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===Precolonial=== [[File:Pachacamac Mamacona2.jpg|thumb|[[Pachacámac]], built from 3rd century to 15th century, was one of the most important pre-Columbian centers of pilgrimage on the Peruvian Coast.<ref name="Guide to Peru">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vIIgCgAAQBAJ&dq=casa+de+osambela&pg=PT108|title=The Rough Guide to Peru|publisher=[[Rough Guides]]|location=[[England]]|year=2015|isbn=978-0-241-24692-4}}</ref> In the image the Temple of the Moon.]] Although the history of the city of Lima began with its Spanish foundation in 1535, the territory formed by the valleys of the [[Rímac River|Rímac]], [[Chillón River|Chillón]] and [[Lurín River|Lurín]] rivers was occupied by pre-Inca settlements, which were grouped under the [[Ichma culture|Lordship of Ichma]].{{sfn|Conlee|Dulanto|Mackay|Stanish|2004|p= 218}} The Maranga culture and the [[Lima culture]] were the ones that established and forged an identity in these territories. During those times, the sanctuaries of Lati (current [[Puruchuco]]) and [[Pachacámac]] (the main pilgrimage sanctuary during the time of the Incas) were built, it was built from 3rd century to 15th century by several civilizations, and which was used even until the time the [[Conquistador|Spanish conquistadors]] arrived. These cultures were conquered by the [[Wari culture|Wari Empire]] during the height of its imperial expansion. It is during this time that the ceremonial center of [[Cajamarquilla]] was built.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.wmf.org/project/cajamarquilla-archaeological-site|title=Cajamarquilla Archaeological Site - World Monuments Watch - 2006|website=[[World Monuments Fund]]}}</ref><ref name="James Higgins">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YErY-1GD7o8C&dq=Lima:+A+cultural+history&pg=PP1|title=Lima: A Cultural History|author=James Higgins|location=Oxford|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|year=2005|isbn=0-19-517890-4|pages=22, 45}}</ref> As Wari importance declined, local cultures regained autonomy, highlighting the [[Chancay culture]]. Later, in the 15th century, these territories were incorporated into the [[Inca Empire]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://es.calameo.com/read/0005981349455e89ae19a|title=Identidad - Cultura Chancay|author=Alberto Colán Falcón|page=1}}</ref> From this time we can find a great variety of [[huaca]]s throughout the city, some of which are under investigation. The most important or well-known huacas are those of [[Huaca Huallamarca|Huallamarca]], [[Huaca Pucllana|Pucllana]], and Mateo Salado, all located in the middle of Lima districts with very high urban growth, so they are surrounded by business and residential buildings; however, that does not prevent its perfect state of conservation. During the time of the Incas, the valley of Lima was highly populated and organized into an Inca province, or huamani (wamani), called Pachacamac. The colonial Spanish historian [[Bernabé Cobo]] mentions that the huamani of Pachacamac was subdivided into three hunu of tributary men, rather than the conventional four hunu. It has also been argued that a fourth hunu may have existed but was not recorded.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal |last1=Díaz |first1=Luisa |last2=Vallejo |first2=Francisco |date=2002-04-09 |title=Armatambo y el dominio incaico en el valle de Lima |url=https://revistas.pucp.edu.pe/index.php/boletindearqueologia/article/view/1856 |journal=Boletín de Arqueología PUCP |issue=6 |pages=355–374 |doi=10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.200201.014 |issn=2304-4292}}</ref> The primary meaning of the word hunu in Quechua is 10,000, leading to the assumption that 30,000 families lived in the valley. This assumption has been criticized, including by the historian Åke Wedin, because hunu can also mean countless, and therefore could simply refer to a very large group of men. The scholar [[John Howland Rowe|John Rowe]] suggested that the valley had a population of about 150,000 during Inca times.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Gonzáles |first=César W. Astuhuamán |date=2011-01-01 |title=The concept of Inca province at Tawantinsuyu |url=https://journals.iai.spk-berlin.de/index.php/indiana/article/view/2002 |journal=INDIANA - Estudios Antropológicos sobre América Latina y el Caribe |language=en |volume=28 |pages=79–107 |doi=10.18441/ind.v28i0.79-107 |issn=2365-2225}}</ref> Whatever the case, each recorded hunu of Pachacamac had a head town, corresponding to some of the most populated settlements in the valley: Caraguayllo ([[Carabayllo District|Carabayllo]]), Maranga, and Surco (or Sulco, also known as the archaeological site Armatambo).<ref name=":2" /><blockquote>... this valley was divided, according to the government of the Inca kings, into three 'unos' or governorships of ten thousand families each; the town of Caraguayllo was the head of the first; that of Maranga, which is situated in the middle of the valley, of the second, and the third, that of Surco; this last town was the largest of all ...<ref>{{Cite book |last=Cobo |first=Bernabé |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=opOPx386EzYC&pg=PA42 |title=Historia de la fundación de Lima |date=1882 |publisher=Imprenta liberal |language=es}}</ref></blockquote>The inhabitants of the pre-Columbian town of Surco were relocated to the modern district of Santiago de Surco early in the colonial period. In addition to Aymara and Quechua, the inhabitants of the northern part of the valley, specifically in the hunu of Carabayllo, spoke an additional language believed to be [[Quingnam]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Lenguas supérstites del Tahuantinsuyo |url=https://elperuano.pe/noticia/86091-lenguas-superstites-del-tahuantinsuyo |access-date=2024-07-22 |website=elperuano.pe |language=es}}</ref> Regarding the pre-Hispanic settlement of Lima, it is recorded that this part of the valley, near the Rimac river, was administered by a curaca, or local lord, named Taulichusco. He was a former [[Yanakuna|yana]], or servant, of Mama Vilo, one of the wives of Emperor Huayna Capac. Lima was awarded to Taulichusco in recognition of his services to the Inca royalty. Some of Peru's most important buildings were erected on the sites of major constructions of the pre-Hispanic settlement. For example, the residential palace of Taulichusco was located where the modern [[Palacio de Gobierno]] of Peru stands today. A temple called Puma Inti once occupied the site where the [[Metropolitan Cathedral of Lima]] is now, and the [[Teatro Municipal de Lima|Municipal Theater of Lima]] is situated where a pre-Columbian structure, referred to as Huaca El Cabildo by the Spaniards, once stood. These buildings were centered around a plaza, which was later expanded to become the [[Plaza Mayor, Lima|Plaza Mayor]]. The Huaca de Aliaga and Huaca Riquelme were other major buildings near the plaza. Other nearby constructions included the temple-oracle of Rímac, one of the main places of worship in the valley, also known as the so-called "huaca grande" that once stood in [[Barrios Altos]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Guzmán-García |first=Carlos Enrique |date=2012-01-01 |title=REDESCUBRIENDO LIMA INCA, Carlos Enrique Guzmán (2012) |url=https://www.academia.edu/50845131 |journal=Arquivisión}}</ref>
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