Less visited than southern Peru, the north of the country has been called the Egypt
of the Americas for its wealth of archaeological sites.
The North Coast was the cradle of several pre-Inca cultures. The Chimú,
the builders of the massive fortified adobe city of Chan Chan, established
an empire which by the 15th century stretched as far south as modern Lima.
These renowned goldsmiths resisted the rise of the Incas until their besieged
capital fell to the armies of the Inca Tupac Yupanqui in 1470.
The warlike Moche, who thrived about 1,500 years ago, left behind an extraordinary
artistic legacy, portraying, in the absence of the written word, every aspect of
their lives in the pictorial designs of their pottery and metalwork and the colourful
friezes of the pyramidal temples they built. These consummate artists recorded what
they ate, what they looked like and how they made both love and war in stylised
illustrations dedicated to the worship of their pantheon of fearsome deities, and
the fabulous wealth of their royal tombs is displayed today in the region’s excellent
museums.
“Living culture and natural beauty: A new world of discovery.”
Today, the elegant colonial city of Trujillo stands as a testament to the European
empire which superseded those of pre-Columbian Peru. Founded in 1535 and named after
the birthplace of the conquistador Francisco Pizarro, it’s wooden-balconied
colonial mansions are well-preserved and its people revel in their Spanish traditions
of horsemanship, music and dance.
The climate of the North Coast is mild, and the region is nationally famous for its
fine seafood, surfer’s beaches and the excellent sport fishing that brought men like
Ernest Hemingway to Peru some fifty years ago.
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