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TRUJILLO, or TRUJILLO

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 323 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TRUJILLO, or TRUJILLO  , a city of
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northern Peru, the see of a bishopric, and capital of the department of Libertad, about 315 M . N.N.W. of
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Lima and 12 m. from the Pacific coast, in
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lat . 8° 7' S., long. i9° 9' W . Pop . (1906, estimate), about 6500 . The city stands on the arid, sandy plain (Mansiche, or Chimu), which skirts the coast from Paita south to
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Santa, a few miles north of the Moche or Chimu
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river, and at the northern entrance to the celebrated Chimu Valley . North and east are the ruins of an old
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Indian city commonly known as the
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Grand Chimu, together with extensive aqueducts and reservoirs . The city is partly enclosed by an old adobe wall built in 1686, and its buildings are in
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great
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part also constructed of adobe . The public institutions include auniversity, two
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national colleges, one of which is for girls, an episcopal seminary, a hospital and a theatre . Trujillo was once an important commercial centre and the metropolis of northern Peru, but the short
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railways
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running inland from various ports have taken away its commercial importance . The
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port of Salaverry (with which Trujillo is .connected by
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rail) is about to m. south-east, where the national government has constructed a long iron pier . Rail-ways also extend northward to Ascope and eastward to
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Laredo, Galindo and Menocucho, and a short
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line runs from
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Roma, on the Ascope extension, to the port of Huanchaco .

The only important manufactures of Trujillo are cigars and cigarettes . Trujillo was founded in 1535, by Francisco

Pizarro, who gave it the name of his native city in Spain . Its position on the road from Tumbez to Lima gave it considerable
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political and commercial importance, and some reflection of that colonial distinction still remains . It suffered little in the War of Independence, but was occupied and plundered by the Chileans in 1882 . Of the ancient aboriginal city, or
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group of towns, whose ruins and
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burial-places cover the plain on every side of Trujillo, comparatively little is definitely known . The extent of these ruins, which cover an
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area 12 to 15 M. long by 5 to 6 m. wide, demonstrate that it was much the largest Indian city on the
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southern continent . The
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principal ruins are 4 M. north of Trujillo, but others lie more to the eastward and still others southward of the banks of the Moche . The great aqueduct, which brought
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water to the several large reservoirs of the city, was 14 M. long and in some places in
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crossing the Chimu Valley it had an
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elevation of 6o ft . The name of Grand Chimu is usually given to the ruined city, this being the title applied to the chief of the
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people, who were called the Chimu, or Yuncas . They were a
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race wholly distinct from the Incas, by whom they were finally conquered . They spoke a different language and had
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developed an altogether different
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civilization, anc'it is not unreasonable to presume that they were related to some earlier race of southern Mexico . Specimens of skilfully wrought ornaments of gold and
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silver, artistically made pottery, and finely
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woven fabrics of cotton and wool (
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alpaca), have been found in their huacas, or burial-places .

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Bronze was known to them, and from it tools and weapons were made . Their extensive irrigation
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works show that they were painstaking agriculturists, and that they were successful ones may be assumed from the
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size of the population maintained in so arid a region . Since the
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Spanish
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conquest their huacas have been opened and rifled, and many of the larger masses of ruins have been extensively
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mined in search of treasure, but enough still remains to impress upon the observer the magnitude of the city and the genius of the people who built it . Nothing is known of their
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history or of their political institutions, but these remains of their handiwork bear eloquent testimony that they had reached a degree of development in some respects higher even than that of the Incas . See E . G . Squier, Peru (New York, 1877) ; and Charles Wiener, Perou et Bolivie (Paris, 1882) .

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