to accommodate their growing facilities. Residential zones also developed in peripheral suburbs, causing the main function of the city center to be a tourist and business district.[69]

Administrative division edit

The metropolitan area of Arequipa consists of 19 districts,[72] with a total area of 305,798 acres (123,752 hectares) of which 10,142 acres (4,104 ha) are distinctly urban.[73]

No. District No. District
1 Downtown 7 Paucarpata
2 Cayma 8 Jacobo Hunter
3 Cerro Colorado 9 Miraflores
4 Sachaca 10 Tiabaya
5 Yanahuara 11 JL Bustamante y Rivero
6 Alto Selva Alegre 12 Mariano Melgar
7 Sabandía 14 Socabaya
Source: National Institute of Statistics and Informatics

Demographics edit

 
Downtown scenery at Mercaderes street.

According to the 2007 census, 70% of the Department of Arequipa's total population and 90% of its urban population lives in Arequipa city proper.

In an early census in 1796, Arequipa had a population of 37,241, of which 22,207 (59.6%) were Spaniards, 5,929 (15.9%) were Native Americans, 4,908 (13.2%) were mestizos, 2,487 (6.7%) were castizos, and 1,710 (4.6%) were Africans.[74] Population growth accelerated from 1.1% growth between 1876 and 1917 to 3.3% growth between 1940 and 1960.[75]

The city's population increased from 80,000 in 1940 to 158,000 in 1961.[75] An earthquake in 1958 and a drought in the Altiplano caused a rise in migration, urbanization, and peripheral city growth (suburbs and shantytowns) that continues to this day.[69] The rearrangement and improvement of urban space after the earthquakes also helped cause Arequipa's population to grow twofold in a decade.[76] The population increased from 158,000 in 1961 to 309,000 in 1972 to almost 500,000 in 1983. Urban development of previously rural areas incorporated subsistence farming into the urban way of life.[77]

Evolution of the population of Arequipa in the period between 1796 and 2017

Population (City of Arequipa)
Year Population Source
1796 37241
1804 37148 Population Census 1804 (Gil de Toboada)[66]
1812 34478 Viceroyalty of Peru in 1812
1876 30932 Census of inhabitants of Peru (1876)
1917 44209 Census of the City of Arequipa in 1917[78]
1940 80947 INEI[79]
1961 158685 INEI[79]
1972 309094 INEI[79]
1981 446942 INEI[79]
1993 619156 INEI[79]
2007 749291 INEI[79]
2017 1008290 INEI 2012 population estimate[80]

Sources: Population Census 1804 (Gil de Toboada)[66] Viceroyalty of Peru in 1812, Census of inhabitants of Peru (1876), Census of the City of Arequipa in 1917[78] INEI,[79] INEI 2012 population estimate[80]

Economy edit

74.2% of the Department of Arequipa's GDP is generated by the city of Arequipa, according to studies by the National University of San Agustin.[citation needed] The Department of Arequipa's GDP is the second highest in Peru, after that of the Department of Lima. From 2003 to 2008, Arequipa was the "city with the greatest economic growth in Latin America" with a 66.1% increase in GDP per capita, according to a 2009 report of "America Economia".[81]

Economic Indicators – City of Arequipa
Population (MM) GDP 2010 (millions USD$ ) GDP per capita 2010 (USD$ ) % Unemployment 2011 No. investment banks
 0–9 10,587 12,188 5,0 1
Source: American Journal Economics. Special Cities[82]

According to a government survey, Arequipa has the largest "workforce" in Peru with 625,547 people, and an economically active population (PEA) which amounts to 376,764 people having an employment rate similar to the national average with an average monthly income of 928 soles.[83] The main economic sectors for the economically active population are manufacturing (12.9%), trade (23%), and non-personal services (36.6%).[84] The unemployment rate in the Arequipa metropolitan area is 8%,[72] compared to only 5% unemployment in Arequipa city proper.[82]

In Arequipa, tourism is a vital contributor to the local economy, as the city is the third most visited city in the country after Cusco and Lima.[4] In 2010, Arequipa received a total of 1.395 million visitors according to the Ministry of Commerce and Tourism.[85]

Since the 20th century, many factories tied to the primary sector, especially textiles and agriculture, have emerged. Arequipa's serves as an important commercial and industrial hub in the southern Andes in Peru, linking the coast to the mountains.[86]

Large-scale mining also contributes to the city's economy; as is the case of Cerro Verde,[87] a mining site established in 1976 near the Arequipa valley.[88]

The city's industrial sector has the largest nationwide diversification[89] and is the second most industrialized city of Peru.[4] After two major earthquakes in 1958 and 1960, with the law of the "Rehabilitation and Development Board of Arequipa", an industrial complex was built with one of the first factories being the Yura cement factory (Cementos Yura).[89]

 
Partial view of the industrial zone of Arequipa (Parque Industrial de Arequipa) located in the southern part of the city.

This first industrial complex named Parque Industrial de Arequipa now has a great diversity of factories ranging from consumer-related industries (food and beverages) and construction (PVC, cement, and steel) to chemical and export products (textile companies).[89] Among the most important companies are Alicorp SAA, Processed Foods SA, Laive, La Iberica, Manuel Muñoz Najar, Bin Pan SA, Consorcio Industrial Arequipa SA, Omniagro, Backus & Johnston, Corporación Aceros Arequipa, Francky and Ricky, Michell & Cia, and IncaTops.[89] Moreover, the city's industrial sector has expanded and other industrial complexes have emerged such as Parque Industrial APIMA (developed for small businesses),[90] Parque Industrial Rio Seco and industrial areas in the Alfonso Ugarte Ave, Uchumayo Road and the northern part of the city.[91]

On 15 August 1959, the first television transmission in the city of Arequipa was broadcast at the Cultural Hall of the National University of San Agustin. Businessman Jack Dwyre conducted the broadcast through his new company Televisora Sur Peruana in partnership with San Agustin National University as Channel 2 (now TV UNSA).[92] The aforementioned university became one of the first in South America to operate a public TV station from inside its campus.[92] Since then, two other public television stations began to operate in Arequipa—Radio Television Continental (Channel 6) in 1962 and Compañía de Radiodifusión Arequipa (Channel 8) in 1987 (broadcasting as ATV Sur since 2012).[93]

Among the newspapers that are printed in the city, El Pueblo is the oldest in Arequipa (published since 1 January 1905) and the second oldest in the country. Writers such as Percy Gibson and Alberto Hidalgo as well as politicians like Hector Cornejo Chavez, Mario Polar Ugarteche and Alfonso Montesinos started their careers working for this newspaper.[94]

Education edit

Primary and secondary education edit

In 2007, the city of Arequipa had 20,595 students at pre-schools or Kindergartens, 143,543 students at elementary schools and 219,305 at high schools.[citation needed] Among the oldest and most prestigious schools in the city are Independencia Americana School, San Francisco de Asis School, Don Bosco School, La Salle School and San Jose School.

Colegio Max Uhle is a German international school in Arequipa.

Higher education edit

 
Entrance to the San Agustín National University

Arequipa has more than 15 universities, nine of them with headquarters in the city and one of them being public (Universidad Nacional San Agustin). The other six are local branches of private and public universities of Peru and Chile. In 2007, a total of 70,894 students were enrolled in universities and 56,087 students were enrolled in colleges or technical institutes.

Two institutions of higher education in Arequipa were founded more than a century ago. Seminario de San Jeronimo, a center of religious formation, has been in operation since 1622.[95] While San Agustin National University (Universidad Nacional San Agustin) was founded on 11 November 1828[96] it can trace its origins back to the Academia Lauretana de Artes y Sciencias, a college founded in 1821.[97]

The first private university established in the city was Universidad Catolica Santa Maria, and the establishment of this university was followed by Universidad Católica San Pablo and Universidad San Francisco.[98] Additionally, important local branches from universities outside the region, such as Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Universidad Tecnologica del Peru, Universidad Los Angeles de Chimbote and Universidad del Mar (Chile) among others, are located in the city.

Universities[99][100]
University Installation Undergraduates[101] Main Campus
Universidad Nacional San Agustin de Arequipa 1828 24188 Arequipa
Universidad Catolica Santa Maria 1961 12268 Arequipa
Universidad Catolica San Pablo 2004 4769 Arequipa
Universidad San Francisco 2010 Arequipa
Universidad La Salle Maestría en Ingeniería del Software Aplicada Arequipa
Universidad Privada de Ciencias de la Salud Maestría en Ingeniería del Software Aplicada Arequipa
Universidad Privada Autonoma del Sur Maestría en Ingeniería del Software Aplicada Arequipa
Universidad Javier Prado[102] Maestría en Ingeniería del Software Aplicada Arequipa
Universidad San Francisco Javier 2010 Arequipa
Universidad Alas Peruanas[103] 2004 9743 Lima
Universidad José Carlos Mariátegui[104] Maestría en Ingeniería del Software Aplicada Lima
Universidad Néstor Cáceres Velásquez[105] 2006 1038 Puno
Universidad Tecnologica del Peru[106] 2007 1201 Lima
Universidad Privada San Pedro 2010 Chimbote
Universidad Los Angeles de Chimbote 2009 344 Chimbote
Universidad del Mar[107] 2009 Chile
Source: Second National Census of Universities (2010)

Culture edit

Regionalism edit

Arequipa, unlike other big Peruvian cities with mestizo and indigenous features, has been labeled as a "Spanish island in an indigenous sea" and because of its status as a "natural oasis".[108] Culture in Arequipa is marked by the regionalism of its inhabitants; in fact, unlike other regional sentiments within Peru, Arequipa's regionalism was connected to the fight against centralism. This proud regionalism, expressed in numerous insurrections or revolutions, has earned the city the nickname "Ciudad Caudillo" (Warlord City). As Peruvian historian Jorge Basadre argued, "Arequipa is a gun pointed at the heart of Lima", alluding to the rivalry between the two cities.[109]

Language edit

An element of culture in Arequipa City is its Spanish dialect which incorporates a distinctive rhythmic way of speaking, which usually elongates the last vowel of the final word in each sentence. A distinctive feature of this dialect is the "voseo",[110][111] that is, the use in Spanish language of the pronoun 'vos' to replace the use of 'tú' or 'usted' (all corresponding to the English 'you'). In Peru, the voseo is sometimes heard only in rural areas except in Arequipa, where that way of speaking is heard in both rural and urban areas.[112] Another dialect from the city surroundings, called loncco, has been largely lost due to migration from other provinces and the standardization of Spanish language by the media. However, there are contests in schools which promote the writing of poems in the loncco dialect.

 
Mario Vargas Llosa (Arequipa, Peru, 28 March 1936). Nobel Prize in Literature 2010

Literature edit

Literature in Arequipa has a long tradition and many of the city's writers have gained national and international recognition. During the Spanish colonial period, only the works of Lorenzo de Llamosas survived.[113] In the nineteenth century, the poetry and fables of Mariano Melgar incorporated patriotic and romantic themes. Other notable writers of Arequipa in that century are Benito Bonifaz, Jorge Polar and María Nieves y Bustamante, among others. In the twentieth century, Mario Vargas Llosa is the most recognized of the Arequipan writers in Peru and abroad, winner of Nobel Prize in Literature in 2010, author of novels like The Green House (1966), Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter (1977), among others. Other writers of the 20th century were the poets Percy Gibson, Cesar Rodriguez Atahualpa, and Oswaldo Reynoso.

Art and photography edit

Some of the most detailed photographic records of 19th- and 20th-century Peru are found in the works of the Vargas Brothers Art Studio. Open from 1912 to 1958, the studio captured more diversity of Peruvian culture than any other photography studio at the time.[114] Most known for their nocturnals and portrait photography of women, their photographic archive, which is privately held by descendants of the studio's founders and brothers Carlos and Miguel Vargas, have been restored and digitized.[115] Many international showings of their works, have brought recognition to the studio and the way of life their images have preserved.[114]

 
One of the halls of Arequipa's Museum of Contemporary Art

Museums edit

A UNESCO World Heritage Site, Arequipa's rich history and art is showcased in its many museums. These include the Museum of the cathedral;[116] the Museum of Contemporary Art (Museo de Arte Contemporáneo) which is devoted to painting and photography collections from 1900 onwards, especially works by Peruvian artists like Carlos Vargas, Martín Chambi, Fernando de Szyszlo, Venancio Shinki and many others;[117] the Regional Museum of the Central Reserve Bank (Museo Regional del Banco Central de Reserva) which houses pre-Columbian and colonial art pieces, plus a collection of colonial and republican coins and banknotes;[118] the Santa Maria University Museum of Archaeology and the Andean Sanctuaries Museum (Museo Santuarios Andinos), both belonging to Santa Maria Catholic University, have an important collection of archaeological pieces mainly from local pre-Columbian cultures (especially the latter, which houses Inca mummies);[119][120] the San Agustin University Museum of Archaeology;[121] the Municipal Museum of Arequipa;[122] and others.

 
Pedro Paulet, scientist born in Arequipa in 1874, was one of the first to experiment with rocket propulsion.

Research, academic and cultural institutions edit

Among the scientists who were born and/or conducted their research in Arequipa are Pedro Paulet, a pioneer scientist on rocket propulsion, as well as Mariano Eduardo de Rivero y Ustariz, a geologist and politician. One of the most important research facilities in the city was the Astronomical Observatory of Carmen Alto, which Harvard University operated from 1891 to 1927, when the university moved its astronomical operations to South Africa.[123]

Cultural events and activities are mostly organized by the main universities of the city: San Agustin National University and Santa Maria Catholic University,[124] and also by cultural organizations such as the Alliance Française,[125] the Peruvian Center for German Culture[126] and the Peruvian North American Cultural Center.[127] Since the 1990s banking institutions showed great interest in promoting and managing cultural activities; while private companies joined this movement by sponsoring various projects.[121]

Sport edit

Association football (or soccer) is the most popular sport in Arequipa, with a popular local team being FBC Melgar of the Peruvian First Division, winning its first national championship in 1981.[128]

City rivals' FBC White Star's women's football department of the club won the national league in 2009.

Other teams in the city are Sportivo Huracán, FBC Aurora, FBC Piérola, Senati FBC, IDUNSA and the now-defunct Total Clean FBC.

The main stadiums in the city (also used for other events) are: Virgen de Chapi Stadium (property of San Agustin National University), Mariano Melgar Stadium, Los Palitos Stadium and Umacollo Stadium.

Music edit

Music is also an important part of cultural life in Arequipa. Since the last years of the Spanish colonial period, there were important academic composers like Mariano Melgar (who was best known as a poet), Pedro Jiménez Tirado April and Florentino Diaz, all of them placing Arequipa as one of the Peruvian cities with a renowned musical scene.[129] The Symphonic Orchestra of Arequipa, created in 1939, contributes to keep classical and vernacular music as part of the city's culture.[130] As in the rest of the country, in Arequipa, many traditional music styles like vals criollo (or Peruvian waltz), yaravi (or harawi) and huayno are still performed.[citation needed]

Cuisine edit

Regional cuisine shows a great diversity with as many as 194 typical dishes.[131] The cuisine of the city mixes recipes from European and Andean cultures,[132] because many dishes were created to satisfy the taste of the Spanish settlers in Arequipa.[133] As a curiosity, many restaurants feature a special main course according to each day of the week: chaque on Mondays, chairo on Tuesdays, chochoca on Wednesdays, chupe colorado on Thursdays, chupe de viernes on Fridays, puchero or timpusca on Saturdays and caldo blanco or pebre de lomos on Sundays.[134] Among the most popular local dishes are chupe de camarones (shrimp soup), ocopa arequipeña, rocoto relleno, cuy chactado (fried guinea pig), locro de pecho, etc.; while typical desserts are: queso helado (ice cream made of milk, cinnamon and coconut), buñuelos, dulces de convento and chocolates. Besides local wines and beers, two typical beverages are chicha de guinapo a dark type of corn grown only locally, and anisado (anise liqueur).[135]

Government edit

As the capital of the Arequipa Province, Arequipa is governed by the Provincial Municipality of Arequipa that has jurisdiction over the entire territory of the province. The district municipalities within the province also have jurisdiction over local matters. As the regional capital, the city is home to the Regional Government of Arequipa. It is also headquarters of several regional offices of the ministries that make up the Civil Government of Peru.

City administration edit

The Provincial Municipality of Arequipa regulates important citywide, metropolitan and provincial issues such as urban planning, transport, municipal tax collection, management of road safety (jointly with the local police), the maintenance of public roads and urban greenery, etc. It is also responsible for the construction of municipal facilities such as sports centers, libraries and social service centers.[136]

Constitutional Court edit

The Constitutional Court is the highest authority regarding control and interpretation of the Constitution. It is autonomous and independent of other constitutional bodies. Subject only to the Constitution and the Organic Law, the court has seven judges elected by the Congress with the favorable vote of at least two-thirds of the legal number of members for a period of five years.

The city is the "Legal Capital of Peru" and "Official Headquarters of the Constitutional Court",[137] as a result of a decentralizing project. Due to the military coup that occurred in Peru at the end of the 1960s, the initiative was abandoned. Then, it was retaken after the election of the Constituent Assembly in 1978. This time, the initiative did not succeed due to the high opposition, but later concluded that Arequipa would host the then "Constitutional Court", as stated in Article 304 º of the Constitution of Peru, 1979: "The Constitutional Court is based in the city of Arequipa ".[138]

Later, by the Constitution of 1993, the "Constitutional Court" was created, which, according to its Charter, is based in Arequipa.[139]

Sights and attractions edit

 
Map of the old town of Arequipa

The Old Town edit

In its 332 hectares[9] has 5817 properties[140] of which 500 are categorized as heritage properties, generally have been built in the nineteenth century, on the site of earlier colonial buildings destroyed by the earthquake of 1868. The houses, usually made in ashlar, are characterized by semi-circular arches and vaulted ceilings. Ashlar structures always have thick walls: 1 to 1.5 meters for rooms, 2 meters for churches. Through the use of lime mortar, the walls are shown homogeneous image that is reinforced with brick vaults or ashlar that are justified in the rarity of the wood.[141]

In the city is a stylistic school called "School Arequipa" of crucial importance in the region and whose influence reached Potosi. This school is characterized by profuse decoration planiform textilográfica and the open spaces and the design and size of their covers, which differ in these aspects of Cuzco and Lima covers.[citation needed]

The architecture in the historic center is characterized by the prominence of ashlar, the use of which begins in the last third of the 16th century. This volcanic stone, white or pink exceptionally soft, lightweight, and weatherproof, emerged as a seismic structural solution. The ashlar was unable to take the early years, except for the covers of the main church and some houses. The original city was built with adobe, masonry, sticks and straw roofs or mud pie. Houses of this type were made until the nineteenth century and were common in the eighteenth century, some remain in the original district of San Lazaro. Later came the brick and tile houses with tile found in the Monastery of Santa Catalina. The cataclysm of 1582 settled these systems and raised the earthquake reconstruction. Then came the ashlar as prime structural solution.[142]

Major earthquakes mark milestones in the formation of Arequipa architecture. Five significant periods are:

  • Founding and village (1540–1582),
  • Splendor of Baroque (1582–1784),
  • Rococo and Neoclassical Reviews (1784–1868),
  • Empiricism and modernizing
  • Evocations neo colonial (1868–1960) and
  • Contemporary.

Religious monuments edit

 
Church of the Jesuits

In historical existence is accounted for 14 churches or temples, four chapels, five convents and 3 monasteries,[143] among the monuments of this type include:

 
Church of Yanahuara

It is the most important neoclassical ediicio Peru, product reconstruction started in 1844 and finished three years later and led by architect Lucas Poblete.[144] Its interior is faced with trs ships with one of the side walls of the main square which fills a side façade is divided by Corinthian columns.[citation needed]

It is the monument maximum Arequipeña School,[12] is one of the most splendid creations of Peruvian Baroque and starting point of this school,[145] in its façade has an inscription inscribed with the year 1698 which shows that the beginning of the eighteenth century this regional art had reached its peak, therein lies a more exaggerated baroque altar.[146]

 
Colonial arcades around the Plaza Mayor.
 
Church of Santo Domingo in 1868

Civil-public monuments edit

There are 10 buildings that origin were engaged in civic purposes, such as Phoenix theaters. and the Municipal Theatre, the Goyeneche Hospital and the Hospital of Priests of St. Peter, bridges Bolognesi and Grau, the Instituto Chavez de la Rosa, Railway Station, Mercado San Camilo and the convento de Santa Catalina.[143]

Military monuments edit

The historic center of Arequipa lacked a wall as we had the city of Lima, they persist despite military monuments as Twentieth Century Prison and Penal Fundo El Fierro women.[147]

Civil-domestic monuments edit

 
Portals of the Convent of San Agustín in 1880

Within the historic center there are 246 houses that are declared monument households.[143] This type of construction is characterized by thick solid walls, with arches and domes similar to those built in the temples and religious monasteries giving the same robustness and monumentality to these constructions built from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and generally used for housing.[142]

  • Casa del Moral
  • Goyeneche Palace
  • Tristan del Pozo House
  • Mint
  • Casona Ugarte
  • House Iriberry
  • House Arrospide
  • Casa del Alferez Flowers
  • Casona del Corregidor Maldonado
  • Casa del Corregidor April and Maldonado
  • Casona Goyeneche
  • House of Pastor
  • Bronze Tambo
  • Tambo of the Loggerhead
  • Tambo de Ruelas

Suburbs edit

  • Yanahuara Villa Hermosa, located 2 kilometres (1 mile) from the city, famous for its churches built in Andalusian style alleys[148] which is Yanahuara Monumental Zone Cultural Heritage of the Nation.[149]
  • Cayma Villa, 3 miles (5 kilometres) from the centre of town. Place known for its taverns and where there is a seventeenth-century church. With a viewpoint which affords a view of Arequipa.
  • The thermal baths of Yura, 30 kilometres (19 miles). Its waters come from inside the volcano Chachani. Also, near the city are the medicinal sources of Jesus and Socosani.
  • Sabandía natural valley with most crystalline waters in the region. Here is the Sabandía mill was built and in operation since the eighteenth century.
  • The farm Sachaca or the Founder's Mansion,[150] is 12 kilometres (7 miles) from the city. Built on the river Socabaya, is a residence that belonged to different owners of historic renown in Peru but became especially known for being one of the family properties principales Goyeneche. This piece of architecture is now open to the public.

Parks and recreation edit

 
Partial view of Selva Alegre Park

Parks and squares cover 26 hectares of urban parks in and around the historic centre; among the most notable areas are:

  • Plaza de Armas
  • Plaza San Francisco
  • Parque Grau
  • Parque 28 de Febrero
  • Plaza Melgar
  • Parque Duhamel
  • Plaza 15 de Agosto
  • Plaza España
  • Plaza Santa Teresa
  • Plaza Independencia
  • Parque San Lazaro
  • Parque Selva Alegre
  • Plaza San Antonio

There are 22 hectares of countryside within this historic area.[151]

Other notable urban green areas in the city are:

  • Parque Ecològico Alto Selva Alegre. Located in the eastern part of the city, in Selva Alegre District, next to Chili River. The park and its surrounding areas occupy an area of 1008 hectares[152] of which 460 hectares covering only the ecological park.[153] A part of the park is located in the buffer zone of the National Reserve of Salinas Aguada Blanca.
  • Fundo Paraíso. Is part of Parque Selva Alegre and occupies an area of 67 hectares[153]
  • Chilina Valley countryside. Has an area of 151 hectares[153]
  • Chilpinilla Metropolitan Park. 14 hectares[154]

Infrastructure edit

Healthcare edit

 
Honorio Delgado Regional Hospital

As the administrative and economic capital of the Arequipa Region, the city has the largest number of both public and private healthcare centers which total 680 establishments.[155] Public health institutions that are present in the city are:

  • Social Security Hospitals[156]
    • Edmundo Escomel (level I hospital)
    • Policlínico Metropolitano
    • Yanahuara (level III hospital)
    • Carlos Seguin National Hospital (level IV hospital)[157]
    • Complejo de Prestaciones Sociales
  • Ministry of Health (MINSA)[158]
    • Honorio Delgado Regional Hospital
    • Goyeneche Hospital
  • National Institute of Neoplasic Diseases (INEN):
    • Regional Institute of Neoplasic Diseases

Water supply edit

The water supply in Arequipa varies by neighborhood in the city.[159] Many water supply interruptions are thought to be caused by repairs needed as the underground tube system ages.[159] Water supply interruptions are perceived as longer in the urban periphery.[159] In this area inhabitants also report a higher incidence of unnotified water supply interruptions.[159]

Transport edit

 
Interchange on La Marina Avenue.

Arequipa's urban road network has a radiocentric structure with four main avenues: Avenida Ejército, Avenida Jesus, Avenida Alcides Carrion and Avenida Parra; which allow the movement of the population between the intermediate and peripheral areas and the downtown. These avenues are connected, in turn, by other avenues such as Avenida Venezuela, Avenida La Marina, Avenida Salaverry, Avenida Cáceres, among others, which almost form a ring around the downtown. Other avenues such as: Avenida Cayma, Avenida Goyeneche, and Avenida Dolores link the suburbs and nearby districts with downtown Arequipa. Interchanges such as the one at Avenida La Marina and another one at Avenida Caceres help to relieve urban traffic. A road of 40 km approximately, which goes through the district of Uchumayo, connects Arequipa to the Pan-American Highway and coastal cities; another road goes through the district of Yura, connecting Arequipa to other cities in the southern highlands like Puno and Cuzco.

Public transit in Arequipa is currently operated by small private companies. In 2014, a metro system was proposed by Peru's then-minister for transport José Gallardo.[160]

 
View of the apron at Rodriguez Ballon International Airport with the Misti volcano in the background.

Arequipa's only airport is Rodríguez Ballón International Airport, which is operated by a private consortium through a concession granted by the government since 2011.[161] It is located in the district of Cerro Colorado, about 12 miles (19 kilometres) northwest of the downtown, and because of its features and facilities is considered one of the best in the country[162] There are regular flights to Peruvian destinations such as Lima, Cuzco, Tacna and Juliaca and to international destinations such as Arica, Iquique, Antofagasta, Santiago de Chile and Buenos Aires.[162]

The railway network system has been operating in Arequipa since 1871[citation needed], and enables communication between the coast and the mountains and different levels of progress and expansion of population centers located in its path. The system consists of the lines Cusco-Puno-Arequipa and Arequipa-Mollendo. It is of great strategic importance in the multimodal communication system in the southern macro region[citation needed], since it is the most effective and economical way to transport heavy loads over long distances.

Terrapuerto Internacional Arequipa is a bus terminal located in the district of Jacobo Hunter. There, several bus companies offer land travel routes to regional and national destinations within Peru and to international destinations such as La Paz, Santiago de Chile, Mendoza and Buenos Aires.

Notable people edit

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Arequipa is twinned with:[163]

See also edit

References edit

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  • García de los Reyes Arquitectos y Asociados (2012b). Municipalidad Provincial de Arequipa (ed.). "Plan de Desarrollo Metropolitano de Arequipa". Retrieved 11 August 2012.
  • Guajardo Castro, Alejandro (2009). "Aspectos morfosintácticos del habla loncca en la campiña arequipeña" (PDF). Maestría de Lingüística de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos (in Spanish).
  • Guillemette, Martín (2010). Institut des Hautes Etudes de l'Amérique Latine (ed.). La revolución mexicana y sus impactos en América Latina: una propuesta de análisis a nivel local. El caso de Arequipa, Perú (Report) (in Spanish). México y sus revoluciones (XIII Reunión de historiadores de México, Estados Unidos y Canadá).
  • Grup, Franz (2010). Instituto Nacional de Cultura (ed.). (PDF) (in Spanish). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 February 2014.
  • Gutiérrez, Ramón (1994). Evolución histórica urbana de Arequipa Metropolitana 1540–1990 (ilustrada ed.). Facultad de Arquitectura, Urbanismo, y Artes, Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería. p. 249. ISBN 9788489034013.
  • Linares Málaga, Eloy (1990). Pre historia de Arequipa (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 August 2012.
  • López de Romaña, Flavia (2006). Instituto Nacional de Cultura (ed.). "Casos de Gestión Cultural en el Perú" (PDF) (in Spanish).
  • Love, Thomas (1995). Department of Sociology/Anthropology of Linfield College – McMinnville, Oregon (ed.). Cash Cows and Fighting Bulls:Redefining Identity, Maintaining Control in Southwestern Perú (PDF).
  • Mc Evoy, Carmen (1997). La utopía republicana: ideales y realidad en la formación de la Cultura Política Peruana, 1871–1919 (in Spanish). PUCP. p. 467. ISBN 9972420620.
  • Mincetur (Ministry of Foreign Trade and Tourism). Proexpansión (ed.). (PDF). p. 98. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2012. Retrieved 11 August 2012.
  • Miró Quesada, Aurelio (1998). Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos (ed.). Historia y leyenda de Mariano Melgar (1790–1815) (in Spanish). UNMSM. p. 218. ISBN 9789972460616.
  • Monguió, Luis (1967). "Don José Joaquín de la Mora y el Perú de mil ochocientos". In University of California Press (ed.). Don José Joaquín de Mora: apuntes biográficos (in Spanish). University of Michigan Library. p. 268. Retrieved 10 June 2013.
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  • Nuñez Pacheco, Rosa; Torres Santillana, Gregorio (1991). "Polifonía del silencio, la literatura arequipeña en los últimos diez years". In Promolibro (ed.). El author de creación literaria de la Macroregión Sur (in Spanish).
  • Palma, Ricardo (1893). Barcelona, Montaner y Simón (ed.). Tradiciones peruanas (in Spanish). Vol. III. pp. 1–252. Retrieved 11 August 2012.
  • Ponce, Fernando (1960). Retablo de papel (ed.). La ciudad en el Perú. Arequipa. p. 53.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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External links edit

  • Municipality of Arequipa
  • Arequipa Region 23 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  •   Arequipa travel guide from Wikivoyage

arequipa, this, article, about, city, other, uses, disambiguation, spanish, pronunciation, aɾeˈkipa, aymara, quechua, ariqipa, city, peru, capital, eponymous, province, department, seat, constitutional, court, peru, often, dubbed, legal, capital, peru, second,. This article is about the city of Arequipa For other uses see Arequipa disambiguation Arequipa Spanish pronunciation aɾeˈkipa Aymara and Quechua Ariqipa is a city in Peru and the capital of the eponymous province and department It is the seat of the Constitutional Court of Peru and often dubbed the legal capital of Peru 1 It is the second most populated city in Peru after Lima with an urban population of 1 296 278 inhabitants according to the 2017 national census citation needed ArequipaRegion capitalCity of ArequipaTop Cathedral of Arequipa Second left partial view of the city Second right Misti volcano Third left Monastery of Santa Catalina de Siena Third right Historic center of Arequipa Fourth left Casa del Moral Fourth right Church of La Compania Bottom Campina Paisajista NeighbourhoodFlagCoat of armsNickname La Ciudad Blanca The White City Anthem Himno Arequipeno source source source ArequipaLocation in PeruCoordinates 16 24 S 71 32 W 16 400 S 71 533 W 16 400 71 533CountryPeruRegionArequipaProvinceArequipaEstablished15 August 1540Founded byGarci Manuel de CarbajalGovernment MayorVictor Hugo Rivera 2023 2026 Area Region capital69 km2 27 sq mi Metro2 923 53 km2 1 128 78 sq mi Elevation2 335 m 7 661 ft Population 2017 Region capital1 008 290 Estimate 1 214 290 Density15 000 km2 38 000 sq mi Metro1 034 736DemonymArequipenoTime zoneUTC 5 PET Summer DST UTC 5 PET Postal code040Area code54Websitewww wbr muniarequipa wbr gob wbr peUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameHistorical Centre of the City of ArequipaTypeCulturalCriteriai ivDesignated2000 24th session Reference no 1016RegionLatin America and CaribbeanIts metropolitan area integrates twenty one districts including the foundational central area which it is the seat of the city government The city had a nominal GDP of US 9 445 million equivalent to US 10 277 per capita US 18 610 per capita PPP in 2015 making Arequipa the city with the second highest economic activity in Peru 2 Arequipa is also an important industrial and commercial center of Peru 3 and is considered as the second industrial city of the country Within its industrial activity the manufactured products and the textile production of wool of camelids The town maintains close commercial links with Chile Bolivia and Brazil and with the cities connected by the South trainway as well as with the port of Matarani 4 The city was founded on 15 August 1540 under the name of Beautiful Villa of Our Lady of the Assumption in the name of Marquis Francisco Pizarro On 22 September 1541 the monarch Carlos V ordered that it should be called the City of Arequipa During the viceregal period it acquired importance for its outstanding economic role 3 and is characterized by the fidelismo towards the Spanish Crown 5 which honored Arequipa with titles such as Very Noble and Very Loyal 6 In the Republican history of Peru the city has been the focus of popular civic and democratic rebellions It has also been the cradle of notable intellectual political and religious figures 7 In the Republican era it was awarded the title of Heroic city of the free people of Arequipa 8 Its historical center extends over an area of 332 hectares 9 and has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site 10 Historical heritage and monumental that it houses and its diverse scenic and cultural spaces turn it into a host city of national and international tourism in its historical center it highlights the religious architecture viceregal and republican product of mixture of Spanish and autochthonous characteristics 11 that constituted an own stylistic school called Arequipena School 12 whose influence arrived in Potosi Bolivia 13 14 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 City symbols 3 Geography 3 1 Location 3 2 Climate 3 3 Solar radiation 3 4 Cityscape 3 5 Administrative division 4 Demographics 5 Economy 6 Education 6 1 Primary and secondary education 6 2 Higher education 7 Culture 7 1 Regionalism 7 2 Language 7 3 Literature 7 4 Art and photography 7 5 Museums 7 6 Research academic and cultural institutions 7 7 Sport 7 8 Music 7 9 Cuisine 8 Government 8 1 City administration 8 2 Constitutional Court 9 Sights and attractions 9 1 The Old Town 9 1 1 Religious monuments 9 1 2 Civil public monuments 9 1 3 Military monuments 9 1 4 Civil domestic monuments 9 2 Suburbs 10 Parks and recreation 11 Infrastructure 11 1 Healthcare 11 2 Water supply 12 Transport 13 Notable people 14 Twin towns sister cities 15 See also 16 References 17 Bibliography 18 External linksEtymology editA local tradition states that Sapa Inca Mayta Capac received a petition from his subjects to reach the valley of the River Chili They asked him for permission to stay in the region as they were impressed by the beauty of the landscape and the mild climate The Inca answered Ari qhipay Quechua Yes stay 15 However another similar tale states that when the first Europeans arrived to the valley they pointed at the ground and asked for the name of the land The local chief not understanding the question assumed they were asking for permission to sit down and gave an affirmation which sounded like Arequipa 16 Chroniclers Blas Valera and Inca Garcilaso de la Vega suggested that the name of the city came from an ancient Aymara phrase ari qquepan supposedly meaning trumpet sound in reference to the sound produced from blowing into an empty conch like seashell 17 Another possible origin of the city s name comes from the Aymara phrase qhipaya ari or Ari qipa from ari acute sharp or pointed and qhipaya behind which translates to behind the peak referring to the nearby volcano Misti 18 History editSee also List of colonial buildings in Arequipa nbsp Arequipa in 1615 by the Inca painter Guaman Poma in his work Nueva coronica y buen gobierno Royal Library Denmark 19 The early inhabitants of the modern day Arequipa area were nomads who relied on fishing as well as hunting and gathering for survival Later pre Inca cultures domesticated llamas and became sedentary with the rise of agriculture 20 Terraces used for crop irrigation were built on both sides of the Chili River valley The Yarabaya and Chimbe tribes settled in the city s current location and together with the Cabana and Collagua tribes they developed an agrarian economy in the valley 20 When the Inca Mayta Capac arrived in the valley of the Chili river he didn t build cities Instead through the mitma policy he forced the resettlement of his subjects to solidify control of existing territories conduct intelligence duties and strengthen border enclaves to control unconquered villages 21 A Hispanic version of the events detailed by chronicler Garcilaso de la Vega which has been described as historically inaccurate 22 suggests that around 1170 dubious discuss Huayna Capac stopped in the Chili River valley with his army calling the area Ari qepay which means Let s stay here Lands were then distributed among 3 000 families who founded communities such as Yanahuara Cayma Tiabaya Socabaya and Characato all of which are districts in Arequipa today 23 After their conquest of Chile the Incas resettled part of the population thousands of kilometres away in Aconcagua Valley 24 nbsp Colonial Monastery of Santa Catalina de SienaOn 15 August 1540 Spanish lieutenant Garci Manuel de Carbajal named the cluster of Native American villages in the area Villa de la Asuncion de Nuestra Senora del Valle Hermoso de Arequipa 25 At the time of its foundation Arequipa already had a city council because Carbajal also led relocation efforts for an existing coastal city named Villa Hermosa de Camana The name was shortened to Villa Hermosa de Arequipa 26 Charles V of Germany and I of Spain gave the town a status of city by Royal Decree on 22 September 1541 27 The relocation efforts were led by Garci Manuel de Carbajal who was selected as the political authority for the foundation of the new town 28 Among the first public works carried out in the city are the Main Church the City Hall the bridge on the Chili River and the monastery of Nuestra Senora de Gracia 29 nbsp Siege of Arequipa 1856 Marshal Ramon Castilla enters Arequipa to gain back control of the city from the armies of General VivancoSince the Spanish founding of Arequipa the mostly Spanish population retained heavy loyalty to the Spanish crown a phenomenon called fidelismo 30 Among its most notable proponents were Francisco de Paula Quiroz Mariano de Rivero Nicolas Fernandez and Jose Miguel de Lastarria 31 In 1805 the Spanish Monarchy gave the city the title of Faithful by Royal Charter 32 Because of its distance from other Peruvian cities Arequipa was not heavily influenced by libertarian movements 30 In 1814 Mateo Pumacahua s pro independence troops only briefly occupied Arequipa The city would remain under Spanish control until the Battle of Ayacucho 1824 due to struggles for local political power 33 Arequipa s strategic location at the crossroads of the colonial silver trade route and that of the post independence wool trade route allowed the city to emerge as an administrative commercial and industrial hub 3 In the decade following Peru s 1821 declaration of independence from Spain society in Arequipa and Peru at large was in transition 34 Thus Arequipa not only became the birthplace of notable political figures 35 but also the site of key political movements 36 that helped defend the legal and economic stability of the city 37 thus elevating Arequipa to a status second only to its rival city and the capital Lima 38 On 13 January 1835 President Luis Jose de Orbegoso moved his government from Lima to Arequipa by presidential decree 39 Meanwhile in Lima General Felipe Santiago Salaverry named himself Supreme Chief of the Republic arguing that the country was leaderless as Orbegoso was outside the capital 40 Orbegoso then sought support from Bolivian president Andres de Santa Cruz against the claims of Salaverry On 4 February 1836 Salaverry s Army of Reunification won a battle at Uchumayo However three days later in Socabaya Salaverry surrendered to Santa Cruz 41 On 18 February 1836 Salaverry and his nine officers were shot in the main square of the city 42 nbsp Cathedral of Arequipa in 1884 nbsp Calle Mercaderes next to the Cathedral in 1926After expressing their rejection to the Peru Bolivian Confederation the Chilean government sent a military expedition that arrived in Arequipa on 12 October 1837 43 To avoid military conflict negotiations led to a peace treaty signing in Paucarpata a small town near Arequipa on 17 November 1837 44 In the following years the city was the site of uprisings and successive military coups which ended with the victory of forces led by Miguel de San Roman against the army of Manuel Ignacio de Vivanco in the Battle of Paucarpata on 29 June 1857 45 Around this time Arequipa gained prominence as a center of business and trade 46 focused in agricultural products and the production of wool sometimes through exploitation of peasants 47 48 nbsp Opening ceremony of the first railway in Arequipa 1871 On 31 August 1882 following the occupation of Lima during the War of the Pacific President Lizardo Montero Flores arrived in Arequipa and declared it the capital of Peru 49 On 22 April 1883 Montero installed a National Congress 50 which was located at Independence College also counting military support from a local army 51 52 and important financial support from quotas and taxes coming from the economic elite and the southern agricultural districts 51 However on 25 October 1883 a popular uprising overthrew the government of President Montero who managed to escape to La Paz Four days later with support from city authorities Chilean troops occupied Arequipa until August 1884 49 The Republican Era brought many improvements to the city s infrastructure and economy The Southern Railroad built by Henry Meiggs connected Arequipa with the port city of Mollendo in 1871 and with Cuzco and Juliaca in 1876 53 In 1908 the first telegraph system in the Arequipa region connected Mollendo Arequipa and Vitor In 1914 the city built its first drinking water supply system as well as an aqueduct In 1940 the city s international airport Alfredo Rodriguez Ballon was opened In 2000 the historic center of Arequipa was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO 54 However on 23 June 2001 an 8 4 magnitude earthquake damaged several historical buildings 55 56 City symbols edit On 22 December 1540 King Charles I of Spain elevated Arequipa to the rank of city by royal decree awarding it a coat of arms on which a mythical animal carries a banner inscribed with Karlos V or Del Rey 17 Historians debate the origin of the crimson flag of the city By 1940 several historians most notably Francisco Mostajo and Victor M Barriga confirmed the royal origin of the crimson color of the flag contrary to a blue banner which historian Victor Benavente hypothesized to be the original This matches the color that local sports organizations use 57 On 2 September 1940 Francisco Mostajo sent a letter to the Mayor of the City to explain his views regarding the color of the Banner of Arequipa basing his claims on the Act of the Oath of King Carlos III of 11 August 1788 On 23 September of the same year Father Victor M Barriga also published an important document in the Catholic newspaper El Deber that contains a description of the royal standard of Arequipa found in the Act of 3 September 1789 58 The city anthem is Fourth Centenary Anthem Lyrics and music were composed by Emilio Pardo Valle and Aurelio Diaz Espinoza who won a 1939 contest which the city council organize to dedicate a new anthem Since then the song has been sung at all important civic events held in the city Geography editLocation edit The city is located at an average elevation of 2 328 metres 7 638 ft above sea level with the lowest part of the city at 2 041 metres 6 696 ft above sea level in the area called Huayco Uchumayo while the highest is located at 2 810 metres 9 220 ft above sea level The central part of the city is split by the Chili River from north to south to the north and east of Arequipa are the Andes Mountains while to the south and west are sub ranges of the Andes The valley of Arequipa strategically links the coastal and highland regions of southern Peru 59 A series of volcanic cones dominates the city skyline Misti and the extinct volcanic groups Pichu Pichu and Chachani The western slopes of the Andes feature thick extensive layers of volcanic lava 60 Climate edit nbsp Partial view of Arequipa with Misti volcano in the background The climate of the city is predominantly dry in winter autumn and spring due to low atmospheric humidity and a level of precipitation corresponding to that of a desert climate BWk according to the Koppen climate classification On average Arequipa has 300 days of sunshine each year Typically temperatures neither exceed 25 C 77 F nor drop below 5 C 41 F The wet season lasts from December to March and is marked by the presence of clouds in the afternoon and low rainfall In winter June and July the temperature drops to an average of 6 C 43 F The average relative humidity is 46 with an average high of 70 in the summer season and a minimum average of 27 during autumn winter and spring according to data from the Goyeneche Hospital weather station 61 The mountainous topography surrounding the Chili River valley affects low pressure fronts and local winds These winds occur mainly in the early morning and the evening Mountain breezes typically flow northeast and valley breezes typically flow southwest Wind velocity fluctuates between 1 5 m s and 2 5 m s 61 Climate data for Arequipa 1961 1990 extremes 1892 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 29 5 85 1 29 7 85 5 26 6 79 9 26 4 79 5 32 0 89 6 26 2 79 2 28 0 82 4 26 8 80 2 27 0 80 6 26 1 79 0 27 8 82 0 27 2 81 0 32 0 89 6 Mean daily maximum C F 21 8 71 2 21 4 70 5 24 2 75 6 24 7 76 5 22 3 72 1 21 7 71 1 21 7 71 1 22 2 72 0 22 7 72 9 22 8 73 0 22 7 72 9 22 5 72 5 22 6 72 7 Daily mean C F 15 3 59 5 15 0 59 0 15 0 59 0 15 2 59 4 14 3 57 7 13 5 56 3 13 3 55 9 14 0 57 2 15 9 60 6 16 3 61 3 16 4 61 5 16 3 61 3 15 1 59 2 Mean daily minimum C F 8 5 47 3 8 7 47 7 8 3 46 9 7 1 44 8 6 2 43 2 5 4 41 7 5 2 41 4 5 4 41 7 6 2 43 2 6 4 43 5 6 6 43 9 7 6 45 7 6 8 44 2 Record low C F 0 9 33 6 0 0 32 0 0 0 32 0 2 0 28 4 0 0 32 0 1 1 30 0 3 7 25 3 0 2 31 6 0 0 32 0 0 1 32 2 0 0 32 0 2 0 35 6 3 7 25 3 Average precipitation mm inches 27 5 1 08 39 9 1 57 20 6 0 81 0 6 0 02 0 1 0 00 0 1 0 00 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 04 0 8 0 03 0 2 0 01 1 0 0 04 4 7 0 19 96 5 3 80 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 4 8 5 6 4 5 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 2 1 6 17 7Average relative humidity 52 59 58 48 41 45 44 43 42 39 39 43 46Mean monthly sunshine hours 223 2 189 3 244 9 294 0 288 3 291 0 291 4 310 0 297 0 303 8 309 0 291 4 3 333 3Mean daily sunshine hours 7 2 6 7 7 9 9 8 9 3 9 7 9 4 10 0 9 9 9 8 10 3 9 4 9 1Source 1 NOAA 62 Source 2 Deutscher Wetterdienst mean temperatures 1949 1956 humidity 1951 1969 precipitation days 1970 1990 and sun 1931 1958 63 Meteo Climat record high and record low 64 Solar radiation edit Solar radiation in Arequipa ranges from 850 to 950 W m 2 watts per square meter one of the highest levels of radiation in South America and the highest recorded in Peru Arequipa s proximity to the Atacama Desert and pollution contribute to the higher levels of radiation 65 Cityscape edit nbsp French type architecture in Arequipa nbsp High rise apartments in Arequipa On 15 August 1540 the Spanish plan for Arequipa resembled a checkerboard made of fifty six blocks each one of 400 Castilian feet 111 40 meters per side 26 Each block consisted of four or eight land lots which were distributed according to the status of the new owners Over time some religious institutions would occupy an entire block as did the Convent of Santa Catalina and the San Francisco Monastery 66 Urban expansion occurred at the expense of the countryside and this phenomenon has accelerated in recent decades Arequipa expanded east of the historic center and new avenues such as Parra Boulevard and Siglo Veinte Avenue were built to connect the historic center with newer neighborhoods such as Vallecito developed in the 1940s 67 or with already existing towns like Yanahuara which were absorbed by the city s expansion Shantytowns appeared in the districts of Miraflores Barrio Obrero and Jacinto Ibanez A permanent marketplace was built in a vacant lot previously occupied by the San Camilo Monastery The Goyeneche Hospital was built between 1905 and 1910 Two theaters Municipal and Ateneo a hotel Hotel de Turistas a public library and the campus of San Agustin University were other city developments of the early 20th century Housing projects and new neighborhoods were also built such as Cuarto Centenario and Selva Alegre 68 In the late 1950s the city rapidly grew especially in peripheral areas 69 Around this time industrial operations located in areas of Barrio del Solar and Barrio Obrero 70 near the city center moved outwards to the industrial zone Parque Industrial causing the former industrial areas to become commercial zones 71 Some educational institutions such as the National University of San Agustin moved out of the city center to more spacious land lots in peripheral areas to accommodate their growing facilities Residential zones also developed in peripheral suburbs causing the main function of the city center to be a tourist and business district 69 Administrative division edit The metropolitan area of Arequipa consists of 19 districts 72 with a total area of 305 798 acres 123 752 hectares of which 10 142 acres 4 104 ha are distinctly urban 73 No District No District1 Downtown 7 Paucarpata2 Cayma 8 Jacobo Hunter3 Cerro Colorado 9 Miraflores4 Sachaca 10 Tiabaya5 Yanahuara 11 JL Bustamante y Rivero6 Alto Selva Alegre 12 Mariano Melgar7 Sabandia 14 SocabayaSource National Institute of Statistics and InformaticsDemographics edit nbsp Downtown scenery at Mercaderes street According to the 2007 census 70 of the Department of Arequipa s total population and 90 of its urban population lives in Arequipa city proper In an early census in 1796 Arequipa had a population of 37 241 of which 22 207 59 6 were Spaniards 5 929 15 9 were Native Americans 4 908 13 2 were mestizos 2 487 6 7 were castizos and 1 710 4 6 were Africans 74 Population growth accelerated from 1 1 growth between 1876 and 1917 to 3 3 growth between 1940 and 1960 75 The city s population increased from 80 000 in 1940 to 158 000 in 1961 75 An earthquake in 1958 and a drought in the Altiplano caused a rise in migration urbanization and peripheral city growth suburbs and shantytowns that continues to this day 69 The rearrangement and improvement of urban space after the earthquakes also helped cause Arequipa s population to grow twofold in a decade 76 The population increased from 158 000 in 1961 to 309 000 in 1972 to almost 500 000 in 1983 Urban development of previously rural areas incorporated subsistence farming into the urban way of life 77 Evolution of the population of Arequipa in the period between 1796 and 2017 Population City of Arequipa Year Population Source1796 372411804 37148 Population Census 1804 Gil de Toboada 66 1812 34478 Viceroyalty of Peru in 18121876 30932 Census of inhabitants of Peru 1876 1917 44209 Census of the City of Arequipa in 1917 78 1940 80947 INEI 79 1961 158685 INEI 79 1972 309094 INEI 79 1981 446942 INEI 79 1993 619156 INEI 79 2007 749291 INEI 79 2017 1008290 INEI 2012 population estimate 80 Sources Population Census 1804 Gil de Toboada 66 Viceroyalty of Peru in 1812 Census of inhabitants of Peru 1876 Census of the City of Arequipa in 1917 78 INEI 79 INEI 2012 population estimate 80 Economy edit74 2 of the Department of Arequipa s GDP is generated by the city of Arequipa according to studies by the National University of San Agustin citation needed The Department of Arequipa s GDP is the second highest in Peru after that of the Department of Lima From 2003 to 2008 Arequipa was the city with the greatest economic growth in Latin America with a 66 1 increase in GDP per capita according to a 2009 report of America Economia 81 Economic Indicators City of ArequipaPopulation MM GDP 2010 millions USD GDP per capita 2010 USD Unemployment 2011 No investment banks 0 9 10 587 12 188 5 0 1Source American Journal Economics Special Cities 82 According to a government survey Arequipa has the largest workforce in Peru with 625 547 people and an economically active population PEA which amounts to 376 764 people having an employment rate similar to the national average with an average monthly income of 928 soles 83 The main economic sectors for the economically active population are manufacturing 12 9 trade 23 and non personal services 36 6 84 The unemployment rate in the Arequipa metropolitan area is 8 72 compared to only 5 unemployment in Arequipa city proper 82 In Arequipa tourism is a vital contributor to the local economy as the city is the third most visited city in the country after Cusco and Lima 4 In 2010 Arequipa received a total of 1 395 million visitors according to the Ministry of Commerce and Tourism 85 Since the 20th century many factories tied to the primary sector especially textiles and agriculture have emerged Arequipa s serves as an important commercial and industrial hub in the southern Andes in Peru linking the coast to the mountains 86 Large scale mining also contributes to the city s economy as is the case of Cerro Verde 87 a mining site established in 1976 near the Arequipa valley 88 The city s industrial sector has the largest nationwide diversification 89 and is the second most industrialized city of Peru 4 After two major earthquakes in 1958 and 1960 with the law of the Rehabilitation and Development Board of Arequipa an industrial complex was built with one of the first factories being the Yura cement factory Cementos Yura 89 nbsp Partial view of the industrial zone of Arequipa Parque Industrial de Arequipa located in the southern part of the city This first industrial complex named Parque Industrial de Arequipa now has a great diversity of factories ranging from consumer related industries food and beverages and construction PVC cement and steel to chemical and export products textile companies 89 Among the most important companies are Alicorp SAA Processed Foods SA Laive La Iberica Manuel Munoz Najar Bin Pan SA Consorcio Industrial Arequipa SA Omniagro Backus amp Johnston Corporacion Aceros Arequipa Francky and Ricky Michell amp Cia and IncaTops 89 Moreover the city s industrial sector has expanded and other industrial complexes have emerged such as Parque Industrial APIMA developed for small businesses 90 Parque Industrial Rio Seco and industrial areas in the Alfonso Ugarte Ave Uchumayo Road and the northern part of the city 91 On 15 August 1959 the first television transmission in the city of Arequipa was broadcast at the Cultural Hall of the National University of San Agustin Businessman Jack Dwyre conducted the broadcast through his new company Televisora Sur Peruana in partnership with San Agustin National University as Channel 2 now TV UNSA 92 The aforementioned university became one of the first in South America to operate a public TV station from inside its campus 92 Since then two other public television stations began to operate in Arequipa Radio Television Continental Channel 6 in 1962 and Compania de Radiodifusion Arequipa Channel 8 in 1987 broadcasting as ATV Sur since 2012 93 Among the newspapers that are printed in the city El Pueblo is the oldest in Arequipa published since 1 January 1905 and the second oldest in the country Writers such as Percy Gibson and Alberto Hidalgo as well as politicians like Hector Cornejo Chavez Mario Polar Ugarteche and Alfonso Montesinos started their careers working for this newspaper 94 Education editPrimary and secondary education edit In 2007 the city of Arequipa had 20 595 students at pre schools or Kindergartens 143 543 students at elementary schools and 219 305 at high schools citation needed Among the oldest and most prestigious schools in the city are Independencia Americana School San Francisco de Asis School Don Bosco School La Salle School and San Jose School Colegio Max Uhle is a German international school in Arequipa Higher education edit nbsp Entrance to the San Agustin National UniversityArequipa has more than 15 universities nine of them with headquarters in the city and one of them being public Universidad Nacional San Agustin The other six are local branches of private and public universities of Peru and Chile In 2007 a total of 70 894 students were enrolled in universities and 56 087 students were enrolled in colleges or technical institutes Two institutions of higher education in Arequipa were founded more than a century ago Seminario de San Jeronimo a center of religious formation has been in operation since 1622 95 While San Agustin National University Universidad Nacional San Agustin was founded on 11 November 1828 96 it can trace its origins back to the Academia Lauretana de Artes y Sciencias a college founded in 1821 97 The first private university established in the city was Universidad Catolica Santa Maria and the establishment of this university was followed by Universidad Catolica San Pablo and Universidad San Francisco 98 Additionally important local branches from universities outside the region such as Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos Universidad Tecnologica del Peru Universidad Los Angeles de Chimbote and Universidad del Mar Chile among others are located in the city Universities 99 100 University Installation Undergraduates 101 Main CampusUniversidad Nacional San Agustin de Arequipa 1828 24188 ArequipaUniversidad Catolica Santa Maria 1961 12268 ArequipaUniversidad Catolica San Pablo 2004 4769 ArequipaUniversidad San Francisco 2010 ArequipaUniversidad La Salle Maestria en Ingenieria del Software Aplicada ArequipaUniversidad Privada de Ciencias de la Salud Maestria en Ingenieria del Software Aplicada ArequipaUniversidad Privada Autonoma del Sur Maestria en Ingenieria del Software Aplicada ArequipaUniversidad Javier Prado 102 Maestria en Ingenieria del Software Aplicada ArequipaUniversidad San Francisco Javier 2010 ArequipaUniversidad Alas Peruanas 103 2004 9743 LimaUniversidad Jose Carlos Mariategui 104 Maestria en Ingenieria del Software Aplicada LimaUniversidad Nestor Caceres Velasquez 105 2006 1038 PunoUniversidad Tecnologica del Peru 106 2007 1201 LimaUniversidad Privada San Pedro 2010 ChimboteUniversidad Los Angeles de Chimbote 2009 344 ChimboteUniversidad del Mar 107 2009 ChileSource Second National Census of Universities 2010 Culture editRegionalism edit Arequipa unlike other big Peruvian cities with mestizo and indigenous features has been labeled as a Spanish island in an indigenous sea and because of its status as a natural oasis 108 Culture in Arequipa is marked by the regionalism of its inhabitants in fact unlike other regional sentiments within Peru Arequipa s regionalism was connected to the fight against centralism This proud regionalism expressed in numerous insurrections or revolutions has earned the city the nickname Ciudad Caudillo Warlord City As Peruvian historian Jorge Basadre argued Arequipa is a gun pointed at the heart of Lima alluding to the rivalry between the two cities 109 Language editAn element of culture in Arequipa City is its Spanish dialect which incorporates a distinctive rhythmic way of speaking which usually elongates the last vowel of the final word in each sentence A distinctive feature of this dialect is the voseo 110 111 that is the use in Spanish language of the pronoun vos to replace the use of tu or usted all corresponding to the English you In Peru the voseo is sometimes heard only in rural areas except in Arequipa where that way of speaking is heard in both rural and urban areas 112 Another dialect from the city surroundings called loncco has been largely lost due to migration from other provinces and the standardization of Spanish language by the media However there are contests in schools which promote the writing of poems in the loncco dialect nbsp Mario Vargas Llosa Arequipa Peru 28 March 1936 Nobel Prize in Literature 2010Literature edit Literature in Arequipa has a long tradition and many of the city s writers have gained national and international recognition During the Spanish colonial period only the works of Lorenzo de Llamosas survived 113 In the nineteenth century the poetry and fables of Mariano Melgar incorporated patriotic and romantic themes Other notable writers of Arequipa in that century are Benito Bonifaz Jorge Polar and Maria Nieves y Bustamante among others In the twentieth century Mario Vargas Llosa is the most recognized of the Arequipan writers in Peru and abroad winner of Nobel Prize in Literature in 2010 author of novels like The Green House 1966 Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter 1977 among others Other writers of the 20th century were the poets Percy Gibson Cesar Rodriguez Atahualpa and Oswaldo Reynoso Art and photography editSome of the most detailed photographic records of 19th and 20th century Peru are found in the works of the Vargas Brothers Art Studio Open from 1912 to 1958 the studio captured more diversity of Peruvian culture than any other photography studio at the time 114 Most known for their nocturnals and portrait photography of women their photographic archive which is privately held by descendants of the studio s founders and brothers Carlos and Miguel Vargas have been restored and digitized 115 Many international showings of their works have brought recognition to the studio and the way of life their images have preserved 114 nbsp One of the halls of Arequipa s Museum of Contemporary ArtMuseums editA UNESCO World Heritage Site Arequipa s rich history and art is showcased in its many museums These include the Museum of the cathedral 116 the Museum of Contemporary Art Museo de Arte Contemporaneo which is devoted to painting and photography collections from 1900 onwards especially works by Peruvian artists like Carlos Vargas Martin Chambi Fernando de Szyszlo Venancio Shinki and many others 117 the Regional Museum of the Central Reserve Bank Museo Regional del Banco Central de Reserva which houses pre Columbian and colonial art pieces plus a collection of colonial and republican coins and banknotes 118 the Santa Maria University Museum of Archaeology and the Andean Sanctuaries Museum Museo Santuarios Andinos both belonging to Santa Maria Catholic University have an important collection of archaeological pieces mainly from local pre Columbian cultures especially the latter which houses Inca mummies 119 120 the San Agustin University Museum of Archaeology 121 the Municipal Museum of Arequipa 122 and others nbsp Pedro Paulet scientist born in Arequipa in 1874 was one of the first to experiment with rocket propulsion Research academic and cultural institutions edit Among the scientists who were born and or conducted their research in Arequipa are Pedro Paulet a pioneer scientist on rocket propulsion as well as Mariano Eduardo de Rivero y Ustariz a geologist and politician One of the most important research facilities in the city was the Astronomical Observatory of Carmen Alto which Harvard University operated from 1891 to 1927 when the university moved its astronomical operations to South Africa 123 Cultural events and activities are mostly organized by the main universities of the city San Agustin National University and Santa Maria Catholic University 124 and also by cultural organizations such as the Alliance Francaise 125 the Peruvian Center for German Culture 126 and the Peruvian North American Cultural Center 127 Since the 1990s banking institutions showed great interest in promoting and managing cultural activities while private companies joined this movement by sponsoring various projects 121 Sport edit Association football or soccer is the most popular sport in Arequipa with a popular local team being FBC Melgar of the Peruvian First Division winning its first national championship in 1981 128 City rivals FBC White Star s women s football department of the club won the national league in 2009 Other teams in the city are Sportivo Huracan FBC Aurora FBC Pierola Senati FBC IDUNSA and the now defunct Total Clean FBC The main stadiums in the city also used for other events are Virgen de Chapi Stadium property of San Agustin National University Mariano Melgar Stadium Los Palitos Stadium and Umacollo Stadium Music edit Music is also an important part of cultural life in Arequipa Since the last years of the Spanish colonial period there were important academic composers like Mariano Melgar who was best known as a poet Pedro Jimenez Tirado April and Florentino Diaz all of them placing Arequipa as one of the Peruvian cities with a renowned musical scene 129 The Symphonic Orchestra of Arequipa created in 1939 contributes to keep classical and vernacular music as part of the city s culture 130 As in the rest of the country in Arequipa many traditional music styles like vals criollo or Peruvian waltz yaravi or harawi and huayno are still performed citation needed Cuisine edit Regional cuisine shows a great diversity with as many as 194 typical dishes 131 The cuisine of the city mixes recipes from European and Andean cultures 132 because many dishes were created to satisfy the taste of the Spanish settlers in Arequipa 133 As a curiosity many restaurants feature a special main course according to each day of the week chaque on Mondays chairo on Tuesdays chochoca on Wednesdays chupe colorado on Thursdays chupe de viernes on Fridays puchero or timpusca on Saturdays and caldo blanco or pebre de lomos on Sundays 134 Among the most popular local dishes are chupe de camarones shrimp soup ocopa arequipena rocoto relleno cuy chactado fried guinea pig locro de pecho etc while typical desserts are queso helado ice cream made of milk cinnamon and coconut bunuelos dulces de convento and chocolates Besides local wines and beers two typical beverages are chicha de guinapo a dark type of corn grown only locally and anisado anise liqueur 135 Government editAs the capital of the Arequipa Province Arequipa is governed by the Provincial Municipality of Arequipa that has jurisdiction over the entire territory of the province The district municipalities within the province also have jurisdiction over local matters As the regional capital the city is home to the Regional Government of Arequipa It is also headquarters of several regional offices of the ministries that make up the Civil Government of Peru City administration edit The Provincial Municipality of Arequipa regulates important citywide metropolitan and provincial issues such as urban planning transport municipal tax collection management of road safety jointly with the local police the maintenance of public roads and urban greenery etc It is also responsible for the construction of municipal facilities such as sports centers libraries and social service centers 136 Constitutional Court edit Main article Constitutional Court of Peru The Constitutional Court is the highest authority regarding control and interpretation of the Constitution It is autonomous and independent of other constitutional bodies Subject only to the Constitution and the Organic Law the court has seven judges elected by the Congress with the favorable vote of at least two thirds of the legal number of members for a period of five years The city is the Legal Capital of Peru and Official Headquarters of the Constitutional Court 137 as a result of a decentralizing project Due to the military coup that occurred in Peru at the end of the 1960s the initiative was abandoned Then it was retaken after the election of the Constituent Assembly in 1978 This time the initiative did not succeed due to the high opposition but later concluded that Arequipa would host the then Constitutional Court as stated in Article 304 º of the Constitution of Peru 1979 The Constitutional Court is based in the city of Arequipa 138 Later by the Constitution of 1993 the Constitutional Court was created which according to its Charter is based in Arequipa 139 Sights and attractions edit nbsp Map of the old town of ArequipaThe Old Town edit Main articles List of colonial buildings in Arequipa and Historic Centre of Arequipa In its 332 hectares 9 has 5817 properties 140 of which 500 are categorized as heritage properties generally have been built in the nineteenth century on the site of earlier colonial buildings destroyed by the earthquake of 1868 The houses usually made in ashlar are characterized by semi circular arches and vaulted ceilings Ashlar structures always have thick walls 1 to 1 5 meters for rooms 2 meters for churches Through the use of lime mortar the walls are shown homogeneous image that is reinforced with brick vaults or ashlar that are justified in the rarity of the wood 141 In the city is a stylistic school called School Arequipa of crucial importance in the region and whose influence reached Potosi This school is characterized by profuse decoration planiform textilografica and the open spaces and the design and size of their covers which differ in these aspects of Cuzco and Lima covers citation needed The architecture in the historic center is characterized by the prominence of ashlar the use of which begins in the last third of the 16th century This volcanic stone white or pink exceptionally soft lightweight and weatherproof emerged as a seismic structural solution The ashlar was unable to take the early years except for the covers of the main church and some houses The original city was built with adobe masonry sticks and straw roofs or mud pie Houses of this type were made until the nineteenth century and were common in the eighteenth century some remain in the original district of San Lazaro Later came the brick and tile houses with tile found in the Monastery of Santa Catalina The cataclysm of 1582 settled these systems and raised the earthquake reconstruction Then came the ashlar as prime structural solution 142 Major earthquakes mark milestones in the formation of Arequipa architecture Five significant periods are Founding and village 1540 1582 Splendor of Baroque 1582 1784 Rococo and Neoclassical Reviews 1784 1868 Empiricism and modernizing Evocations neo colonial 1868 1960 and Contemporary Religious monuments edit nbsp Church of the JesuitsIn historical existence is accounted for 14 churches or temples four chapels five convents and 3 monasteries 143 among the monuments of this type include Basilica Cathedral of Arequipa nbsp Church of YanahuaraIt is the most important neoclassical ediicio Peru product reconstruction started in 1844 and finished three years later and led by architect Lucas Poblete 144 Its interior is faced with trs ships with one of the side walls of the main square which fills a side facade is divided by Corinthian columns citation needed Church of La CompaniaIt is the monument maximum Arequipena School 12 is one of the most splendid creations of Peruvian Baroque and starting point of this school 145 in its facade has an inscription inscribed with the year 1698 which shows that the beginning of the eighteenth century this regional art had reached its peak therein lies a more exaggerated baroque altar 146 Convent of Santa Catalina nbsp Colonial arcades around the Plaza Mayor nbsp Church of Santo Domingo in 1868Civil public monuments edit There are 10 buildings that origin were engaged in civic purposes such as Phoenix theaters and the Municipal Theatre the Goyeneche Hospital and the Hospital of Priests of St Peter bridges Bolognesi and Grau the Instituto Chavez de la Rosa Railway Station Mercado San Camilo and the convento de Santa Catalina 143 Military monuments edit The historic center of Arequipa lacked a wall as we had the city of Lima they persist despite military monuments as Twentieth Century Prison and Penal Fundo El Fierro women 147 Civil domestic monuments edit nbsp Portals of the Convent of San Agustin in 1880Within the historic center there are 246 houses that are declared monument households 143 This type of construction is characterized by thick solid walls with arches and domes similar to those built in the temples and religious monasteries giving the same robustness and monumentality to these constructions built from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and generally used for housing 142 Casa del Moral Goyeneche Palace Tristan del Pozo House Mint Casona Ugarte House Iriberry House Arrospide Casa del Alferez Flowers Casona del Corregidor Maldonado Casa del Corregidor April and Maldonado Casona Goyeneche House of Pastor Bronze Tambo Tambo of the Loggerhead Tambo de Ruelas Suburbs edit Yanahuara Villa Hermosa located 2 kilometres 1 mile from the city famous for its churches built in Andalusian style alleys 148 which is Yanahuara Monumental Zone Cultural Heritage of the Nation 149 Cayma Villa 3 miles 5 kilometres from the centre of town Place known for its taverns and where there is a seventeenth century church With a viewpoint which affords a view of Arequipa The thermal baths of Yura 30 kilometres 19 miles Its waters come from inside the volcano Chachani Also near the city are the medicinal sources of Jesus and Socosani Sabandia natural valley with most crystalline waters in the region Here is the Sabandia mill was built and in operation since the eighteenth century The farm Sachaca or the Founder s Mansion 150 is 12 kilometres 7 miles from the city Built on the river Socabaya is a residence that belonged to different owners of historic renown in Peru but became especially known for being one of the family properties principales Goyeneche This piece of architecture is now open to the public Parks and recreation edit nbsp Partial view of Selva Alegre ParkParks and squares cover 26 hectares of urban parks in and around the historic centre among the most notable areas are Plaza de Armas Plaza San Francisco Parque Grau Parque 28 de Febrero Plaza Melgar Parque Duhamel Plaza 15 de Agosto Plaza Espana Plaza Santa Teresa Plaza Independencia Parque San Lazaro Parque Selva Alegre Plaza San Antonio There are 22 hectares of countryside within this historic area 151 Other notable urban green areas in the city are Parque Ecologico Alto Selva Alegre Located in the eastern part of the city in Selva Alegre District next to Chili River The park and its surrounding areas occupy an area of 1008 hectares 152 of which 460 hectares covering only the ecological park 153 A part of the park is located in the buffer zone of the National Reserve of Salinas Aguada Blanca Fundo Paraiso Is part of Parque Selva Alegre and occupies an area of 67 hectares 153 Chilina Valley countryside Has an area of 151 hectares 153 Chilpinilla Metropolitan Park 14 hectares 154 Infrastructure editHealthcare edit nbsp Honorio Delgado Regional HospitalAs the administrative and economic capital of the Arequipa Region the city has the largest number of both public and private healthcare centers which total 680 establishments 155 Public health institutions that are present in the city are Social Security Hospitals 156 Edmundo Escomel level I hospital Policlinico Metropolitano Yanahuara level III hospital Carlos Seguin National Hospital level IV hospital 157 Complejo de Prestaciones Sociales Ministry of Health MINSA 158 Honorio Delgado Regional Hospital Goyeneche Hospital National Institute of Neoplasic Diseases INEN Regional Institute of Neoplasic DiseasesWater supply edit The water supply in Arequipa varies by neighborhood in the city 159 Many water supply interruptions are thought to be caused by repairs needed as the underground tube system ages 159 Water supply interruptions are perceived as longer in the urban periphery 159 In this area inhabitants also report a higher incidence of unnotified water supply interruptions 159 Transport edit nbsp Interchange on La Marina Avenue Arequipa s urban road network has a radiocentric structure with four main avenues Avenida Ejercito Avenida Jesus Avenida Alcides Carrion and Avenida Parra which allow the movement of the population between the intermediate and peripheral areas and the downtown These avenues are connected in turn by other avenues such as Avenida Venezuela Avenida La Marina Avenida Salaverry Avenida Caceres among others which almost form a ring around the downtown Other avenues such as Avenida Cayma Avenida Goyeneche and Avenida Dolores link the suburbs and nearby districts with downtown Arequipa Interchanges such as the one at Avenida La Marina and another one at Avenida Caceres help to relieve urban traffic A road of 40 km approximately which goes through the district of Uchumayo connects Arequipa to the Pan American Highway and coastal cities another road goes through the district of Yura connecting Arequipa to other cities in the southern highlands like Puno and Cuzco Public transit in Arequipa is currently operated by small private companies In 2014 a metro system was proposed by Peru s then minister for transport Jose Gallardo 160 nbsp View of the apron at Rodriguez Ballon International Airport with the Misti volcano in the background Arequipa s only airport is Rodriguez Ballon International Airport which is operated by a private consortium through a concession granted by the government since 2011 161 It is located in the district of Cerro Colorado about 12 miles 19 kilometres northwest of the downtown and because of its features and facilities is considered one of the best in the country 162 There are regular flights to Peruvian destinations such as Lima Cuzco Tacna and Juliaca and to international destinations such as Arica Iquique Antofagasta Santiago de Chile and Buenos Aires 162 The railway network system has been operating in Arequipa since 1871 citation needed and enables communication between the coast and the mountains and different levels of progress and expansion of population centers located in its path The system consists of the lines Cusco Puno Arequipa and Arequipa Mollendo It is of great strategic importance in the multimodal communication system in the southern macro region citation needed since it is the most effective and economical way to transport heavy loads over long distances Terrapuerto Internacional Arequipa is a bus terminal located in the district of Jacobo Hunter There several bus companies offer land travel routes to regional and national destinations within Peru and to international destinations such as La Paz Santiago de Chile Mendoza and Buenos Aires Notable people editAugusto Perez Aranibar 1858 1948 physician and philanthropist Patricia Salas O Brien born 1958 sociologist Minister of Education Mario Vargas Llosa born 1936 novelist and journalistTwin towns sister cities editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Peru Arequipa is twinned with 163 nbsp Charlotte United States 1962 164 nbsp Maui County United States 1994 165 nbsp Corrientes Argentina 1973 nbsp Arica Chile 1991 166 nbsp Iquique Chile 2005 nbsp Guangzhou China 2004 167 nbsp Ponta Grossa Brazil 2005 nbsp Lins Brazil 2007 nbsp El Tocuyo Venezuela 2007 nbsp Biella Italy 1985 168 nbsp Cochabamba Bolivia 1990 nbsp Puebla Mexico 2006 nbsp Morelia Mexico 1991 nbsp Guanajuato Mexico 2004 169 See also editList of colonial buildings in Arequipa Arequipa Region Metropolitan areas of Peru Goyeneche Palace Tourism in PeruReferences edit Official Journal El Peruano 2010 Legal Information System PDF p 96 Urban world What s next McKinsey Global Institute McKinsey amp Company October 2016 a b c Chanfreau p 40 a b c Mincetur Export Investment Guide p 17 Linares Malaga p 115 Barriga 1940 p 133 Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Normative Compendium of the Historic Center of Arequipa p 63 Neira et al 1990 p 438 a b Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Normative Compendium of the Historic Center of Arequipa p 80 UNESCO 2000 Historical Center of the City of Arequipa Technical Office of the Historical Center and Monumental Zone of Arequipa MPA OTCHA 2002 Final Normative Compendium of the Historic Center of Arequipa PDF Report p 2 Archived from the original PDF on 7 November 2012 a b Benavides Rodriguez 1990 p 73 Endesa ilumina la iglesia barroca de la Compania Infolatam 6 June 2007 Archived from the original on 20 November 2008 Retrieved 4 August 2009 Municipalidad Provincial de Arequipa Compendio normativo del Centro Historico de Arequipa p 6 Garayar 2004 p 51 Lev Uspensky Imya doma tvoego a b Palma 1893 p 29 Toponymy Arequipa Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala 1615 Guaman Poma Nueva coronica y buen gobierno Royal Library Denmark website a b Galdos Rodriguez 1997 p 13 Galdos Rodriguez 1997 p 14 Galdos Rodriguez 1997 p 15 Garayar 2004 p 50 Mostny Grete 1983 1981 Prehistoria de Chile in Spanish 6th ed Santiago de Chile Editorial Universitaria p 156 Arellano 1988 p 257 a b Neira et al 1990 p 244 Cornejo Bouroncle 1952 p 16 Neira et al 1990 p 246 Neira et al 1990 p 256 a b Caceres Pefaur 2006 p 128 Garayar 2004 p 54 Caceres Pefaur 2006 p 127 Gadea Aburto Saul 23 August 2006 Arequipa al dia ed Por que el Peru es independiente Arequipa al dia in Spanish Universidad Catolica de Santa Maria Archived from the original on 24 April 2011 Retrieved 8 November 2012 Ponce 1960 p 51 Cotler 2009 p 97 Cotler 2009 p 93 Bethell 1991 p 402 Ponce 1960 p 53 Neira et al 1990 p 438 Decree assuming command of the Republic General Felipe Santiago Salaverry 25 February 1835 Garayar 2004 p 56 de la Riva Aguero 1858 Pardo y Aliaga 2007 p 34 Monguio 1967 Garayar 2004 p 57 Cotler 2009 p 28 Cotler 2009 p 27 Cotler 2009 p 20 a b Marley David 2008 Wars of the Americas Vol 2 ABC CLIO p 889 Neira et al 1990 p 532 a b Mc Evoy 1997 p 222 Bulnes 1996 CAMPANA DE AREQUIPA PDF p 285 Zegarra Luis Felipe 2011 Railroads in Peru How Important Were They Desarrollo y Sociedad 68 68 213 259 doi 10 13043 dys 68 7 Historical Centre of the City of Arequipa World Heritage List UNESCO Retrieved 17 September 2015 The highest magnitude earthquakes since 1900 Tavera Hernando 2011 Cuantificacion del Tamano del Terremoto de Arequipa del 23 June 2001 PDF in Spanish Archived from the original PDF on 20 January 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2012 Galdos Rodriguez 1997 p 246 Neira et al 1990 p 354 Gutierrez 1994 p 17 Regional Government of Arequipa Analysis of the state and of the determinants of health p 19 a b Gesta Zonal de Aire Arequipa PDF in Spanish Plan a limpiar el aire Consejo Nacional del Ambiente Arequipa Climate Normals 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved 26 July 2017 Klimatafel von Arequipa Prov Arequipa Peru PDF Baseline climate means 1961 1990 from stations all over the world in German Deutscher Wetterdienst Retrieved 18 December 2018 Station Arequipa in French Meteo Climat Retrieved 19 October 2016 National Environmental Council To clear the air p 21 a b c Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Diagnosis of the historic center of Arequipa p 12 Mario Rommel Arce Los Barrios Su historia costumbre y tradiciones Archived from the original on 28 January 2013 Retrieved 28 October 2009 Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Diagnosis of the historic center of Arequipa p 14 a b c Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Diagnosis of the historic center of Arequipa p 15 Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Diagnosis of the historic center of Arequipa p 24 Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Diagnosis of the historic center of Arequipa p 6 a b Garcia de los Reyes Arquitectos y Asociados 2012b Garcia de los Reyes Arquitectos y Asociados 2012a p 36 Gutierrez 1994 p 83 a b Gutierrez 1994 p 226 Gutierrez 1994 p 231 Gutierrez 1994 p 232 a b Instituto Nacional de Estadistica 1944 p 60 a b c d e f g El crecimiento de las ciudades Instituto Nacional de Estadistica e Informatica Migraciones Internas en el Peru Archived from the original on 27 June 2012 Retrieved 9 August 2012 a b Peru Poblacion estimada al 30 de junio y tasa de crecimiento de las ciudades capitales por departamento 2011 y 2015 Peru Estimaciones y proyecciones de poblacion total por sexo de las principales ciudades 2012 2015 Report Instituto Nacional de Estadistica e Informatica March 2012 Retrieved 3 June 2015 America Economia 2009 Ser verde en 2009 es como estar online en 1999 PDF America Economia in Spanish 7728 p 22 p 25 Archived from the original PDF on 20 May 2009 a b America Economia 2012 Las mejores ciudades para hacer negocios America Economia Especiales Archived from the original on 27 May 2012 Retrieved 23 August 2012 Ciudades Promedio y mediana del ingreso laboral mensual de la PEA ocupada PDF Ministerio del Trabajo Programa de Estadisticas y Estudios Laborales 2007 Retrieved 10 August 2012 PEA Ocupada segun diversas variables estructura de mercado grupo ocupacional y rama de actividad PDF Ministerio del Trabajo Programa de Estadisticas y Estudios Laborales 2000 Retrieved 10 August 2012 Arequipa principales indicadores del sector turismo 2001 2010 Instituto Nacional de Estadistica e Informatica Banco de publicaciones estadisticas 2011 Archived from the original on 20 September 2012 Retrieved 9 August 2012 Metropolitan Strategic Plan of Arequipa Arequipa Economics Archived 26 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Cotler 2009 p 96 Centrum Cerro Verde Financial Reports p 4 a b c d 3 Arequipa perfil Economico ilustrada ed 2006 p 292 Centty Villafuerte Eymor B 2002 Informe Pymes de Arequipa 2002 p 124 Archived from the original on 18 January 2009 Zonificacion Industrial PDF Aspecto Normativos del 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Provincial de Arequipa PDF in Spanish Informacion General de la Municipalidad Provincial de Arequipa Archived from the original PDF on 26 March 2013 Retrieved 19 August 2012 Coaguila Valdivia 2010 p 4 Rommel Arce Mario La tradicion juridica de Arequipa Archived from the original on 10 October 2012 Retrieved 3 August 2012 Regulation Regulatory Constitutional Court p 2 Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Diagnosis of the historic center of Arequipa p 39 Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Diagnosis of the historic center of Arequipa p 40 a b Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Diagnosis of the historic center of Arequipa p 18 a b c Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Diagnosis of the historic center of Arequipa p 65 UNESCO History of Humanity p 221 Arellano p 256 Benavides Rodriguez 1990 p 74 Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Diagnosis of the historic center of Arequipa p 66 Provincial Municipality of Arequipa Tourism Archived 8 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine Yanahuara Villa 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to water in rapidly growing urban cities in Latin America The case of Arequipa Peru Norte Grande Geography Journal in Spanish 80 80 369 389 doi 10 4067 S0718 34022021000300369 S2CID 245090305 Arequipa to be second city in Peru to get metro system Andina 3 September 2014 Retrieved 31 March 2020 Airport Concession South Andean Archived from the original on 30 May 2012 Retrieved 11 December 2012 a b Mincetur Export Investment Guide p 26 aqpsoluciones 10 July 2011 Arequipa busca estrechar lazos comerciales con ciudades hermanas Archived from the original on 20 September 2012 Retrieved 5 August 2012 Charlotte Arequipa Charlotte United States 2004 Archived from the original on 11 January 2009 Retrieved 9 April 2008 Ciudades hermanadas PDF Hawaii Government Retrieved 26 July 2009 Estudiantes de Universidad de San Agustin de Arequipa saludaron a alcaldesa Municipio de Iquique Archived from the original on 8 May 2010 Retrieved 12 December 2012 Guangzhou Sister Cities via WaybackMachine com Guangzhou Foreign Affairs Office Archived from the original on 24 October 2012 Retrieved 21 July 2013 Citta di Biella in Italian Retrieved 29 September 2015 Ciudades hermanadas PDF Ayuntamiento de Guanajuato in Spanish Archived from the original PDF on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 18 August 2011 Bibliography editArellano Fernando 1988 Universidad Catolica Andres ed El Arte Hispanoamericano in Spanish Universidad Catolica Andres ISBN 9789802440177 Retrieved 28 July 2012 Asamblea Nacional de Rectores 2012 ANR ed Datos Estadisticos Universitarios Report in Spanish II Censo Nacional Universitario p 21 Retrieved 11 August 2012 Barriga Victor M 1940 La Colmena S A ed Arequipa y sus blasones in Spanish Benavides Rodriguez Alfredo 1990 Andres Bello ed La arquitectura en el virreinato del Peru y en la capitania general de Chile in Spanish ilustrada ed p 282 Bethell Leslie 1991 Cambridge University Press ed The Cambridge History of Latin America Latin America since 1930 ilustrada ed p 919 ISBN 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aprendizaje del capitalismo Estudios de historia economica y social del Peru republicano IEP Instituto del Estudios Peruanos p 332 ISBN 9789972510977 Retrieved 10 June 2013 Congreso de irrigacion y colonizacion del norte 1929 Imprenta Torres Aguirre ed Anales del primer Congreso de irrigacion y colonizacion del norte 19 24 February 1929 Lambayeque Republica del Peru p 270 Retrieved 9 August 2012 Consejo Nacional de Ambiente Consejo Nacional del Ambiente ed Gesta Zonal de Aire Arequipa PDF in Spanish Plan a limpiar el aire Archived from the original PDF on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 11 August 2012 Cornejo Bouroncle Jorge 1952 H G Rozas ed Arequipa homenaje y recuerdo p 35 Retrieved 28 July 2012 Cornejo Velasquez Hernan 2006 Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos ed El simbolismo de la comida arequipena PDF Investigaciones Sociales in Spanish Lima 17 41 65 Retrieved 11 August 2012 Cotler Julio 2009 Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el desarrollo Instituto de Estudios Peruanos ed 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General de Censo General de habitantes del Peru de 1876 in Spanish Empresa de Generacion del Energia Electrica S A EGASA 2003 En agosto Arequipa esta de fiesta Egasin Nº2 16 Instituto Nacional de Estadisticas ed 1944 Relacion de los censos parciales levantados en el Peru despues del censo general de 1876 Censo de poblacion y ocupacion de 1940 Galdos Rodriguez Guillermo 1997 Universidad Nacional de San Agustin ed Una ciudad para la historia una historia para la ciudad Arequipa en el siglo XX in Spanish p 391 Garayar Carlos 2004 Ediciones Peisa ed Atlas Regional Arequipa in Spanish Ediciones Peisa ISBN 9972 40 315 7 Garcia de los Reyes Arquitectos y Asociados 2012a Municipalidad Provincial de Arequipa ed Diagnostico propositivo para el Plan de Desarrollo Metropolitano de Arequipa Retrieved 11 August 2012 Garcia de los Reyes Arquitectos y Asociados 2012b Municipalidad Provincial de Arequipa ed Plan de Desarrollo Metropolitano de Arequipa Retrieved 11 August 2012 Guajardo Castro Alejandro 2009 Aspectos morfosintacticos del habla loncca en la campina arequipena PDF Maestria de Linguistica de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos in Spanish Guillemette Martin 2010 Institut des Hautes Etudes de l Amerique Latine ed La revolucion mexicana y sus impactos en America Latina una propuesta de analisis a nivel local El caso de Arequipa Peru Report in Spanish Mexico y sus revoluciones XIII Reunion de historiadores de Mexico Estados Unidos y Canada Grup Franz 2010 Instituto Nacional de Cultura ed Gaceta Cultural del Peru PDF in Spanish Archived from the original PDF on 4 February 2014 Gutierrez Ramon 1994 Evolucion historica urbana de Arequipa Metropolitana 1540 1990 ilustrada ed Facultad de Arquitectura Urbanismo y Artes Universidad Nacional de Ingenieria p 249 ISBN 9788489034013 Linares Malaga Eloy 1990 Pre historia de Arequipa in Spanish Retrieved 11 August 2012 Lopez de Romana Flavia 2006 Instituto Nacional de Cultura ed Casos de Gestion Cultural en el Peru PDF in Spanish Love Thomas 1995 Department of Sociology Anthropology of Linfield College McMinnville Oregon ed Cash Cows and Fighting Bulls Redefining Identity Maintaining Control in Southwestern Peru PDF Mc Evoy Carmen 1997 La utopia republicana ideales y realidad en la formacion de la Cultura Politica Peruana 1871 1919 in Spanish PUCP p 467 ISBN 9972420620 Mincetur Ministry of Foreign Trade and Tourism Proexpansion ed Arequipa Export Investment Guide PDF p 98 Archived from the original PDF on 7 November 2012 Retrieved 11 August 2012 Miro Quesada Aurelio 1998 Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos ed Historia y leyenda de Mariano Melgar 1790 1815 in Spanish UNMSM p 218 ISBN 9789972460616 Monguio Luis 1967 Don Jose Joaquin de la Mora y el Peru de mil ochocientos In University of California Press ed Don Jose Joaquin de Mora apuntes biograficos in Spanish University of Michigan Library p 268 Retrieved 10 June 2013 Municipalidad Provincial de Arequipa 2002 Diagnostico del Centro Historico de Arequipa Plan Maestro del Centro Historico de Arequipa in Spanish p 73 dead link Municipalidad Provincial de Arequipa 30 November 2000 Historical Center of the City of Arequipa Compendio Normativo in Spanish Superintendencia del Centro Historico y Zona Monumental Retrieved 4 August 2009 Neira Maximo Galdos Guillermo Malaga Alejandro Quiroz Eusebio Carpio Juan 1990 Historia General de Arequipa in Spanish Fundacion M J Bustamante de la Fuente Nunez Pacheco Rosa Torres Santillana Gregorio 1991 Polifonia del silencio la literatura arequipena en los ultimos diez years In Promolibro ed El author de creacion literaria de la Macroregion Sur in Spanish Palma Ricardo 1893 Barcelona Montaner y Simon ed Tradiciones peruanas in Spanish Vol III pp 1 252 Retrieved 11 August 2012 Ponce Fernando 1960 Retablo de papel ed La ciudad en el Peru Arequipa p 53 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Pardo y Aliaga Felipe 2007 Teatro completo Critica teatral el Espejo de mi tierra in Spanish PUCP p 34 Robles Elmer 2006 Origen de las universidades mas antiguas de Peru Revista Historia de la Educacion Latinoamericana in Spanish 8 1 35 48 Retrieved 11 August 2012 Zatonyi Marta 2006 Gozar el arte gozar la arquitectura in Spanish ilustrada ed Infinito p 292 ISBN 9789879393406 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arequipa External links editMunicipality of Arequipa Arequipa Region Archived 23 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine nbsp Arequipa travel guide from Wikivoyage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arequipa amp oldid 1187971555, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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