Capital city

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A capital city (or just capital) is the area of a country, province, region, or state regarded as enjoying primary status; although there are exceptions, a capital is almost always a city which physically encompasses the offices and meeting places of the seat of government and is usually fixed by law or by the constitution. An alternative term is political capital, but this phrase has a second meaning based on an alternate sense of the word capital. The capital is frequently the largest city of its constituent area.

The word capital is derived from the Latin caput meaning "head" and, in the United States, the related term capitol refers to the building where government business is chiefly conducted.

The seats of government in major sub-state jurisdictions are often called "capitals", but this is typically the case only in countries with some degree of Federalism, wherein major substate legal jurisdictions have elements of sovereignty. In unitary states, an "administrative center" or other similar term is typically used for such locations besides the national capital city. For example, the seat of government in a State of the United States is usually called its "capital", but the main city in a region of the United Kingdom is usually not called such, even though in Ireland, a county's main town is usually called its "capital". On the other hand, these four subdivisions of the United Kingdom do have capital cities: ScotlandEdinburgh, WalesCardiff, Northern IrelandBelfast, and EnglandLondon.

In Canada, the ten Provinces of Canada all have capital cities, including Quebec City, Toronto, Victoria, B.C., Winnipeg, et cetera. The states of such countries as Mexico, Brazil, and Australia all have capital cities, and these are the capitals of the six states of Australia: Adelaide, Brisbane, Hobart, Melbourne, Perth, and Sydney. In Australia, the term "capital cities" includes seven cities: these six, plus the Federal capital of Canberra. These also include five of the largest cities of Australia, with Newcastle, New South Wales, being the sixth-largest city.

In the Federal Republic of Germany, each of its constituent republics (or "Lands") has its own capital city, such as Bonn, Frankfurt am Main, Hamburg, Heidelberg, Stuttgart, and Munich. Likewise, each of the republics of the Russian Federation has its own capital city.

At the lower administrative subdivisions in various English-speaking countries, terms such as county town, county seat, and borough seat are usually used.

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[edit] Origins of capital cities

Historically, the major economic center of a state or region often becomes the focal point of political power, and becomes a capital through conquest or federation. These were the cases for Ancient Baghdad, Berlin, London, Madrid, Moscow, Ancient Rome (the largest conquerer of them all), Peking, Stockholm, Tokyo, and Vienna. The capital city naturally attracts politically motivated people and those whose skills are needed for efficient administration of national or imperial governments, such as lawyers, political scientists, bankers, journalists, and public policy mavens. Sometimes, religious leaders are also involved, such as in the cases of Constantinople (more than one religion), Rome (the Roman Catholic Church), Jerusalem (more than one religion), Ancient Baghdad, London (the Anglican Church), Moscow (the Russian Orthodox Church), Paris, and Peking.

A capital city that is also the prime economic, cultural, or intellectual center of a nation or an empire is sometimes referred to as a primate city. Such is certainly the case with Athens, Beijing, Brussels, Buenos Aires, Cairo, Copenhagen, Lima, Lisbon, London, Madrid, Manila, Montevideo, Mexico City, Nairobi, Paris, Prague, Ancient Rome, Seoul, Stockholm, Tokyo, Vienna, and Warsaw among national capitals. This is also the case with cities like Adelaide, Atlanta, Barcelona, Brisbane, Boston, Calgary, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Frankfurt am Main, Geneva, Hamburg, Heidelberg, Irkutsk, Istanbul, Lyon, Marseilles, Melbourne, Milan, Minneapolis-St.Paul, Munich, Naples, Nagasaki, Osaka, Perth, Phoenix, Rio de Janerio, Sao Paulo, Salt Lake City, Sapporo, Shangai, St. Petersburg, Sydney, Turin, Toronto, Vancouver, B.C., Volgagrad, and Winnipeg, in their respective state, province, or constituent republic (in cases such as Germany and Russia).

Capitals are sometimes sited to discourage further growth in an existing major city. Naypyidaw was founded in Burma's interior with the justification that the former capital, Rangoon, was considered to be overcrowded.[1]

The convergence of political and economic or cultural power is by no means universal. Traditional capitals may be economically eclipsed by provincial rivals, as occurred with Nanjing by Shanghai. The decline of a dynasty or culture could also mean the extinction of its capital city, such as occurred with Babylon and Cahokia.

[edit] Deliberately-created capital cities

A significant subset of present-day capital cities, such as Abuja, Nigeria (December 1991), Ankara, Turkey, Brasília, Brazil (April 1960), Canberra (1927), Islamabad, Frankfurt, Kentucky, Jefferson City, Missouri, New Delhi, Oklahoma City (1889), Ottawa, Quezon City, Washington, D.C. (1800), and Wellington, New Zealand, were one of these two, or a combination of both:
A. Deliberately planned cities that were built as an alternative to the seat of government that had been located in an established population center. There have been various reasons for this, including the overcrowding in a major metropolitan area, and the desire to place the capital city in a location with a better climate (usually a less-tropical one), B. A town that was chosen as a compromise between two cities (or other political divisions), neither of which would allow the other the honor of being the capital city. Usually, the new capital is located geographically midway between the two (roughly). The above have been the cases of
1. Canberra, Australia, which was chosen as a compromise located between Melbourne and Sydney.
2. Frankfurt, Kentucky, which is midway between Louisville and Lexington, Kentucky.
3. Ottawa, Ontario, which is located along the boundary between the Province of Quebec and the Province of Ontario - the two most populous of the ten provinces, and also roughly midway between the two most-populous cities of Canada, Montreal, Quebec, and Toronto, Ontario.
4. Wellington, New Zealand, which is located at the southern tip of the North Island of New Zealand, the more populous island, immediately across the Cook Strait from the South Island. The capital city was moved here from Auckland, in the northern extent of the North Island, in order to put the capital in a better location for the South Islanders. There is a ferry between Wellington and the South Island, and also on clear days the South Island is visible from Wellington.

When the United States of America established its present Constitution by writing it in 1787, the question of its capital city arose. Several cities desired to be the national capital: Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, Richmond, Virginia, etc., but none of these was willing to concede this honor to one of the others. Also, there was rivalry between the proposed 13 States of the United States as to which one would contain the capital city. Given this situation, the compromise was reached to establish a Federal district separate from any of the States, and this would contain a brand-new city for the capital. The capital district was given the name of the District of Columbia, and the capital city of Washington was founded within it. In 1800, Washington was ready to house the Federal government for the first time.

The District of Columbia was the first such district to be set aside purposely for a capital city, and this arrangement has been followed by Australia (the Australian Capital Territory), Mexico (the Federal District), and Brazil (where the district and the city both have the same name, Brasilia).

[edit] Unorthodox capital city arrangements

A number of cases exist where states have multiple capitals, and there are also several states that have no capital.

[edit] Capitals that are not the seat of government

Countries in the world where capital and seat of government are currently separated:

[edit] International entities

[edit] The Capital as a symbol

With the rise of modern empires and the nation-state, the capital city has become a symbol for the state and its government, and imbued with political meaning. Unlike medieval capitals, which were declared wherever a monarch held his or her court, the selection, relocation, founding, or capture of a modern capital city is an emotional event. For example:

The British-built town of New Delhi represented a simultaneous break and continuity with the past — the location of Delhi being where many imperial capitals were built e.g. Indraprastha, Dhillika. and Shahjahanabad, but the actual capital being the new British-built town designed by Edwin Lutyens. Wellington, located on the southwestern tip of the North Island of New Zealand, replaced the much quite northerly city of Auckland in order to place the national capital close to the South Island and hence to placate its residents.

[edit] Capitals in military strategy

The capital city is almost always a primary target in a war, as capturing it usually guarantees capture of much of the enemy government, victory for the attacking forces, or at the very least demoralization for the defeated forces.

In ancient China, where governments were massive centralized bureaucracies with little flexibility on the provincial level, a dynasty could easily be toppled with the fall of its capital. In the Three Kingdoms period, both Shu and Wu fell when their respective capitals of Chengdu and Jianye fell. The Ming dynasty relocated its capital from Nanjing to Beijing, where they could more effectively control the generals and troops guarding the borders from Mongols and Manchus. The Ming was destroyed when the Li Zicheng took their seat of power, and this pattern repeats itself in Chinese history, until the fall of the traditional Confucian monarchy in the 20th century. After the Qing Dynasty's collapse, decentralization of authority and improved transportation and communication technologies allowed both the Chinese Nationalists and Chinese Communists to rapidly relocate capitals and keep their leadership structures intact during the great crisis of Japanese invasion.

National capitals were arguably less important as military objectives in other parts of the world, including the West, because of socioeconomic trends toward localized authority, a strategic modus operandi especially popular after the development of feudalism and reaffirmed by the development of democratic and capitalistic philosophies. In 1204, after the Latin Crusaders captured the Byzantine capital, Constantinople, Byzantine forces were able to regroup in several provinces; provincial noblemen managed to reconquer the capital after 60 years and preserve the empire for another 200 years after that. The British forces sacked various American capitals repeatedly during the Revolutionary War and War of 1812, but American forces could still carry on fighting from the countryside, where they enjoyed support from local governments and the traditionally independent frontiersmen-civilians. Exceptions to these generalizations include highly centralized states such as France, whose centralized bureaucracies could effectively coordinate far-flung resources, giving the state a powerful advantage over less coherent rivals, but risking utter ruin if the capital is taken; in their military strategies, traditional enemies of France such as Prussia (in the Franco-Prussian War of 1871) focused on the capture of Paris.

[edit] Relative size of capital cities

In most countries the seat of government is situated in the largest city; exceptions to this practice are listed below.

[edit] Capitals located in the 2nd largest city

[edit] Capitals located in the 3rd largest city

[edit] Capitals located in the 4th largest city

[edit] Capitals located in the 5th largest city

[edit] Other capitals

Unless otherwise stated population data is based on figures presented in their respective Wikipedia articles.

[edit] Distance to the capital

The greatest distance between a capital and the remotest part of the country is from

Other great distances are

[edit] Distances between capital cities (nearest and farthest)

The closest two capital cities of two sovereign countries are Vatican City, Vatican, and Rome, Italy, one of which is inside the other (the distance between the middle points, St. Peter's Square/Piazza Venezia is about 2 km).
The second closest two capital cities between two sovereign countries are Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo and Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo, which are about 1.6 km (1 mile) apart, one upstream from the other on different banks of the Congo River (the distance between the middle points is about 10 km).
Vienna and Bratislava, sometimes erroneously considered the two closest capitals, are actually 55 km (34 miles) apart.
The longest distance from one capital of a sovereign country to the one closest to it is 2330 km (1448 miles) between Wellington, New Zealand and Canberra, Australia. Each is nearer to the other than to the capital of any other sovereign country.
The greatest distance between the capitals of two sovereign countries that share a border is 6423 km (3991 miles), between Pyongyang, North Korea and Moscow, Russia.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Pedrosa, Veronica (20 November 2006). "Burma's 'seat of the kings'". Al Jazeera. http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/80733C47-7F1C-45EB-BB8E-805DB15BFE67.htm. Retrieved 21 November 2006. 
  2. ^ Demey, Thierry (2007). Brussels, capital of Europe. S. Strange (trans.). Brussels: Badeaux. ISBN 2-9600414-2-9. 
  3. ^ Geonames.com
  4. ^ "Geonames.com". Geonames.com. http://www.geonames.org/SZ/largest-cities-in-swaziland.html. Retrieved 2010-06-20. 
  5. ^ "Geonames.com". Geonames.com. http://www.geonames.org/TT/largest-cities-in-trinidad-and-tobago.html. Retrieved 2010-06-20. 
  6. ^ "Geonames.org". Geonames.org. http://www.geonames.org/BZ/largest-cities-in-belize.html. Retrieved 2010-06-20. 
  7. ^ "Encarta". Encarta. http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefFAF.aspx?refid=631504875. 
  8. ^ "Geonames.org". Geonames.org. http://www.geonames.org/PW/largest-cities-in-palau.html. Retrieved 2010-06-20. 
  9. ^ "Geonames.com". Geonames.com. http://www.geonames.org/CI/largest-cities-in-ivory-coast.html. Retrieved 2010-06-20. 
  10. ^ "Geonames.com". Geonames.com. http://www.geonames.org/LK/largest-cities-in-sri-lanka.html. Retrieved 2010-06-20. 
  11. ^ "Mongabay.com". Population.mongabay.com. http://population.mongabay.com/population/malta. Retrieved 2010-06-20. 
  12. ^ The Washington, D.C. urban area is the 8th largest metropolitan area by population in the United States.
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