Chinatown Lima

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The Chinatown in Lima, locally known as Barrio Chino, is centered around two blocks -the seventh and eighth- of Jirón Ucayali in downtown, a stretch almost universally referred to as Calle Capón, a name acquired during the Spanish Colonial period as it was the location of the market for castrated pigs.
In the 20th Century Chinatown had shrunk but nevertheless maintained a distinct ethnic character. In 1971 an archway, a gift from the people of Taiwan, was erected to mark the entrance to Chinatown. Nonetheless, the streets of the neighborhood were so crammed with stalls and street sellers that they were essentially impassable to vehicles. The crowding also made it a notorious haven for pickpockets and cut-purses.

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