Lima (Peru)
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The Iglesia de San Francisco features the city's first cemetery1 as well as many rare documents. |
Straddling (坐落在…旁)both banks of the Rjo Rjmac at the foot of the Cerro San Cristobal, the capital of Peru is an eclectic(折衷的)mix of traditional colonial buildings, soaring skyscrapers2 and Pueblos(印第安人村庄)(shanty settlements that blanket the dusty hills overlooking the city).
Home to two-thirds of Peru's industry and nearly one-third of the country's total population, pollution and poverty is highly present this city of seven million. A few miles southwest of the city center, Villa3 El Salvador shelters 350,000 people.
In spite of its troubles, the city boasts a great many historic monuments, museums for every palate(口味,品位), a lively cultural and arts scene and the country's best food, drink and nightlife.
Most of Lima's sights can be found within the old city, declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO(联合国教科文组织).
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The dramatic Andes Mountains outside of Lima |
Attractions include the Palacio Torre Tagle, the city's best surviving specimen4 of secular(长期的)colonial architecture; the Museo de Oro del Peru, with its precolumbian(哥伦布发现新大陆前)metals, weavings and mummies and the Museo de Arte, with more than 7,000 exhibits giving a retrospective(回顾)of Peruvian cultures and art from 2,000 years ago to the present day.
Lima's many markets overflow5 with hand-crafted (手工的)jewelry6 of silver and gold, Peruvian textiles and ceramics7(陶器), flowers and fresh produce.
For a break from the city's clamor, duck into(钻进)Lima's fine baroque churches(巴洛克式教堂)or take a stroll through its many parks and gardens, some established as early as the 17th century by Lima's Spanish aristocracy(贵族统治).