| Pimpingos | |
|---|---|
| District | |
| Country |
|
| Region | Cajamarca |
| Province | Cutervo |
| Capital | Pimpingos |
| Government | |
| • Mayor | Joselito Gonzales Perales |
| Area | |
| • Total | 186.04 km2 (71.83 sq mi) |
| Elevation | 1,720 m (5,640 ft) |
| Population (2005 census) | |
| • Total | 6,196 |
| • Density | 33/km2 (86/sq mi) |
| Time zone | PET (UTC-5) |
| UBIGEO | 060606 |
Pimpingos District is one of fifteen districts of the Cutervo Province in the Cajamarca Region in Peru. It was created on 22 October 1910 by Law No. 1296. It is one of the oldest districts of the province.
It is located approximately between 06°37′35″S and 06°44′50″S and between 78°39′10″W and 78°46′50″W.
North: With Colasay Chora district and the province of Jaén.
The In the districts of Toribio Casanova and St. Thomas.
South: In the districts of Santo Tomas and San Andrés.
W. In the district of Santa Cruz de Cutervo.
Pimping The district has a population of approximately 6 196 inhabitants by 2005, which has the following structure of the population, it reflects a larger composition that falls in children and young people.
Pimping is an area of 186.04 km2, representing 6.1% of the total Provincial. The population density is 41.66 inhabitants per km2. In the area of the department represents 0.56% of the total area.
Population density Pimping District, is below the density of the province and beyond departmental and national density
Pimping The District has 30 villages, of which 2 have the status of Minor Population Centers: Condorhuasi White House.
The Province Cutervo, representing 10.2% of the total population of Department of Cajamarca and Pimping represents 5.3% of the total population of the Province of Cutervo.
Cajamarca is the most rural department in the country, reaching a rate of 72%. It is also the third most populous department in the country, with a rate of 5.7%
Building Official: Law No. 1296 October 22, 1910 became part of the province of Cutervo, dismembered Jaén.
Pimping The village also has a special place in the history of Peru by the Peruvian territory have been integrated using the international rights of Self-Determination of Peoples and utiposidetes in 1830.
Pimping The word is in the geographical map, drawn by the Spanish, assigned as the receipt of real lace Marañón River that has been made in the late 18th century to prevent the illicit removal of snuff Bracamoros that produced the Provinces Jaén and Chachapoyas, won by Don Alonso de Alvarado for the years of 1553.
The territory of present Pimping District, belonged to the Pre-Hispanic chiefdom Ethnicity and Huambo, which were conquered by the Inca and then by the Spanish invaders.