HISTORY & CULTURE

Peñico: Peruvian citadel that is nearly 4,000 years old opens doors to tourists

Site of 3,800-year-old citadel from the Caral civilisation, one of the oldest in the world and located in northern Peru, opens to the public after eight years of scientific studies and restoration work.

Aerial view of the citadel of Peñico, located in the province of Huaura, Lima Department, Peru, on July 12, 2025. Foto: AFP/ERNESTO BENAVIDES

To the music of conch shell trumpets, a 3,800-year-old citadel of the Caral civilisation – one of the oldest in the world – opened its doors to visitors in Peru after eight years of study and restoration work.

The archaeological site, known as Peñico, was a meeting point for trade between the first human communities on the Pacific coast and those from the Andes and Amazon regions, researchers have said. 

Located in the Supe valley, some 110 miles (180 kilometres) north of the Peruvian capital Lima and around 12 miles from the Pacific ocean, Peñico was a hilly landscape before exploration work began in 2017.

Archaeologists believe it could hold insights into why the Caral civilisation – which flourished between 3,000 and 1,800 BC – faded. 

At the opening ceremony, artists from the region played pututus – the traditional shell trumpets – during an ancestral ritual offering to the Pachamama, Mother Earth, consisting of agricultural products, coca leaves and local drinks.

Penico was an "organised urban centre devoted to agriculture and trade between the coast, the mountains and the forest," said archaeologist Ruth Shady, who leads research on the site.

The site itself dates back to between 1,800 and 1,500 BC, she added. 

It was built on a geological terrace 2000 feet (600 metres) above sea level, parallel to a river to avoid flooding. 

Research carried out by the Peruvian Culture Ministry has identified 18 constructions, including buildings and residential complexes. 

Researchers believe that it was built at the same time as the first civilisations in the Middle East and Asia. 

Shady said researchers are hoping the site can shed light on the crisis they think helped hasten the end of the Caral civilisation. This crisis, she said, was linked to climatic changes that led to droughts and affected agricultural activities in the region. 

"We want to understand how the Caral civilisation formed and developed over time, and how it came to be in crisis as a result of climate change," she added.