Lima

Location:

Intro

Located along Peru’s central coast, Lima anchors national governance and serves as the country’s principal gateway to the Pacific and global markets.

Background

Founded as the Spanish colonial capital of the Viceroyalty of Peru, Lima became the administrative heart of Spanish South America. Centralization persisted after independence, shaping Peru’s political geography.

History

Indigenous coastal civilizations

Spanish founding as colonial capital

Administrative center of Spanish South America

Capital of independent Peru

Rapid urbanization and internal migration

Metropolitan expansion and governance strain

Present Day

Lima hosts national government institutions, ports, finance, and services. Urban governance addresses water scarcity, transport congestion, inequality, and informal settlement expansion.

Future Outlook

Lima will remain Peru’s dominant urban and political center. Long-term resilience depends on water management, infrastructure investment, and decentralization pressures.

Population
9900000

Map


Event Timeline

27 April 1951
1999-3 January 2026
2026-01-03
1841-01-26
1842-08-29

Treaty of Nanking Signed

The Treaty of Nanking ended the First Opium War and ceded Hong Kong Island to Britain, formalizing its colonial status.

1860-10-24

Kowloon Peninsula Ceded to Britain

The Convention of Peking ceded the southern part of the Kowloon Peninsula to Britain, extending colonial Hong Kong beyond the island.

1898-06-09
1898

Kowloon Walled City Preserved

Britain leases the New Territories for 99 years but allows China to retain nominal control of the Kowloon Walled City.

1941
1945-08-30