Jirón Áncash

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Jirón Áncash
Second block of the street
Part ofDamero de Pizarro
NamesakeDepartment of Ancash[1]
FromJirón de la Unión
ToÓvalo de la Paz
Construction
Completion1535

Jirón Áncash is a major street in the Damero de Pizarro, located in the historic centre of Lima, Peru. The street starts at its intersection with the Jirón de la Unión at the Puente de Piedra, and continues until it reaches the Óvalo de la Paz.

History

The road that today constitutes the street was laid out by Francisco Pizarro when he founded the city of Lima on January 18, 1535.

The Church of San Francisco was built during the 16th century. During an earthquake in November 1630,[2] an image of the Virgin Mary is said to have turned her face towards the main altar of the church, just at the moment when the seismic movement stopped: several chroniclers have reported this event. The people of Lima, within their Catholicism, interpreted that the mother of Christ turned to see the saint and appease the fury of her son who was causing the earthquake. Given this fact, the Miracle Chapel (Spanish: Capilla del Milagro) was built on the same site it occupies now.[3] Likewise, the Colegio Mayor de San Felipe y San Marcos was founded on that road, which would later be refounded in the Convictorio de San Carlos. The San Ildefonso School was also located in the same block.

The Portada de Maravillas in 1867.

During the 17th and 18th centuries, several monasteries were founded on this road. In 1808, outside the Gate of Wonders (Spanish: Portada de Maravillas), where this street ended, the Presbítero Maestro Cemetery was built, the first general cemetery in Lima. In 1956, El Ángel Cemetery was built. This led to the sector of Jirón Áncash where both cemeteries are located being called Cemetery Avenue (Spanish: Avenida Cementerio).

The Walls of Lima collapsed in 1868, and with them the gate disappeared.

At the end of the 19th century, the Desamparados station was established as the main railway station of the Central Railway that penetrated towards the Andes to the city of Huancayo.

The street's first block was originally open to the public. A public space known as the Malecón de los Desamparados, named after the church of the same name, demolished in 1937, was closed off in the 1990s due to a series of terrorist attacks that targeted Government Palace during the Internal conflict in Peru.[4]

In 2005, the former facilities of a colonial house were discovered during excavations for the construction of a building. The area is currently the Bodega y Quadra Museum, a site museum that illustrates the daily life of the locals during the Viceregal era.[5]

Block names

Until 1862, each block (cuadra) had a unique name:[6]

In 1862, when new urban nomenclature was adopted, the road was named jirón Áncash, after the department of Áncash.

See also

References

Bibliography