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CITIES
TACNA
This city is the bastion of the essence of all Peruvian
things. The frontier city of Tacna is the business hub
of the southern tip of Peru and an interesting stopover.
Its monuments, such as the arch of the Alto de la Alianza,
reflect the important role this balmy city has played
in Peruvian history. President La Mar declared Tacna
the Heroic City in 1828, shortly after Peru achieved
its independence from Spain. A century later, the city
inhabitants set an example for the rest of the country
in their patriotism and courage: at the end of the War
of the Pacific in 1879, which pitted Peru against Chile,
the townspeople of Tacna decided in a plebiscite to
form part of Peru once more, after having been annexed
by Chile. This symbolic act helped Peru not only recover
a strategic location, but also give hope to a nation
that was rebuilding itself after the war.
Today,
with its troubles in the past, Tacna has become a bustling
metropolis, a free trade zone and a transit area to
Chile, as well as Peru's second-ranked port of entry.
Its attractions include a splendid neo- Renaissance
Cathedral, the Municipal Theater, which dates back to
the nineteenth century, the Alameda Bolognesi walkway,
the monument and museum of the Alto de la Alianza, commemorating
the key battle for Independence, and the caves of Toquepala,
where archaeologists have found some of the oldest human
remains in Peru.
No visitor should miss the festival of the Señor
de Locumba, celebrated every September in which every
year thousands of faithful are drawn in from both Peru
and abroad.
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