The history of Trujillo It begins from its foundation in the year 1534, becoming the most important city in the middle north of the Viceroyalty from the economic point of view.
This distinction was due to its location as an intermediate point between the port of the City of Kings (Lima) and the Spanish sites located in Panama..
Trujillo is the capital of the department of La Libertad of Peru, in addition to this it is the third most important city in the country for representing the cultural and economic axis of the north coast.
In Peru, Trujillo is recognized as the city of eternal spring, the national capital of La Marinera and as the capital of national culture.
During the pre-Hispanic period, the territory adjacent to Trujillo was home to the Cupisnique, Mochica and Chimú cultures..
According to archaeological evidence, the largest settlement in the area was the Chan Chan citadel. This city, in its period of greatest expansion, is estimated to have been inhabited by more than 100,000 indigenous Chimú.
Even though the existence of several pre-Hispanic urban settlements has been demonstrated, the existence of the city of Trujillo has not been specified prior to the arrival of the Spanish colonizers..
The foundation of Trujillo, under the name of Villa de Trujillo, took place on December 6, 1534, by the Spanish conqueror Diego de Almagro.
This name was conferred in homage to the Spanish city Trujillo de Extremadura, where the colonizer Francisco Pizarro was born..
Francisco Pizarro himself made the foundation official on March 5, 1535, giving it the name of the city of Trujillo de Nueva Castilla..
Subsequently, on November 23, 1537, King Carlos I granted it the title of city by means of a Royal Decree and endowed it with his coat of arms, a symbol that also remains in force today..
The city was designated as the capital of the district, with which it assumed the administrative captaincy of the area.
The city whose economy had flourished from wheat, sugar cane and cattle raising is devastated after the earthquake that occurred in 1619.
Facing a long process of reconstruction, it manages to overcome and develop after the year 1625.
But it happened that at the end of the seventeenth century plagues and droughts undermined their agricultural crops, leaving Trujillo devoid of its main economic activity, subsumed in a serious crisis.
Natural disasters continued to hit the city. In the second decade of the 18th century, a flood occurred that destroyed the city of Zaña.
In 1725 and 1759, when Trujillo was at its peak, it faced high intensity earthquakes which were followed by a new flood in 1820.
In 1820 the mayor of the city José Bernardo de Torre Tagle led the first Peruvian independence movement.
This movement concluded with the declaration of the independence of Trujillo before an open town hall held in the Plaza de Armas, on December 24 of the same year..
Trujillo was during the War of Independence a strategic city.
In 1823, after the creation of the Republic of Peru, he assumed the capital of the country before the onslaught of the royalist troops that ended up taking the city of Lima.
In 1824, he received the army of the liberator Simón Bolívar, who ended up assuming the government of the liberated country.
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