Ottawa (i/ˈɒtəwɑː/ or /ˈɒtəwə/) is the capital of Canada, the second largest city in the Province of Ontario, and the fourth largest city in the country.[3] The city is located on the south bank of the Ottawa River in the eastern portion of Southern Ontario. Ottawa borders Gatineau, Quebec, located on the north bank of the Ottawa River; together they form the National Capital Region (NCR).[6]。
The 2006 census had the city's population as 812,129,[3] and the metropolitan population as 1,130,761.[5] In 2009, Ottawa-Gatineau's population was estimated at 1,220,674, fifth among census metropolitan areas in Canada.[7] Mercer ranked Ottawa with the second highest quality of living of any in the Americas, and 14th highest in the world.[8] It was also considered the second cleanest city in Canada, and third cleanest city in the world.[9]。
Founded in 1826 as Bytown and incorporated as "Ottawa" in 1855, the city has evolved into a political and technological center of Canada. Its original boundaries were expanded through numerous minor annexations and ultimately replaced by a new city incorporation and major amalgamation in 2001 which significantly increased its land area.。
The name "Ottawa" is derived from the Algonquin word adawe, meaning "to trade".[10] Ottawa and the Ottawa Valley was home to the Algonquin people prior to the arrival of Europeans during the fur and subsequent lumber trade eras. Initially an Irish and French Christian settlement,[11] Ottawa has become a multicultural - bilingual city with a diverse population.[12]。
History
Étienne Brûlé, the first European to travel up the Ottawa River, passed by Ottawa in 1610 on his way to the Great Lakes.[13] Samuel de Champlain three years later on his trip wrote about the waterfalls of the area, and about his encounters with the Algonquins, a people who have been using the Ottawa River for centuries.[14] They called the river Kichi Sibi or Kichissippi' meaning "Great River" or "Grand River".[15] These early explorers were later followed by many missionaries.[13][16][17]。
Philemon Wright, a New Englander, created the first settlement in the area on March 7, 1800, on the north side of the river, across from Ottawa in Hull.[18][19] He, with five other families and twenty-five labourers,[15] set about to create an agricultural community[20] called Wrightsville and Wright pioneered the Ottawa Valley timber trade (soon to be the most significant economic activity) by transporting timber by river from the Ottawa Valley to Quebec City.[21]。
Bytown (Ottawa's early name) came about because of the Rideau Canal, on which preliminary work began in 1826,[22] the year of Bytown's founding. Its construction was overseen by Colonel John By, and was intended to provide a secure route between Montreal and Kingston on Lake Ontario, bypassing the stretch of the St. Lawrence River bordering New York State.[23] Colonel By set up a military barracks on the site of today's Parliament Hill. He also laid out the streets of town with its "Upper Town" and "Lower Town" separated by the canal. Bytown's population grew to 1,000 as the Rideau Canal was being completed in 1832.[24][25] Bytown was renamed Ottawa in 1855, when it was incorporated as a city.[26]。
On December 31, 1857, Queen Victoria was asked to choose a common capital for the Province of Canada and chose Ottawa.[27] The Queen's advisers suggested she pick Ottawa for several reasons:[28] Ottawa's position in the back country made it more defensible, while still allowing easy transportation over the Ottawa River. Ottawa was at a point nearly exactly midway between Toronto and Quebec City (500 kilometres (310 mi)),[29] and that the smaller size of the town made it less likely that politically motivated mobs could go on a rampage and destroy government buildings, as had happened in the previous Canadian capitals.[30]。
The Centre Block on Parliament Hill under construction in 1863. 。
Starting in the 1850's large sawmills began to be erected by entrepreneurs, known as lumber barons, and would become some of the largest in the world.[31] Rail lines erected in 1854 connected Ottawa to areas south, and to the transcontinental rail network via Hull and Lachute, Quebec in 1886.[32] Between 1910 and 1912, the Chateau Laurier, and a downtown Union Station would be constructed.[33] Public transportation began in 1870 with a horsecar system.[34], overtaken in the 1890s by a vast electric streetcar system that would last until 1959. The Hull-Ottawa fire of 1900 destroyed two thirds of Hull, including 40 per cent of its residential buildings and most of its largest employers along the waterfront.[35] The fire also spread across the Chaudière Bridge and destroyed about one fifth of Ottawa from the Lebreton Flats south to Booth Street and down to Dow's Lake.[36] The Centre Block of the Parliament buildings were destroyed by fire on February 3, 1916.[37] The House of Commons and Senate were temporarily relocated to the recently constructed Victoria Memorial Museum, now the Canadian Museum of Nature[38] until the completion of the new Centre Block in 1922, the centrepiece of which is a dominant Gothic revival styled structure known as the Peace Tower.[39]。
Urban planner Jacques Greber was hired in the 1940s to work on a master plan for the National Capital Region (the Greber Plan).[40] Jacques Greber was the creator of the National Capital Greenbelt, the Parkway System, as well as many other projects throughout the NCR.[41] He was also responsible for the removal of the streetcar system and closing down historic downtown Union Station (now Government Conference Centre) in favour of a suburban station several kilometres to the east.[42] In the 1960s through 1980s, the National Capital Region experienced a building boom.[43] This was followed by large growth in the high-tech industry during the 1990s and 2000s.[44] In 2001, in an amalgamation legislated by the Province, all twelve existing municipalities in the area were terminated and replaced by a new incorporation of the City of Ottawa.[。
Geography
In view from left to right: Gatineau the Ottawa River and Downtown Ottawa 。
Ottawa is situated on the south bank of the Ottawa River, and contains the mouths of the Rideau River and Rideau Canal.[46] The oldest part of the city (including what remains of Bytown) is known as Lower Town, and occupies an area between the canal and the rivers. Across the canal to the west lies Centretown and Downtown Ottawa, which is the city's financial and commercial hub. As of June 29, 2007, the Rideau Canal, which stretches 202 km (126 mi) to Kingston, Fort Henry and four Martello towers in the Kingston area was recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[47]。
Located on a major, yet mostly dormant fault line,[48] Ottawa is occasionally struck by earthquakes. Examples include a magnitude 5.2 earthquake on January 1, 2000,[49] a magnitude 4.5 earthquake on February 24, 2006,[50] a magnitude 5.0 earthquake on June 23, 2010.[51]。
Across the Ottawa River, which forms the border between Ontario and Quebec, lies the city of Gatineau, itself the result of amalgamation of the former Quebec cities of Hull and Aylmer together with Gatineau.[52] Although formally and administratively separate cities in two separate provinces, Ottawa and Gatineau (along with a number of nearby municipalities) collectively constitute the National Capital Region, with a combined population exceeding one million residents, which is considered a single metropolitan area. One federal crown corporation (the National Capital Commission, or NCC) has significant land holdings in both cities, including sites of historical and touristic importance. The NCC, through its responsibility for planning and development of these lands, is an important contributor to both cities. Around the main urban area is an extensive greenbelt, administered by the National Capital Commission for conservation and leisure, and comprising mostly forest, farmland and marshland.[53]。
Ottawa一般指渥太华
1、渥太华是加拿大的首都,也是加拿大第四大城市 ,人口132.4万,4715平方公里,位于安大略省东南部,渥太华河南岸,多伦多以东400公里,蒙特利尔以西190公里。
2、ontario一般指安大略省,安大略省是加拿大的十个省之一,为加拿大的一级行政单位,面积106.8万平方公里。
安大略省南部与美国的明尼苏达、密歇根、俄亥俄、宾夕法尼亚和纽约诸州为界,水域自西面的森林湖直到东部康沃尔的圣劳伦斯河,其中包括五大湖中的苏必利尔湖、休伦湖、伊利湖和安大略湖。
扩展资料:
截至2014年,渥太华共实现地区生产总值582亿美元,人均4.4万美元,该市的经济以轻工业为主,有造纸、木材加工、食品、机械制造等工业。第二大经济来源是旅游业。
截至2010年7月1日,安大略省拥有人口1321.1万,居加拿大人口第一位,其中65%左右为英国后裔,5%为法国后裔,该省原住民为北美印第安人,占1.5%。2013年,安大略省实现国民生产总值(GDP)6957.05亿加元,人均国民生产总值4.64万加元。
参考资料来源:
百度百科-渥太华
百度百科-安大略省
Ottawa。
渥太华是加拿大的首都,也是加拿大第四大城市,人口132.4万,4715平方公里,位于安大略省东南部,渥太华河南岸,多伦多以东400公里,蒙特利尔以西190公里。
渥太华在1826年9月26日以“拜顿”之名建立,为爱尔兰和法国的基督教乡镇,1850年1月1日合并为一个城镇,并于1855年1月1日以“渥太华”之名合并取代,并不断发展成为加拿大的政治和工业技术中心,现在已成为一个具有多元文化、高水准生活水平、低失业率的大城市。
“渥太华”这个名称是来自亚冈昆语adawe,意思为“贸易”。渥太华常被华人简称为渥京。
扩展资料:
截至2014年,渥太华共实现地区生产总值582亿美元,人均4.4万美元,该市的经济以轻工业为主,有造纸、木材加工、食品、机械制造等工业。第二大经济来源是旅游业。
渥太华所处的优越地理位置为工业、农业、商业和金融业的发展提供了有利的环境和条件。渥太华的主要农作物是小麦、大豆、玉米、甜菜、土豆和烟草,其农业全部实现了机械化、电气化、水利化和化肥化,并在加强农业科研和成果推广的基础上实现了由“雨育农业”向“生态农业”的转变。
在渥太华城区和近郊,传统的皮革加工、木材加工、造纸、建筑材料等工业已不占重要地位,取而代之的是电子、生物研究与开发、医疗器械、办公设备、宇航与卫星通讯设备、消防与环卫设备等行业。
参考资料来源:百度百科-渥太华。
渥太华,加拿大,英语和法语,就Canadian。
加拿大首都是渥太华,也是加拿大第六大城市,渥太华在加拿大安大略省,面积2778平方公里,位于安大略省东南部,渥太华河南岸,多伦多以东400公里,蒙特利尔以西190公里。渥太华常被华人简称为渥京。
1926年,加拿大独立,渥太华成为首都。渥太华是加拿大的政治和工业技术中心,现在已成为一个具有多元文化、高水准生活水平、低失业率的大城市。
渥太华市区共分为11个部分:拜沃德市场、市中心、西市中心、上城、格利布、金三角、勒布雷顿、下城、东渥太华、南渥太华、桑迪山。
渥太华是一个文化城市,处处充满浓厚的文化气息。市内有国家艺术中心、国家博物馆、国家画廊、国家人类博物馆、国家自然博物馆、国家科技博物馆、国家集邮博物馆、国家航空展览馆等30个博物馆和50个堪称世界一流的艺术馆及剧院。
每年夏季,渥太华还举办渥太华国际室内音乐节、渥太华国际爵士乐音乐节和渥太华思科蓝调音乐节等文化盛会,是名副其实的文化殿堂。
拓展资料:
加拿大由十个省和三个地区(英语:territory,法语:territoires)组成。
10个省分别是:
阿尔伯塔省
不列颠哥伦比亚省
曼尼托巴省
纽芬兰与拉布拉多省
新不伦瑞克省
新斯科舍省
安大略省
爱德华王子岛省
魁北克省
萨斯喀彻温省
3各地区分别是:
努纳武特地区
西北地区
育空地区
在国内很多人认为温哥华是加拿大首都,其实不是,温哥华是加拿大的主要港口城市和重要经济中心,也是加拿大西部的政治、文化、旅游和交通中心。该市已连续多年被联合国人居署评为全球最宜居的城市之一。
温哥华坐拥加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省的核心地带,是一座国际化大都市,按人口来算,温哥华是加拿大第三大城市。2016年,温哥华市区人口已达63.2万。
参考资料:
渥太华百度百科