Why Lima is called ‘the Octopus’?

          Lima is the capital of Peru. It is the country’s commercial and industrial centre. The city is a modern oasis, surrounded by the Peruvian coastal desert close to the western side of the Andes Mountains. The name Lima evolved from the Quechua name Rimac, meaning ‘talker’.

          Metropolitan Lima is a huge, city without a fixed form. Its shapelessness and varying concentration of population within has given it a nickname: El Pulpo, ‘the Octopus’! The city has been under the process of industrialization from the 1930s. Today, there are around 7,000 factories in the city, which manufacture and process textiles, clothing, food, chemicals, fish, and leather and oil derivatives. Lima’s historic centre is a UNESCO World Heritage site from 1988. The Cathedral and the Monastery of San Francisco, the Sanctuary of Las Nazarenes and its beaches are some of the major attractions of the city. Elevated levels of air pollution from automobiles and buses and by earthquakes threaten Lima’s historic monuments.

Picture Credit : Google