Avenida Arica
Chapel inside LaSalle College | |
Namesake | Arica |
---|---|
From | Plaza Bolognesi |
Major junctions | Avenida Venezuela, Avenida Tingo María |
To | Avenida Luis Braille |
Arica Avenue (Spanish: Avenida Arica), formerly known as Breña Avenue (Spanish: Avenida Breña),[1][2] is a major avenue in Lima, Peru. It starts at the Plaza Bolognesi and crosses the districts of Lima and Breña until it reaches Luis Braille Avenue.
History
The avenue's first section was built in 1906,[3] part of the urban expansion of the city that took place during the early 20th century,[4] and was originally named after the district of Breña, which it crosses.[1]
A few years after its construction, the avenue was renamed after the so-called "captive" province of the same name,[1] then under a Chilean administration that was the focus of a territorial dispute that did not end until the Treaty of Lima was signed in 1929.[5]
See also
- Plaza Bolognesi
- Paseo Colón
- Avenida Alfonso Ugarte
- Avenida Brasil (Lima)
References
- ^ a b c Monteverde Sotil, Rodolfo (2017). "Política internacional de la posguerra del Pacífico, remodelación urbana y proyectos escultóricos de Lima: El monumento público a Francisco Bolognesi y los Caídos en la Batalla de Arica (1905)". Historia (Santiago). 50 (2). doi:10.4067/s0717-71942017000200663 – via SciELO.
- ^ "Honores al héroe: la historia de la escultura de Francisco Bolognesi". El Pregonero. PROLIMA. 2021-04-10. p. 10.
- ^ Córdova Aguilar, Hildegardo (1989). "La Ciudad de Lima: su Evolución y Desarrollo Metropolitano". Revista Geográfica (110): 231–265. JSTOR 40992600 – via JSTOR.
- ^ Tizón y Bueno, Ricardo (1935). "V: El plano de Lima al principiar el siglo XX". Monografías históricas sobre la ciudad de Lima (in Spanish). Vol. 1. Libería e Imprenta Gil, S.A. p. 429.
- ^ "DISPUTE SETTLED AFTER 50 YEARS". The Montreal Gazette. Associated Press. Feb 22, 1929.
- v
- t
- e
- 28 de Julio
- 9 de Diciembre (Paseo Colón)
- Abancay
- Alfonso Ugarte
- Alfredo Benavides
- Arequipa (Leguía)
- Arenales
- Arica
- Bolivia (Industria)
- Brasil (Magdalena)
- Caminos del Inca
- Emancipación
- Ejército
- España (Exhibition)
- Gálvez Barrenechea
- Guardia Civil
- Javier Prado
- Grau (Barranco)
- Grau (Lima)
- Inca Garcilaso de la Vega (Wilson)
- Larco
- Nicolás de Piérola (La Colmena)
- Óscar R. Benavides
- Peruanidad
- Petit Thouars
- Roosevelt
- Salaverry
- Tacna
- Túpac Amaru
- Uruguay (Progreso)
- Venezuela (Progreso)
- Vía Expresa
- Abancay
- Amazonas
- Áncash
- Apurímac
- Arequipa (Riva Agüero)
- Azángaro
- Callao
- Camaná
- Carabaya (Augusto Wiese)
- Caylloma
- Chabuca Granda (Zepita)
- Conde de Superunda (Lima)
- Cotabambas (Independencia)
- Cuzco
- Gamarra
- Huallaga
- Huancavelica
- Ica
- Junín
- Lampa
- Moquegua
- Ocoña
- Olaya
- Puno
- Quilca
- Rufino Torrico (Arica)
- Santa
- Santa Rosa (Miró Quesada)
- Tarata
- Trujillo
- Ucayali
- Unión
- Chabuca Granda
- Cinco esquinas
- Descalzos
- Paseo de Aguas
- Héroes Navales
- Miraflores
- San Ramón (Pizza St.)
- Central Highway
- Costa Verde
- Highway 1
Current | |
---|---|
Former |
- Italics indicate former names in common use
- Some streets also cross into neighbouring Callao
- See also: Transport in Lima