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1[[quoteright:330:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/map_peru_2003_4425.gif]]
2->''"Llamas!"''
3-->-- '''First thing that most people say whenever they think of Peru''', or...
4->''"Cuzco, Machu Picchu"''.
5->''"Ahh, Peru"''.
6-->-- '''The thing for which Peru is most known among tourists'''.
7
8'''Peru''' (''Perú'' in Spanish and ''Piruw'' in Quechua and Aymara), or '''Republic of Peru''' (''República del Perú'' in Spanish, ''Piruw Ripuwlika'' in Quechua and ''Piruw Suyu'' in Aymara) is a country in western UsefulNotes/SouthAmerica. It is the third largest country in South America (after UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}} and UsefulNotes/{{Argentina}}), also, it is among the countries with most variety in natural regions and subclimates in the world. How many you ask? There are somewhere over 100 subclimates subdivided in three natural regions: the coast, formed mainly by deserts and small valleys, the Andes mountains, and the jungle (the Amazon rainforest). Its population surpasses 29 million, with its capital and largest city, Lima, encompassing 9 million inhabitants, diversified between the indigenous populations and the mestizos, with a small percentage of Black people, Asians, and Europeans. In particular, it contains the second-largest ethnically Japanese population in all of South America, beaten out only by Brazil. Religiously, however, it is mostly Christian Catholic, with a growing number of Evangelical congregations.
9
10Peru has Spanish as the official language, and the most spoken one. Also having two sub-official ones: Quechua, and Aymara. There are however, many other indigenous languages like the Ashaninka and the various languages of the people of the Amazon Forest, like Shipibo-Konibo.
11
12Peru is well known for its AndeanMusic, the folk music of indigenous communities in the Andes Mountains.
13
14[[folder: History]]
15
16'''First off: How?'''
17It is not known exactly when people started to live in the UsefulNotes/TheAmericas and much less known is from where did these humans came from. From as early as the time of the Spanish arrival, people debated how was this continent filled with people given, its geographical isolation in contrast to the continents of UsefulNotes/{{Europe}}, UsefulNotes/{{Asia}} and UsefulNotes/{{Africa}}. Nevertheless, during the 19th century and The20thCentury, it became a general consensus to argue that the start of the migration to America was done during the last Glacial period. Most known is the postulate that suggests that the first people arrived there from the Bering land bridge, located in the northern part of America and which was most likely linked to Siberia.
18
19The Bering theory was accepted and was widely known as the explanation of the populating process of the continent. It eventually came to be refuted or at least amended, in light of various human bones or tools found in South America. The simple reason as to why there was a problem with the Bering theory was the date of those human remains, which were almost as old as the time of the last glacial period.
20
21This of course implied that humans had to somehow migrate further south in an incredibly short frame of time - and of course, they had to do this by foot, since horsemanship had yet to be developed. Additionally, there was a tendency to find more and more vestiges of humans in the southern part of the continent rather than in the northern part, finally coupled with the finding of Caral (detailed bellow) that simply made it impossible for humans to have simply come from Siberia and reach to the south in a ludicrous short amount of time without leaving some remains of similar action what would be UsefulNotes/{{Canada}} and the UsefulNotes/UnitedStates today.
22
23This finally lead the researchers to take up some of the other postulates for the origin of the first Amerindians. Nowadays the Bering theory is mentioned as one of, not the only, route from which the original humans of the continent came from, the other being the Polynesian route, from which people would have used boats to hop from each of the islands of the Pacific to finally reach the southern part of America in a similar fashion to how UsefulNotes/{{Australia}} or UsefulNotes/NewZealand were populated.
24
25'''[[UsefulNotes/PreColumbianCivilizations Pre-Columbian Period]]'''
26
27The territory of Perú was home to many of the ancient cultures of South America, such as the Norte Chico civilization, which built the most ancient city in the American Continent (About 5000 years old) most known as Caral, and various others. Pre-Columbian history, so called to allude to the time before the arrival of UsefulNotes/{{Europe}}ans, is studied in six stages, with three general divisions of time.
28
29It must be noted that the term ''Horizon'' arose to denote a time when a culture had hegemony or primacy over the others contemporary to it, and therefore, set a trend amongst them. While such thing could be done by conventional conquest, they are not synonimous.
30
31One of the major discussions is the apparent lack of writing amongst the Peruvian cultures until the end of the Precolumbine period. Aside from the Quipus, which were knotted cords that served for logistics and accounting, there have been two speculated ways of writing, one of them being beanform marks found in some places and the other being the Tocapus, symbols found in the clothes of the higher ranked members of society and which are thought to be a hieroglyphical way of writing.
32
33* The Archaic Period:
34** Initial Period: Ranges through prehistory, covering the Caral civilisation and diverse foundings such as Toquepala and Kotosh.
35** The Early Horizon: Covers the time of the Chavin hegemony upon other cultures, such as the Paracas and its decadence.
36* The Classical Period:
37** The Early Intermediate: Ranges between the decadence of Chavin and the rise of the Wari, the Nazca, the Moche and other cultures appeared in this period.
38** The Middle Horizon: Spans the rise and fall of the Wari Empire in Perú, features other cultures such as the Chachapoyas.
39* The Postclassical Period:
40** The Late Intermediate: Houses the time between the fall of Wari and the victory of the Inca Confederacy upon the Chancas, which would eventually lead to the Inca Empire, the cultures that appear are, amongst others, the Tiawanaco, the Chimu and The Inca Confederacy.
41** The Late Horizon: Follows the rise of the Inca Empire, lead by Pachacutec, and its eventual expansion, which would be called the Tawantinsuyu and would eventually cover most of the northern territory of Chile, the coast and mountains of Perú as well as parts of the forests, Ecuador, and parts of Colombia and Bolivia; it ends with the capture of Atahualpa and his execution by UsefulNotes/FranciscoPizarro on 26 July, 1533.
42
43The events that lead to the fall of the Tawantinsuyu were both external and internal: The Incas practiced polygamy and the Inca himself could have several children born into the Panaca (Royal Family), whoever, there were rules and processes by which a son could be elected a legitimate Auqui (prince) in case the Inca died and, eventually, be crowned as the next Inca. Such princes were Huascar, born in the Panaca; and Atahualpa, son of Huayna Capac and a quitean princess, and thus barred from the normal line of succession.
44
45Huayna Capac and his heir perished due to an illness never heard from before (most likely smallpox, a disease brought by the Spaniards), leaving a succesion crisis inside of the Empire. The elite of Cusco and the religious leaders supported Huascar as the next Inca to lead the Tawantinsuyu; however, Atahualpa, having the support of the army, lead a civil war in which he managed to capture Huascar, take the Maskaypacha (crown) for himself and seize ''de facto'' control of the Tawantinsuyu as the next Inca.
46
47It's in this frame of time that UsefulNotes/FranciscoPizarro and his ''conquistadores'' entered the territories of the Empire and made their way to Tumbes. Atahualpa, having heard of the bearded men before and knowing of their mortality (therefore, ruling out the possiblity of them being gods) arranged to meet them in Cajamarca, bringing with himself a thousand strong men as guards with other thousands in reserve for an eventual ambush.
48
49Eventually, Pizarro and Atahualpa met in Cajamarca. The meager 150 Spaniards[[note]]some believed the Spanish had alreadu managed to gather some followers amongst the natives in a similar fashion as it was done in Mexico and had them waiting in case the Spanish forces were attacked, but if it was the case, they were surely not as many as Atahualpa's army[[/note]] were frightened by the army before them but rallied by Pizarro to go on until they were surrounded at the moment of the meeting. Pizarro used a translator to tell Atahualpa that he was to abandon his idolatric ways, submit to God and become a subject of the King of Spain. What followed is still debated by historians, however it's agreed that Atahualpa intended to kill or capture the Spaniards, take whatever they had with him and keep some of them as artisans. When he was given the Bible, Atahualpa looked at it and later tossed it away, making his intentions to the Spaniards explicit and taking the initiative.
50
51Atahualpa however made a mistake in relying only in his numerical advantage without having the foresight of any hidden cards the Spaniards could use against him, which so happened to be the horse and the cannons the Spaniards brought with them, alongside the native auxiliars that they had in reserve, which served to rout the imperial guard and eventually lead to Atahualpa's own capture.
52
53In captivity, Atahualpa hoped to play with the greed of the Spaniards at his favour and made an offer of a personal rescue of a pair of rooms filled with gold and silver each. As time passed, Pizarro's lieutenants grew evermore paranoid due to the fear of being overrun and slain by the Inca's armies, something that [[ProperlyParanoid seems to be a certainty]] as Atahualpa had given orders to his generals to await his word before moving and there was an army nearby the place where he was being kept.
54
55Pizarro isn't thought to have desired for Atahualpa's subsequent trial and execution, and was even planning to have him shipped to Spain to the court of [[UsefulNotes/CharlesV Charles I]] as an exiled monarch, however the urging of his men and his own nerves eventually won and made a mock trial to kill the Inca. Reportedly, Pizarro couldn't contain ManlyTears given that he and Atahualpa had struck an unlikely friendship during his imprisonment.
56
57Atahualpa was to be killed in the pyre for the crimes of idolatry, polygamy, incest and the execution of his brother Huascar, the latter point being one of dubious certainty given that he indeed died but is not known if it was by the direct command of Atahualpa, and the formers being extrajudicial accusations given that he was not part of the Spanish Empire and he couldn't be judged by under its law (given however that this was not a veridic trial and more of an excuse to have him killed it mattered little). Atahualpa made one last request and asked to be baptised so he would die by the garrote vil instead, a tool of strangling; baptised as Francisco, he was executed on 26th July, 1533.
58
59'''Viceroyal Period'''
60
61Classically, it is said that the Inca Empire peacefully died right the moment Atahualpa was killed, which is a '''BIG''' misconception debunked as early as the time of the first chronicles made by the friars or the writings of Creator/IncaGarcilasoDeLaVega. The truth is that after his death, Atahualpa's other generals continued the fight against the Spaniards. The Spanish were evermore aided by various indigenous people who saw in them a chance to free themselves from the Tawantinsuyu and, ironically, the Inca elite who had been enemies of Atahualpa. Eventually, this would lead to the coronations of [[PuppetKing puppet rulers]] such as Túpac Hualpa, who died three months after his coronation, and Manco Inca who was another brother of Túpac Hualpa and Atahualpa.
62
63However, Manco Inca realised that the small contingent of Pizarro was nothing more than the screening for the Spanish Army and they intended to conquer the country, this led to his flight from Cuzco to the city of Vilcabamba near the mountain jungles, from where he and other three rebel Incas would lead a war against the Spaniard ''conquistadores''. These four monarchs are known as the Incas of Vilcabamba. Their war against Spanish authority lasted between the years 1537 and 1572.
64
65The situation amongst the ''conquistadores'' was not harmonic on the other hand. The rivalry between Pizarro and Diego de Almagro over the city of Cuzco (and later the new capitol, Lima) and the fact that the partition of the lands were more in favour of Pizarro than the latter ended in what is known as the Wars of the Conquistadores amongst the two and all who supported either of them. This war was carried on by the brothers and familiars of Pizarro and Almagro, lasting between 1537 and 1546.
66
67Meanwhile, Charles I of Spain was not amused with the actions of the ''conquistadores'', who made themselves warlords and dukes of the conquered territory and literally worked to death the indigenous population, as well as the execution of Atahualpa by a lesser man, which was an outrage amongst the court, eventually, and, by the aid of Bartolome de las Casas, who was horrified by the abuse of the ''conquistadores'' towards the indigenous people, promulgated the New Laws (Leyes Nuevas) which put an end to the system of ''Encomiendas'', which were hereditary territorial possessions of the ''conquistadores'', and paved the way to the Viceroyalty system.
68
69Needless to say that the ''conquistadores'' were not going to accept this without a fight.
70
71What followed was an open rebellion against the Spanish crowd led by Gonzalo Pizarro (Francisco Pizarro's brother and successor) and UsefulNotes/FranciscoDeCarvajal, who managed to capture and execute the first viceroy, Blasco Nuñez Vela, but were eventually defeated by Vela's successor, Pedro de la Gasca, which marked the end of the encomiendas and the beginning of the Viceroyalty of Peru.
72
73Viceroy Francisco de Toledo is credited as the real "founder" of the viceroyalty, he broke the power of the ''encomenderos'', reorganized the native population in reductions, strengthened the presence of the Catholic Church, established the Inquisition and fortified the coasts against the attacks of the Dutch and English pirates.
74
75The Viceroyalty period is equated as TheMiddleAges of the American territories in control of Spain due to the development of a feudal-like system of land owning and the revival of titles and jobs not used in the Peninsula for being outdated. There was also the interaction between the local nobles or leaders who found themselves competing or collaborating with the new government. It must be noted as well that the Spanish kings didn't see themselves disturbing the continuity of the previous rulers. They instead advocated the concept of ''Translatio Imperii'' to justify their rule of the American Kingdoms.
76
77The Viceroyalty itself was a system used [[OlderThanTheyThink before the establishment of the American holdings]] and served as well to rule the other kingdoms attached to the Spanish crown -Aragon, Naples and eventually UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}}-, in general, it has two periods that reflect the approaches of the ruling dynasties.
78
79* The Habsburg Period: Also known as the Austrian period, it had the greatest parallels to the Middle Ages and even to UsefulNotes/TheRomanEmpire itself in its way to rule. The Habsburgs, having experience with running [[UsefulNotes/HolyRomanEmpire empires]] before, used indirect rule, the influence of the Catholic Church and alliances with the local nobility to keep the Empire together, which they managed to at the cost of the Peninsular holdings being eclipsed by the American kingdoms they ruled. On the flip side, Hispanic America was left out of much of the modern changes that were happening in Europe at the time and only received them by hand of the Jesuit order.
80
81* The Bourbon Period: The French period, it paved the way to the modernisation of the American Kingdoms, creating more territorial divisions to better manage the Empire such as the Viceroyalties of Rio de la Plata, Nueva Granada and the captaincies general of UsefulNotes/{{Cuba}}, the UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}}, UsefulNotes/{{Chile}}, UsefulNotes/{{Venezuela}}, UsefulNotes/{{Guatemala}}, Yucatan and others. Like its parallel in Versailles, the period marked an age of cultural and intellectual flourishment. It also started the tendency of centralisation of power that would eventually lead to various problems ahead.
82
83During the next centuries, the vice-royalty of Peru expanded its borders, encompassing all of South America minus UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}}. Its capital, Lima, became along with Mexico City the largest and wealthiest city of the New World, mainly thanks to the exports of silver from Potosi and Pasco. However, the mantle of opulence, hid a deeply segregated society ruled by the Spanish nobility and high clergy.
84
85Following the rise of the Bourbon Dynasty in UsefulNotes/{{Spain}} (1713) the Vice-royalty experienced a series of reforms,the most important where the creation of the Vice-royalties of Bogota (UsefulNotes/{{Colombia}}) and Rio de la Plata (UsefulNotes/{{Argentina}}), the expulsion of the Jesuit order and confiscation of their lands and the appointment of ''criollos'' (descendants of Spaniards born in America) to the government.
86
87Ironically, this reforms eventually alienated the Viceroyalties since it also ended some of the old alliances with the local nobility and the federal type of control that was the signature of the Habsburg Monarchy was left aside in favour of a stronger centralization of power in the metropolis.
88
89Eventually, the eighteen century saw the decline of the Vice-royalty power, the rebellions of Tupac Amaru II, Jose Santos Atahualpa and Mateo Pumacahua led to the implementation of increasingly strict rules regarding the Indian population that only got worst during UsefulNotes/TheNapoleonicWars when several cities refused to recognize Spanish authority and established their own ''juntas''. Interestingly, during this period, Lima remained a strong royalist bastion, thanks to the fact that the city held a privileged position in the colonies, with its own nobility and merchant society that relied on strong commercial ties with the metropolis.
90
91
92'''Republican Period'''
93
94The first decade of the 19th century saw the rising of several separatists groups in Peru, mainly formed by students from the universities and colleges of Lima, Cuzco and Trujillo but, because of the aforementioned royalist presence in Lima and the increasingly militaristic governments of the Viceroys Jose Fernando de Abascal and Joaquin de la Pezuela, those movements didn't enjoyed the same grade of success than the ones from Bogota and Rio de la Plata.
95
96The newly independent republics of South America saw in the Spanish presence in Peru a threat to their own independence, hence the two main powers, Argentina and Gran Colombia, organized separately and invasion force to the Vice-royalty.
97
98The southern army, led by Jose de San Martín, managed to occupy Lima and declared the independence in July 28th 1821, and was achieved three years later after the northern army, led by Simon Bolivar, defeated Jose de la Serna, the last viceroy in the battles of Junin and Ayacucho. Its identity started to form once the Peruvians refused UsefulNotes/{{Bolivia}}'s (and Simon Bolivar's) plans for a Latin American Confederation and, later, a union between these two states.
99
100The first years of the new Republic of Peru were marked by political and economical instability, alternating between wars with it's neighbors and coup d'etats done by local warlords in almost repetitive succession, it wouldn't be until the government of Ramon Castilla around the 1850s that the country achieved a lengthy period of stability.
101
102Following UsefulNotes/{{The Chincha Islands War}} that pitched Peru, Chile, Ecuador and Bolivia against Spain, the country entered their golden age also called the Age of Guano, the mass production and exportation of this product launched Peru into an economic boom that saw the rise of a new upper class, the modernization of the country and the influx of immigrants, mainly from UsefulNotes/{{China}}, UsefulNotes/{{Japan}}, UsefulNotes/{{Italy}} and UsefulNotes/{{Germany}}.
103
104The Age of Guano came to and end with the UsefulNotes/{{War of the Pacific}} (1879-1883) between Peru, Bolivia and Chile, not only Peru lost the war and was forced to cede it's saltpeter rich southern provinces of Arica, Tacna and Tarapaca but most of its army and infrastructure were destroyed, following the occupation of most of the country (including Lima) by the Chilean troops.
105
106Following the war, the country entered the period of Reconstruction which was plagued by civil wars between former war generals that ended with Nicolás de Pierola's victory.
107
108The beginning of the twentieth century was marked by the rule of the Peruvian Upper Class in a period known as the Aristocratic Republic where the presidents were chosen by and amongst a group formed by the wealthiest citizens. This period gained its peak during the eleven year government of Agusto B. Leguia. Leguia's government saw the modernization of the largest cities at the price of neglect of the Andean provinces and the countryside. In reaction to his government, two political parties appeared that would affect the future development of the country, the APRA and the Peruvian Communist Party (PCP), the increasingly discontent with the government plus the economic crash of 1929 led to the deposition of Leguia. The following years would witness the alternation between military dictatorships and democratic governments.
109
110In this century there were also the roots of the problems that would eventually afflict the country, namely, the ever growing segregation of the people of Amerindian ascendency or factions by the ''criollos''.
111
112In 1968, after a rather scandalous agreement of the president towards a Canadian company for the extraction of oil in Talara, the Armed Forces, led by General Juan Velasco Alvarado, staged a coup against president Fernando Belaunde and deposed him under the excuse of "acting on behalf of the people of Peru", this lead towards the last military dictatorship in Peru. Velasco broke relationships with the US after it tried to force him to make the Canadian company stay in Peru, something that he refused and proceeded to nationalize the oil produced in Talara. This made the US declared a blockade against Peru but, to the joy to the peruvians, many countries in Latinamerica, such as Mexico were sympathetic towards the cause and didn't followed the blockade. Afterwards he made some reforms to cut down the power of the ''Hacendados'', who were landowners and were the power behind the Aristocratic Republic, eventually proclaiming the Agrarian Reform which, while well intended, ended up leaving the land in the hands of people with little to no education who eventually satisfied themselves with an agriculture of self-substantion. In his last years, he began to arm the country for a planned invasion against Chile in order to recover the lost province of Arica and Tarapaca, however, General Morales Bermudez, whose wife was Chilean, instigated a coup against him.
113
114In 1975, the general was deposed and the regime under Morales Bermudez started to become a democracy again, all the while appeasing the US with whom Velasco had broken ties with after the coup. Following a period of instability in TheEighties and TheNineties characterized by general inflation, the surgent of guerrillas in the countryside, and the ten-year dictatorship of Alberto Fujimori, the country finally gained political stability in [[TurnOfTheMillennium the 2000s]]. From here, it had its usual problems of crime, corruption and drug trafficking, coupled with sustaining economic growth.
115[[/folder]]
116
117[[folder:Notable Peruvians]]
118* Creator/IncaGarcilasoDeLaVega. The world's first Latino writer and the earliest known mestizo to be born in the Americas. He wrote several books about the history and events in the continent such as the ''Florida del Inca''. He is best known for ''Comentarios Reales del Inca'', a rundown of Peru's history from the Inca period to the start of the Viceroyalty.
119* Manuela Sáenz--who is not so much Peruvian as Liman. Originally from [[UsefulNotes/{{Ecuador}} Quito]], she had married a Lima-based English merchant before meeting UsefulNotes/SimonBolivar. She became the Liberator's longest-lasting mistress (indeed, wife in all but name), and the Lima networks she developed were instrumental in the joint liberation campaign Bolívar and San Martín waged in Peru.
120* Creator/JoseMariaArguedas. The biggest promoter of the Indigenist Movement that brought focus to the native cultures of the country, as well as the blatant discrimination against people of color.
121* Creator/JoseMariaEguren. The sole {{Symbolis|m}}t Peruvian {{poet|ry}} who developed the same iconic features of the aforementioned movement on his own. He wasn't aware people in Europe were using things like musicality or the free verse as well.
122* Creator/MarioVargasLlosa, award-winning author of primarily historical fiction novels and non-fiction political essays who received the 2010 Nobel Prize in Literature, and unsuccessfully ran against Alberto Fujimori in the 1990 presidential election (see below)
123* Creator/NicomedesSantaCruz, notable decimist from the 20th century.
124* Creator/MichaelBentine. [[note]]The spelling of the family name was originally ''Bentín'', but Mike Anglicised the spelling by adding a terminal "e".[[/note]] Although born in England, comedian, author and TV presenter Bentine was a Peruvian citizen through his father. He was bilingual in Spanish and never forgot his roots in this country, fronting appeals in the UK for aid after natural disasters in Peru. He visited frequently, and, as a member of the family that founded Peru's first airline company, was familiar with the country, its strengths and weaknesses, and worked tirelessly to raise awareness of its existence outside South America.
125* Music/RenataFlores. A {{musician}} who sings trap songs almost exclusively in Quechua.
126* Music/MilenaWarthon. The inventor of the AndeanPop music genre.
127
128* Some notable Peruvian Americans include:
129** Creator/BenjaminBratt was born to a Quechua mother from Lima.
130** Creator/DaniellaAlonso. Her father is a Peruvian of Japanese descent.
131** Creator/JoshKeaton is of Peruvian descent on his mother's side and was raised speaking Spanish as his first language.
132** Creator/RosaSalazar
133** Creator/IsabelaMoner was born to a Peruvian mother and considers herself more Peruvian than American.
134* Creator/BorisVallejo, USA-based fantasy artist.
135* Alberto Fujimori, the nation's first Japanese president and also its most authoritarian, with historians describing him as a dictator. His daughter, Keiko, is the frontwoman of the nation's conservative movement.
136* Joel Guerra, creator of ''WebAnimation/{{HANDS UP|JoelG}}'' and ''WebAnimation/{{ENA}}''.
137[[/folder]]
138----
139!! Tropes common in PeruvianMedia:
140* AndeanMusic: The Music/SimonAndGarfunkel song ''El Cóndor Pasa'' is a Peruvian ballad.
141* CyclicNationalFascination:
142** The telenovela industry during TheNewTens made unreported employment and low-paying jobs the subject of most of its productions. Predictably, it often was a rather romanticized view on the matter -- not accurately portraying the country's poverty, initially over-relying on provinciano stereotypes, and usually revolving around some sort of by-proxy RagsToRiches plot (meaning, the LoveInterest tends to be wealthy). It all can be traced back to ''Series/{{Yo no me llamo Natacha}}'' and ''Series/MiAmorElWachiman''. Respectively, the tale of a GuileHero domestic worker who travels to Lima, the capital, to work for well-off families; and the love story between a pituca (rich, sheltered girl) and a poor security guard. There have been made telenovelas about carretilleras (ambulant, food vendors), informal clothing makers, landladies of low-income zones, and Cumbia singers. It was such a popular trend that one of the latest productions is a {{Deconstruction}} spawned by a [[https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapa_tu_combi tragedy]] that made all of the previous idealistic takes much HarsherInHindsight.
143** The Indigenista movement started a cycle of fascination-rejection toward the country's many indigenous cultures. To be more specific, whatever remains of Incan and Aymaran cultures after Spain's invasion and assimilation. The main proposers sought to create appreciation toward that heritage in an attempt to tone down the blatant, problematic Eurocentrism that had dominated Peruvian society up until then. As a result, works exploring the struggles and traditions of the Indigenous people's descendants were created. This caused heavy rejection, further highlighting Peru's deep-seated racism issues, until it cycled back to appreciating it during leftist administrations (and during TheEighties terrorist period), where there was a noticeable push for indigenous cultures to not only be part of school curricula but also for it to be presented in a favorable light. Peruvian soap operas and films tend to reflect this trend. Examples of this are ''Film/TheMilkOfSorrow'', ''Film/{{Juliana}}'', ''Series/{{El gran reto}}'', and ''[[Film/{{Winapacha}} Wiñaypacha]]''. In terms of music, pop-trap musicians Music/MilenaWarthon and Music/RenataFlores have adopted traditional indigenous music influences and instruments; with the latter singing some verses in Quechua.
144----
145[[AC:The Peruvian flag]]
146https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/peru_flag_4268.png
147
148->The tradition says that the Libertador San Martín dreamed the first flag of Perú after seeing the flamingos of the coast flying in the sky; the red hoist and fly stripes symbolize the blood of Peru's fallen freedom fighters that fought for the independence of the country and the white central stripe represents peace.
149----
150[[AC:The Peruvian national anthem]]
151
152->Somos libres
153->seámoslo siempre, seámoslo siempre
154->y antes niegue sus luces
155->sus luces, ¡sus luces el Sol!
156->Que faltemos al voto solemne
157->que la patria al Eterno elevó,
158->Que faltemos al voto solemne
159->que la patria al Eterno elevó.
160->Que faltemos al voto solemne
161->que la patria al Eterno elevó.
162
163->En su cima los Andes sostengan
164->la bandera o pendón bicolor,
165->que a los siglos anuncie el esfuerzo
166->que ser libres, que ser libres
167->que ser libres por siempre nos dio.
168->A su sombra vivamos tranquilos,
169->y al nacer por sus cumbres el Sol,
170->renovemos el gran juramento
171->que rendimos, que rendimos
172->que rendimos al Dios de Jacob,
173->que rendimos al Dios de Jacob, al Dios del Jacob...
174
175->Somos libres
176->seámoslo siempre, seámoslo siempre
177->y antes niegue sus luces
178->sus luces, ¡sus luces el Sol!
179->Que faltemos al voto solemne
180->que la patria al Eterno elevó,
181->Que faltemos al voto solemne
182->que la patria al Eterno elevó.
183->Que faltemos al voto solemne
184->que la patria al Eterno elevó.
185
186--
187
188->We are free!
189->May we always be so, may we always be so!
190->And may the Sun renounce its light,
191->its light, its light,
192->Before we break the solemn vow
193->which the homeland lifted up to the Eternal,
194->Before we break the solemn vow
195->which the homeland lifted up to the Eternal.
196->Before we break the solemn vow
197->which the homeland lifted up to the Eternal.
198
199->On its summits may the Andes sustain
200->the two-color flag or standard,
201->may it announce to the centuries the effort
202->that being free, that being free
203->that being free gave us forever.
204->Under its shadow may we live calmly
205->and, at birth of the sun in its summits,
206->may we all renew the great oath
207->that we rendered, that we rendered
208->that we rendered to the God of Jacob,
209->that we rendered to the God of Jacob, the God of Jacob...
210
211->We are free!
212->May we always be so, may we always be so!
213->And may the Sun renounce its light,
214->its light, its light,
215->Before we break the solemn vow
216->which the homeland lifted up to the Eternal,
217->Before we break the solemn vow
218->which the homeland lifted up to the Eternal.
219->Before we break the solemn vow
220->which the homeland lifted up to the Eternal.
221----
222[[AC:Government]]
223* Unitary presidential republic
224** President: Dina Boluarte
225** Vice President: - (vacant)
226** Prime Minister: Gustavo Adrianzén
227** President of Congress: Alejandro Soto Reyes
228----
229[[AC:Miscellaneous]]
230* '''Capitol and largest city:''' Lima
231* '''Population:''' 32,824,358
232* '''Area:''' 1,285,216 sq km (496,225 sq mi) (19th)
233* '''Currency:''' Peruvian sol (S/) (PEN)
234* '''ISO-3166-1 Code:''' PE
235* '''Country calling code:''' 51
236* '''Highest point:''' Huascarán (6768 m/22,205 ft) (11th)

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