'Jauja' is a town of 25,000 people in central
Peru, capital of a province with a population of 105,000. It is situated in the fertile
Mantaro Valley, 45 kilometers to the north of
Huancayo (the capital of
Junín Region), at an altitude of 3,400 m.

Jauja's cathedral was the first to be built in Peru (and South America) on the orders of Francisco Pizarro
After the Spanish had sealed the
conquest of Peru by taking
Cusco in
1533, Spanish
conquistador Francisco Pizarro established Jauja as Peru's provisional capital in April of
1534. The foundation of
Lima by Pizarro in
1535, however, overshadowed Jauja's importance.
Jauja has been surpassed by
Huancayo as a commercial center in recent years. The small city, however, has retained much of its colonial-era charm.
In Spanish language, Jauja is also the name of the proverbial Land of
Cockaigne where people can live not having to work.
The riches of the real Jauja at the time of the conquest created this myth.
Over the years the people of Jauja have come to refer to their town and region as "el pais de Jauja" literally the country of Jauja. This name was also used in Edgardo Rivera's book on the area and its culture.
External links
★
Locally made Website
★
Another site with pictures and information
★
La tierra de Jauja, a 1547 sketch (''
paso'') by the Spanish playwright
Lope de Rueda in which two thieves steal from a simpleton, distracting him with tales of the marvels of the land of Jauja.