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Cape Town

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I

Introduction

Cape Town (Afrikaans Kaapstad), city in southwestern South Africa, the legislative capital of the country and the capital of Western Cape province. Cape Town is one of three national capitals, along with Pretoria (the executive capital) and Bloemfontein (the judicial capital). It is situated at the northern end of the Cape Peninsula, about 50 km (about 30 mi) north of the Cape of Good Hope. The city has a spectacular setting, cradled by the steep slopes of Table Mountain to the south, Devil’s Peak to the southeast, Lion’s Head to the southwest, and Signal Hill to the west. Table Bay, an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean, lies to the northwest. The site of the first European settlement in South Africa (founded in 1652), Cape Town is today a major port, an industrial hub, and a center of culture and tourism. The city has a Mediterranean climate, with warm, dry summers and cool, wet winters.

II

Description

Central Cape Town, the oldest part of the city, is situated between Table Mountain and Table Bay. Today this area is home to numerous high-rise buildings and the city’s commercial center. Sprawling suburbs surround central Cape Town, with residential areas spreading up the lower slopes of Table Mountain and around the mountain to the southwest and southeast. Residential and industrial areas also extend across the Cape Peninsula to the south.

One of Cape Town’s most important historic sites—and the oldest building in the city—is the Castle, a stone fort built between 1666 and 1679 by Cape Town’s original Dutch settlers. In the city center, other notable landmarks include the Dutch Reformed Groote Kerk (Great Church, built between 1699 and 1704) and the South African Houses of Parliament. Old mosques and Dutch-style buildings are found in the Malay quarter on the lower slopes of Signal Hill.

Cape Town and its surrounding areas also hold many recreational attractions. The Victoria and Alfred Waterfront on Table Bay, revitalized in the early 1990s, contains many shops, pubs, and restaurants. Canal Walk, located in a part of Cape Town known as Century City, is a modern, multistory shopping complex complete with stores, cinemas, restaurants, and a children’s science center. South of Table Mountain, the Kirstenbosch National Botanic Gardens were a gift to the nation from British colonial statesman and financier Cecil Rhodes. There are many walking trails on Table Mountain, which is also served by a cable car, and in the mountains of the Cape Peninsula. The peninsula also contains numerous wineries and many protected areas, including the 7900 hectare (19,400 acre) Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve. Table Mountain Nature Reserve is the natural habitat of the silver tree, a species native to this area.



III

Population and Culture

Cape Town’s city population in 2001 was 2,993,000, and its metropolitan area population was 2,893,247. In the mid-1990s, 48 percent of Cape Town’s inhabitants were Coloured (people of mixed race), 27 percent were black, 23 percent were white, and 2 percent were Asian. Most of the city’s inhabitants are Protestants; however, the Cape Malays form a distinctive Muslim minority within the Coloured population, and adherence to Islam has grown among other Coloured people in recent years. Afrikaans is the language of at least half of the city’s Coloureds and almost half of the whites, with the rest of those groups speaking English or identifying themselves as bilingual. Most blacks speak Xhosa as their primary language.

Under apartheid—that is, South Africa’s system of racial segregation that was in effect between 1948 and the early 1990s—whites, Coloureds, blacks, and Asians were forced to live in separate residential areas. Although segregation laws are no longer in effect, many of Cape Town’s neighborhoods remain largely segregated by race. Predominantly white neighborhoods are located northeast of the city center and on the Atlantic coast west of Lion’s Head. Cape Flats, in the east, and Mitchell’s Plain, in the southeast, are traditionally Coloured areas. Black neighborhoods, most located far from the city center, include the townships of Langa, Nyanga, and Guguletu, along with Khayelitsha, a township in which the housed population is now greatly exceeded by the squatter population. Black shantytowns such as Marconi Beam have developed closer to the city. Since the end of apartheid in the early 1990s, more affluent blacks, Coloureds, and Asians have begun moving into the historically white areas of Cape Town.

The University of Cape Town (founded as South African College in 1829 and established as a full university in 1918) is one of South Africa’s leading universities. The University of the Western Cape (1960), founded originally as a university for Coloureds but now open to all races, is located on the city’s outskirts. Cape Town has a municipal Symphony Orchestra, and the ARTSCAPE Theatre Complex stages operas, plays, ballets, and concerts. Important museums and libraries in Cape Town include the South African Museum (1825), the South African National Gallery (1871), and the South African Library (1818). The Michaelis Collection (1914) houses 16th-century to 18th-century Dutch and Flemish paintings. The South African Cultural History Museum (1966), housed in a former slave lodge, also manages several smaller museums.

IV

Economy

Cape Town’s industries include oil refining; shipbuilding and repair; diamond cutting; food processing; printing; and the production of chemicals, fertilizers, cement, clothes, plastics, and leather goods. The city’s tourism industry is growing, with visitors attracted to Cape Town’s cultural sites, dramatic setting, and the scenery of the Cape Peninsula. A large port complex on Table Bay handles millions of tons of cargo each year. A national railway and road network connects the city to other major South African cities, as well as Botswana and Zimbabwe. Cape Town International Airport is located east of the city. Trains, buses, and minibuses provide public transportation.

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