Mala District

Mala
District

Coat of arms
Country  Peru
Region Lima
Province Cañete
Founded July 22, 1825
Capital Mala
Government
  Mayor Victor Hugo Carbajal Gonzales
Area
  Total 129.31 km2 (49.93 sq mi)
Elevation 30 m (100 ft)
Population (2007 census)
  Total 27,881
  Density 215.61/km2 (558.4/sq mi)
Time zone PET (UTC-5)
UBIGEO 150509

Mala District is one of sixteen districts of the province Cañete in Peru.[1] It limits on the north with San Antonio District and Santa Cruz de Flores District that separates them the Mala river. To the south-east, the Coayllo District.

History

There once was a zone where the Huarcos, brave and strong warriors that defended with their lives the fort of Cañete against the devastating Incas. After the Huarcos civilization crumbled, Mala was ruled by the Incas in the Pachacamac temple located 30 km of Lima.

Near the Mala river there is a pre-incan tower (the area is now called "Las Totoritas") where Diego de Almagro and Francisco Pizarro had a reunion in 1537 and they were going to make peace. According to Pedro Cieza de León, Pizarro was planning to make a stampede to Almagro because he was his enemy. From the 19th Century, the animal husbandry Rinconada de Mala, property of the Asín family, is at service but now only the remaining part of the estate. It is at the Km.86 of the Panamerican Highway.

Festivals

The patronal feast is celebrated at the Saint Peter's feast day, June 29. In its traditional food the district has the tamale, the chicharron, the bruta soup (a soup with dry rehydrated potatoes with noodles, also called in Spanish "mancha pecho"), the carapulcra, and the chapana (a sweet yucca).

See also

Administrative divisions of Peru

References

Coordinates: 12°39′27″S 76°37′45″W / 12.65750°S 76.62917°W / -12.65750; -76.62917

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