Cape Town
Information about Cape Town
| Cape Town Kaapstad, iKapa | |||
| Panorama of the Cape Town city bowl from the Waterfront to Table Mountain | |||
| |||
| Nickname: The mother city, or The Tavern of the Seas | |||
| Motto: Spes Bona (Latin for "Good Hope") | |||
| Location of the City of Cape Town in Western Cape Province | |||
| Coordinates: | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Country | South Africa | ||
| Province | Western Cape Province | ||
| Municipality | City of Cape Town Metropolitan Municipality | ||
| Founded | 1652 | ||
| Government <ref name="">Pollack, Martin (2006-05-31). Achmat Ebrahim is the new city manager of Cape Town. City of Cape Town Metropolitan Municipality. Retrieved on 2007-03-25. | |||
| - Type | City council | ||
| - Mayor | Helen Zille | ||
| - City manager | Achmat Ebrahim | ||
| Area | |||
| - City | 2499 km (0 sq mi) | ||
| Population (2001) | |||
| - City | 2,893,251 | ||
| - Density | 1158/km (0/sq mi) | ||
| Time zone | SAST (UTC+2) | ||
| Postal code | 8000 | ||
| Area code(s) | 021 | ||
| Website: [1] | |||
Cape Town (Afrikaans and Dutch: Kaapstad; Xhosa: iKapa) is the third most populous city in South Africa, forming part of the metropolitan municipality of the City of Cape Town. It is the provincial capital of the Western Cape, as well as the legislative capital of South Africa, where the National Parliament and many government offices are located. Cape Town is famous for its harbour as well as its natural setting in the Cape floral kingdom, including such well-known landmarks as Table Mountain and Cape Point. Often regarded as one of the world's most beautiful cities because of its geography, Cape Town is the most popular South African destination for tourism.
Cape Town was originally developed as a victualling station for Dutch ships sailing to Eastern Africa, India, and the Far East more than 200 years before the construction of the Suez Canal in 1869. Jan van Riebeeck's arrival on 6 April 1652 established the first permanent European settlement in South Africa. Cape Town quickly outgrew its original purpose as the first European outpost at the Castle of Good Hope. It was the largest city in South Africa until the growth of Johannesburg and Durban.
According to the 2001 Census, the city has a population of 2.95 million.[1] Cape Town's land area of 2,499 square kilometres (965 sq mi) is larger than other South African cities, resulting in a comparatively lower population density of 1,158 people per square kilometre (2,999/sq mi).[1] Cape Town is town twinned with Nice in France and Haifa in Israel.
History
There is no certainty as to when humans first occupied the area prior to the first visits of Europeans in the 15th century. The earliest known remnants in the region were found at Peers cave in Fish Hoek and date to around 12,000 years ago. Little is known of the history of the region's first residents, since there is no written history from the area before it was first mentioned by Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias in 1486. Vasco da Gama recorded a sighting of the Cape of Good Hope in 1497, and the area did not have regular contact with Europeans until 1652, when the Netherlands' Jan van Riebeeck and other employees of the Dutch East India Company (Dutch: Verenigde Oost-indische Compagnie, VOC) were sent to the Cape to establish a way-station for ships travelling to the Dutch East Indies. The city grew slowly during this period, as it was hard to find adequate labour. This labour shortage prompted the city to import slaves from Indonesia and Madagascar; many of whom would come to form the first of the Cape Coloured communities.
The British successfully gained outright control of Cape Town in 1795, during the Battle of Muizenberg. Under the terms of a peace agreement negotiated after the war, the Cape was returned to the Dutch in 1803. The war resumed later that year, and British forces re-occupied the Cape, after winning the Battle of Blaauwberg in 1806. In the 1814 peace treaty which ended the war in Europe, the Cape was permanently incorporated into the British Empire. As the territory under British control grew even larger outward from the city, it became the capital of the newly formed Cape Colony.
The discovery of diamonds in Griqualand West in 1869, and gold on the Witwatersrand in 1886, near the present-day city of Johannesburg prompted a massive gold rush. Johannesburg grew rapidly as the country was flooded with immigrants. Tensions also emerged between the Boers, who had taken part in the Great Trek and established republics in the centre of the country; the new migrants, known as uitlanders; and the British colonial government. This conflict resulted in the Second Anglo-Boer War. After the British won this war and acquired control of the gold and diamond industries, they unified the Cape Colony with the two defeated Boer Republics (the South African Republic and the Orange Free State) and the British colony of Natal to form the Union of South Africa, which was proclaimed in 1910 with Cape Town as its legislative capital, a function it has continued to serve for the Republic of South Africa from 1961 to the present.
In 1948, the National Party was elected on election promises of racial segregation laws, collectively known by the Afrikaans word apartheid. As a consequence of the Group Areas Act, which classified all areas of the country and city according to race, formerly multi-racial suburbs were either purged of unlawful residents or demolished. The most infamous example of this in Cape Town is District Six, which was demolished in 1965, prompting the forced removal of over 60,000 residents after it was declared a whites-only region.[2] Many of these residents were relocated to the Cape Flats. Under apartheid, the Cape was considered a "Coloured labour preference area", to the exclusion of Black Africans.
Nobel Square at the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront.
Geography
Lion's Head and Signal Hill From Table Mountain
Climate
The Cape Peninsula has a Mediterranean climate with well-defined seasons. In winter, which lasts from May to September, large cold fronts come across from the Atlantic Ocean with heavy precipitation and strong north-westerly winds. The winter months are cool, with an average minimum temperature of 7 °C (45 °F). Most of the city's annual rainfall occurs in wintertime, but due to the mountainous topography of the city, rainfall amounts for specific areas can vary dramatically. The suburb of Newlands which is to the south of the city is the wettest place in South Africa. The valleys and coastal plains average 515 millimetres (20 in) of rain per annum, while mountain areas can average as much as 1,500 millimetres (60 in) per annum. Summer, which lasts from November to March, is warm and dry. The Peninsula gets frequent strong winds from the south-east, known locally as the Cape Doctor, because it blows away pollution and cleans the air. The south-easterly wind is caused by a high-pressure system which sits in the South Atlantic to the west of Cape Town, known as the South-Atlantic High. Summer temperatures are mild, with an average maximum of 26 °C (79 °F).| Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maximum record temperature (°C) | 37 | 38 | 39 | 39 | 35 | 29 | 29 | 32 | 34 | 32 | 34 | 38 | ||
| Minimum record temperature (°C) | 7 | 5 | 6 | 3 | -1 | -2 | -2 | -1 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 5 | ||
| Mean daily maximum temperature (°C) | 26 | 26 | 25 | 22 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 18 | 18 | 21 | 23 | 24 | 21.5 | |
| Mean daily minimum temperature (°C) | 16 | 16 | 14 | 12 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 11 | 13 | 14 | 11.5 | |
| Mean monthly rainfall (mm) | 15 | 8 | 18 | 48 | 79 | 84 | 89 | 66 | 43 | 31 | 18 | 10 | ||
| Source: [2] | ||||||||||||||
Government
The Cape Town City Hall, located in the City Bowl
Cape Town's local government is the City of Cape Town, which is a metropolitan municipality. Cape Town is governed by a 210-member city council, which reports to a 28-member executive council. The executive council, in turn, is presided over by a city manager and an executive mayor. The city is divided into 105 electoral wards; each ward directly elects one member of the council, whilst the other 105 councillors are elected by a party-list proportional representation system. The mayor is chosen by the city council.
The current mayor is Helen Zille of the Democratic Alliance. In the most recent local government elections, the Democratic Alliance was the largest single party with 90 of the 210 seats on the council, ahead of the African National Congress's 81 seats, but with no party holding a majority. A subsequent by-election has increased the DA's seats to 91.[3] The DA has now increased it's majority, by introducing the Independent Democrats (South Africa) to the coalition, and so the DA-led council now has a majority of 22 seats.
Before the unification of Cape Town's local government into the so-called "Unicity", it was divided into six regional "Administrations"; many functions of the Unicity are still divided according to the old Administrations. The administrations include Cape Town, which has the regions of the City Bowl, the Atlantic Seaboard, the southern suburbs, Pinelands, Langa and Mitchell's Plain. The South Peninsula includes Hout Bay, Wynberg, Constantia, Fish Hoek, Kommetjie, Noordhoek and Simon's Town. The Blaauwberg region includes Milnerton, Tableview, and Bloubergstrand. Tygerberg has its own region, with Durbanville, Bellville, and Khayelitsha added to it. Oostenberg includes Kraaifontein, Brackenfell, Kuilsrivier, Blue Downs, and Eerste Rivier. The last administration, Helderberg, includes Somerset West, Strand, and Gordon's Bay.
Demographics
According to the South African National Census of 2001, the population of Cape Town is 2,893,251 people. There are 759,767 formal households, of which 87.4% have a flush or chemical toilet, and 94.4% have refuse removed by the municipality at least once a week. 80.1% of households use electricity as the main source of energy. 16.1% of households are headed by one person.[4]
Coloured people account for 48.13% of the population, followed by Black Africans at 31%, Whites at 18.75%, and Asians at 1.43%. 46.6% of the population is under the age of 24, whilst 5% are over the age of 65. The median age in the city is 26 years old, and for every 100 females, there are 92.4 males. 19.4% of city residents are unemployed; 58.3% of the unemployed are black, 38.1% are Coloured, 3.1% are White and 0.5% are Asian.[4]
41.4% of Cape Town residents speak Afrikaans at home, 28.7% speak Xhosa, 27.9% speak English, 0.7% speak Sotho, 0.3% speak Zulu, 0.1% speak Tswana and 0.7% of the population speaks a non-official language at home. 76.6% of residents are Christian, 10.7% have no religion, 9.7% are Muslim, 0.5% are Jewish and 0.2% are Hindu. 2.3% have other or undetermined beliefs.[4]
4.2% of residents aged 20 and over have received no schooling; 11.8% have had some primary school; 7.1% have completed only primary school; 38.9% have had some high school education; 25.4% have finished only high school and 12.6% have an education higher than the high school level. Overall, 38.0% of residents have completed high school. The median annual income of working adults aged 20–65 is ZAR 25 774. Males have a median annual income of ZAR 28 406 versus ZAR 22 265 for females.[4]
Economy
The main entrance to the Cape Town International Convention Centre
Cape Town has four major commercial nodes, with Cape Town Central Business District containing the majority of job opportunities and office space. Century City, the Bellville/TygerValley strip and Claremont commercial nodes are well established and contain many offices and corporate headquarters as well.
High school attendance rates and the city's well-established higher education infrastructure have helped Cape Town to attract foreign investors, as there are more people with internationally recognised certification and diplomas.[6]
The Western Cape also generates a quarter of the South African agricultural sector's total gross income and more than half of South Africa's exports. Much of the produce is handled through the Port of Cape Town or Cape Town International Airport. Most major shipbuilding companies have offices and manufacturing locations in Cape Town.[7] The Province is also a centre of energy development for the country, with the existing Koeberg nuclear power station providing energy for the majority of Cape Town's needs. Recently, scientists have discovered oil and natural gas off of the coast in the Atlantic Ocean.[8]
The Western Cape is an important tourist region in South Africa; the tourism industry accounts for 9.8% of the GDP of the province and employs 9.6% of the province's workforce. In 2004, over 1.5 million international tourists visited the area.[9]
Tourism
The Victoria & Alfred Waterfront with Table Mountain and its characteristic tablecloth in the background
The distinctive Cape Malay Bo-Kaap is one of the most visited areas in Cape Town.
Cape Town is arguably the most popular tourist destination in South Africa due to its good climate, natural setting, and relatively well-developed infrastructure.[10] The city has several well-known natural features that attract tourists, most notably Table Mountain,[11] which forms a large part of the Table Mountain National Park and is the back end of the City Bowl. Reaching the top of the mountain can be achieved either by hiking up, or by taking the Table Mountain Cableway. Cape Point is recognised as the dramatic headland at the end of the Cape Peninsula.[12] Many tourists also drive along Chapman's Peak Drive, a narrow road that links Noordhoek with Hout Bay, for the views of the Atlantic Ocean and nearby mountains. It is possible to either drive or hike up Signal Hill for closer views of the City Bowl and Table Mountain.[13]
Many tourists also visit Cape Town's beaches, which are popular with local residents. Due to the city's unique geography, it is possible to visit several different beaches in the same day, each with a different setting and atmosphere. Beaches located on the Atlantic Coast tend to have very cold water as the water is mostly glacial melt from Antarctica. The water at False Bay beaches is often warmer by up to 10 °C (18 °F).[14] Both coasts are equally popular, although the beaches in affluent Clifton and elsewhere on the Atlantic Coast are better developed with restaurants and cafés, with a particularly vibrant strip of restaurants and bars accessible to the beach at Camps Bay.[14] Boulders Beach near Simon's Town is known for its colony of African penguins.[15] Surfing is popular and the city hosts the Red Bull Big Wave Africa surfing competition every year.
The city has several notable cultural attractions. The Victoria & Alfred Waterfront, built on top of part of the docks of the Port of Cape Town, is one of the city's most popular shopping venues, with several hundred shops and the Two Oceans Aquarium.[16][17] Part of the charm of the V&A, as it is locally known, is that the Port continues to operate and visitors can watch ships enter and leave. The V&A also hosts the Nelson Mandela Gateway, through which ferries depart for Robben Island.[18] It is possible to take a ferry from the V&A to Hout Bay, Simon's Town and the Cape Fur Seal colonies on Seal and Duiker Islands. Several companies offer tours of the Cape Flats, a mostly Coloured township, and Khayelitsha, a mostly black township. An option is to sleep overnight in Cape Town's townships. There are several B&Bs where you can spend a safe and real African night.[19]
Cape Town is noted for its architectural heritage, with the highest density of Cape Dutch style buildings in the world. Cape Dutch style, which combines the architectural traditions of the Netherlands, Germany and France, is most visible in Constantia, the old government buildings in the Central Business District, and along Long Street.[20][21] The annual Cape Town Minstrel Carnival, also known by its Afrikaans name of Kaapse Klopse, is a large minstrel festival held annually on January 2 or "Tweede Nuwe Jaar" (Afrikaans: Second New Year). Competing teams of minstrels parade in brightly coloured costumes, either carrying colourful umbrellas or playing an array of musical instruments. The Artscape Theatre Centre is the main performing arts venue in Cape Town.
Night life in the city caters for all tastes and sexual preferences, with a range of restaurants and cafes that are generally recognised as including some of the finest eateries in South Africa (both in food quality and decor terms). Night clubs and bars abound with popular areas including the top end of Long Street and its immediate surrounds, as well as the redeveloped Cape Malay quarter, De Waterkant. Varied accommodation for tourists is also abundant, ranging from well located backpackers hostels to hotels that have been rated at the top of their class in world terms.
Cape Town's transport system links it to the rest of South Africa; it serves as the gateway to other destinations within the province. The Cape Winelands and in particular the towns of Stellenbosch, Paarl and Franschhoek are popular day trips from the city for sightseeing and wine tasting.[22][23] Whale watching is popular amongst tourists: Southern Right Whales are seen off the coast during the breeding season (August to November) and Bryde's Whales can be seen any time of the year.[24] The nearby town of Hermanus is known for its Whale Festival, but whales can also be seen in False Bay.[24] Heaviside's dolphins are endemic to the area and can be seen from the coast north of Cape Town; dusky dolphins live along the same coast and can occasionally be seen from the ferry to Robben Island.[24]
Approximately 1.5 million tourists visited in Cape Town during 2004, bringing in a total of R10 billion in revenue. The forecasts for 2006 anticipate 1.6 million tourists spending a total of R12 billion. The most popular areas for visitors to stay include Camps Bay, Sea Point, the V&A Waterfront, the City Bowl, Hout Bay, Constantia, Rondebosch, Newlands, Somerset West and Hermanus.[25]
Communications and media
The Naspers Building, which is the headquarters of Naspers, the largest media company in Cape Town
Cape Town has many local community newspapers. Some of the largest community newspapers in English are the Athlone News from Athlone, the Atlantic Sun, the Constantiaberg Bulletin from Constantiaberg, the City Vision from Bellville, the False Bay Echo from False Bay, the Helderberg Sun from Helderberg, the Plainsman from Michells Plain, the Sentinel News from Hout Bay, the Southern Mail from the Southern Peninsula, the Southern Suburbs Tatler from the Southern Suburbs, Table Talk from Table View and Tygertalk from Tygervalley/Durbanville. Afrikaans language community newspapers include the Landbou-Burger and the Tygerburger. Vukani, based in the Cape Flats, is published in Xhosa.[27]
Cape Town is a centre for broadcast media and has several radio stations that only broadcast within the city. Good Hope FM (94–97 MHz FM) and KFM (94.5 MHz FM) mostly play pop music, while Fine Music Radio (101.3 FM) plays classical music and jazz. Heart FM (104.9 MHz FM), the former P4 Radio, plays Jazz and R&B. Bush Radio is a community radio station (89.5 MHz FM). The Voice of the Cape (95.8 MHz FM) and Cape Talk (567 kHz MW) are the major talk radio stations in the city.[28]
The SABC (South African Broadcasting Corporation) has a small presence in the city, with satellite studios located at Sea Point. e.tv has a greater presence, with a large complex located at Longkloof Studios in Gardens. M-Net is not well represented with infrastructure within the city. Numerous productions companies and their support industries are located in the city, mostly supporting the production of overseas commercials, model shoots, TV-series and movies. The local media infrastructure remains primarily in Johannesburg.
Sports teams and stadia
Cape Town's most popular sports by participation are cricket, association football, swimming, and rugby.[29] The Stormers represent Western Province and Boland in the Southern Hemisphere's Super 14 rugby union competition. Cape Town is the home of the Western Province Rugby Union, who play at Newlands Stadium and compete in the Currie Cup. Cape Town also regularly hosts the national team, the Springboks, and hosted matches during the 1995 Rugby World Cup, including a semi-final.
Football, which is better known as soccer in South Africa, is also popular. Two clubs from Cape Town play in the Premier Soccer League (PSL), South Africa's premier league. These teams are Ajax Cape Town, which formed as a result of the 1999 amalgamation of the Seven Stars and the Cape Town Spurs; and Santos. Cape Town will also be the location of several of the matches of the FIFA 2010 World Cup, which is to be held in South Africa. The Mother City is building a new 70,000 seat stadium in the Green Point area.
In cricket, the Cape Cobras represent Cape Town at the Newlands Cricket Ground. The team is the result of an amalgamation of the Western Province Cricket and Boland Cricket teams. They take part in the Supersport and Standard Bank Cup Series.
Cape Town has Olympic aspirations: in 1996, Cape Town was one of the five candidate cities shortlisted by the IOC to launch official candidatures to host the 2004 Summer Olympics. Although the games ultimately went to Athens, Cape Town came in an impressive third place, edging out Stockholm and Buenos Aires in the first three rounds of voting. There has been some speculation that Cape Town is seeking the South African Olympic Committee's nomination to be South Africa's bid city for either the 2016 or the 2020 Summer Olympic Games.
Transport
The interior of Cape Town Railway Station
The M3 as it passes the University of Cape Town. The M3 is the major link between the City Bowl and the southern suburbs.
- Air
As of June 2006, Cape Town International Airport is being upgraded to handle an expected increase in air traffic as tourism numbers will increase in the lead-up to the 2010 FIFA World Cup.[31] The renovations include several large new parking garages, a revamped domestic departure terminal and a new international terminal. The airport's cargo facilities are also being expanded and several large empty lots are being developed into office space and hotels.
The Cape Town International Airport was among the winners of the World Travel Awards for being Africa's leading airport.[32]
- Sea
Simon's Town Harbour on the False Bay coast of the Cape Peninsula is the main base of the South African Navy.
- Rail
Metrorail operates a commuter rail service in Cape Town and the surrounding area. The Metrorail network consists of 96 stations throughout the suburbs and outskirts of Cape Town.
- Road
Cape Town also has a system of freeway and dual carriageway M-roads, which connect different parts of the city. The M3 splits from the N2 and runs to the south along the eastern slopes of Table Mountain, connecting the City Bowl with Muizenberg. The M5 splits from the N1 further east than the M3, and links the Cape Flats to the CBD. The R300, which is informally known as the Cape Flats Freeway, links Mitchells Plain with Bellville, the N1 and the N2.
- Buses
- Taxis
Minibus taxis are the standard form of transport for the majority of the population who cannot afford private vehicles.[34] Although essential, these taxis are often poorly maintained and are frequently not road-worthy. These taxis make frequent unscheduled stops to pick up passengers, which can cause accidents.[35][36] With the high demand for transport by the working class of South Africa, minibus taxis are often filled over their legal passenger allowance, making for high casualty rates when minibuses are involved in accidents. Minibuses are generally owned and operated in fleets, and inter-operator violence flares up from time to time, especially as turf wars occur over lucrative taxi routes.[37]
Universities
The University of Cape Town's main campus with Devil's Peak behind it
Both the University of Cape Town and Stellenbosch University are leading universities in South Africa. This is due in large part to substantial financial contributions made to these institutions by both the public and private sector.[38] Since the African National Congress has come into governmental power, some restructuring of Western Cape universities has taken place and as such, traditionally non-white universities have seen increased financing, which has benefitted the University of the Western Cape.[39][40]
The public Cape Peninsula University of Technology was formed on January 1, 2005, when two separate institutions – Cape Technikon and Peninsula Technikon – were merged. The new university offers education primarily in English, although one may take courses in any of South Africa's official languages. The institution generally awards the National Diploma.
Skyline

Panorama of the Cape Town city bowl from the Waterfront to Table Mountain
Panorama of the Cape Town city taken from Table Mountain
Sister Cities
Notes
1. ^ Cape Town Municipal Profile 2006. Municipal Demarcation Board.
2. ^ Recalling District Six. SouthAfrica.info (19 August 2003).
3. ^ City of Cape Town, 2006 Local Government Elections: Seat Calculation Summary. Independent Electoral Commission of South Africa (3 April 2006).
4. ^ Statistics South Africa: 2001 Census Results.
5. ^ City of Cape Town: Economic Statistics.
6. ^ Education Reform and Economic Competitiveness. International Convention of Principals (ICP 2005).
7. ^ South African Boatbuilders Business Council.
8. ^ South African Department of Minerals and Energy.
9. ^ Annual Report 2004/2005 (PDF), Cape Town Routes Unlimited. ISBN 0-621-35496-1.
10. ^ Official Western Cape and Cape Town tourism guide.
11. ^ Table Mountain Aerial Cableway.
12. ^ Cape Point, South Africa.
13. ^ Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden.
14. ^ Cape Town Beaches. SafariNow.com.
15. ^ The African Penguin.
16. ^ The Victoria & Alfred Waterfront.
17. ^ The Two Oceans Aquarium.
18. ^ Robben Island.
19. ^ Township stays.
20. ^ Cape Dutch Architecture. Encounter South Africa.
21. ^ (1977) A Comparative Evaluation of Urbanism in Cape Town. University of Cape Town Press, 20–98. ISBN 0-620-02535-2.
22. ^ Cape Winelands.
23. ^ The Western Cape wine lands.
24. ^ Cape Town Whale Watching. Afton Grove.
25. ^ Cape Town Tourism Statistics. Cape Town Direct.
26. ^ South Africa Newspapers. ABYZ News Links.
27. ^ South Africa Newspapers. Daily Earth.
28. ^ Radio companies. BizCommunity.Com.
29. ^ (2006) Time Out: Cape Town. Time Out Publishing, 127–130: Sports. ISBN 1-904978-12-6.
30. ^ Cape Town International Airport. SouthAfrica.info.
31. ^ Jordan, Bobby. "R150-million upgrade kicks off one of the biggest developments in Cape Town's history", Sunday Times, 17 May 1998.1998">
32. ^ Cape Town International Airport. Cape Town Routes Unlimited.
33. ^ Introducing SAPO. South African Port Operations.
34. ^ Transport. CapeTown.org.
35. ^ South Africa's minibus wars: uncontrollable law-defying minibuses oust buses and trains from transit. LookSmart.
36. ^ Transportation in Developing Countries: Greenhouse Gas Scenarios for South Africa. Pew Center.
37. ^ Taxing Alternatives: Poverty Alleviation and the South African Taxi/Minibus Industry. Enterprise Africa! Research Publications.
38. ^ Competitiveness factors. City of Cape Town.
39. ^ Cape Town Society. CapeConnected.
40. ^ Education Cosas critical of education funding. Dispatch Online.
2. ^ Recalling District Six. SouthAfrica.info (19 August 2003).
3. ^ City of Cape Town, 2006 Local Government Elections: Seat Calculation Summary. Independent Electoral Commission of South Africa (3 April 2006).
4. ^ Statistics South Africa: 2001 Census Results.
5. ^ City of Cape Town: Economic Statistics.
6. ^ Education Reform and Economic Competitiveness. International Convention of Principals (ICP 2005).
7. ^ South African Boatbuilders Business Council.
8. ^ South African Department of Minerals and Energy.
9. ^ Annual Report 2004/2005 (PDF), Cape Town Routes Unlimited. ISBN 0-621-35496-1.
10. ^ Official Western Cape and Cape Town tourism guide.
11. ^ Table Mountain Aerial Cableway.
12. ^ Cape Point, South Africa.
13. ^ Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden.
14. ^ Cape Town Beaches. SafariNow.com.
15. ^ The African Penguin.
16. ^ The Victoria & Alfred Waterfront.
17. ^ The Two Oceans Aquarium.
18. ^ Robben Island.
19. ^ Township stays.
20. ^ Cape Dutch Architecture. Encounter South Africa.
21. ^ (1977) A Comparative Evaluation of Urbanism in Cape Town. University of Cape Town Press, 20–98. ISBN 0-620-02535-2.
22. ^ Cape Winelands.
23. ^ The Western Cape wine lands.
24. ^ Cape Town Whale Watching. Afton Grove.
25. ^ Cape Town Tourism Statistics. Cape Town Direct.
26. ^ South Africa Newspapers. ABYZ News Links.
27. ^ South Africa Newspapers. Daily Earth.
28. ^ Radio companies. BizCommunity.Com.
29. ^ (2006) Time Out: Cape Town. Time Out Publishing, 127–130: Sports. ISBN 1-904978-12-6.
30. ^ Cape Town International Airport. SouthAfrica.info.
31. ^ Jordan, Bobby. "R150-million upgrade kicks off one of the biggest developments in Cape Town's history", Sunday Times, 17 May 1998.1998">
32. ^ Cape Town International Airport. Cape Town Routes Unlimited.
33. ^ Introducing SAPO. South African Port Operations.
34. ^ Transport. CapeTown.org.
35. ^ South Africa's minibus wars: uncontrollable law-defying minibuses oust buses and trains from transit. LookSmart.
36. ^ Transportation in Developing Countries: Greenhouse Gas Scenarios for South Africa. Pew Center.
37. ^ Taxing Alternatives: Poverty Alleviation and the South African Taxi/Minibus Industry. Enterprise Africa! Research Publications.
38. ^ Competitiveness factors. City of Cape Town.
39. ^ Cape Town Society. CapeConnected.
40. ^ Education Cosas critical of education funding. Dispatch Online.
See also
External links
- Government
- News
- Other
- Cape Town Information
- Cape Town Hotels Handled by local people who would love to share their knowledge of the place
- Cape Town Travel Guide (attractions, info, music, webcams, photos, maps, properties, life..
- 'Cape Town- Journey of Remembrance' - a political and historical Tour through CT, facilitated by anti-Apartheid activists of the DACPM (non profit NGO)
- * Maps and aerial photos for Coordinates:
- Maps from Google Maps, Live Search Maps, , Yahoo! Maps, or MapQuest
- Topographic maps from TopoZone
- Landuse survey from GlobalGuide
Suburbs of Cape Town | ||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Western Cape Province of South Africa | ||
|---|---|---|
| Capital | Cape Town | |
| Regions | Cape Peninsula | Cape Winelands | Garden Route | Little Karoo | Overberg | West Coast | |
| Cities | Cape Town | |
| Largest towns | George | Knysna | Oudtshoorn | Paarl | Robertson | Stellenbosch | Swellendam | Worcester | |
| Municipalities | Metropolitan: City of Cape Town District: Cape Winelands | Central Karoo | Eden | Overberg | West Coast Local: Beaufort West | Bergrivier | Bitou | Breede River/Winelands | Breede Valley | Cape Agulhas | Cederberg | Drakenstein | George | Hessequa | Kannaland | Knysna | Laingsburg | Matzikama | Mossel Bay | Oudtshoorn | Overstrand | Prince Albert | Saldanha Bay | Stellenbosch | Swartland | Swellendam | Theewaterskloof | Witzenberg | |
| Provincial capitals of South Africa | |
|---|---|
| Western Cape | Northern Cape | Eastern Cape | KwaZulu-Natal | Free State | North West | Gauteng | Mpumalanga | Limpopo | |
50 largest cities in South Africa by population |
|---|
Johannesburg
Durban
Cape Town
East Rand
Pretoria
Port Elizabeth
East London
Vereeniging
Bloemfontein
Thohoyandou
Pietermaritzburg
Polokwane
Bushbuckridge
Louis Trichardt
Nelspruit
Mthatha
Welkom
Rustenburg
Mount Ayliff
Greater Tzaneen
Qwa-Qwa
Klerksdorp
Brits
Nkomazi
Newcastle
Mokopane
Krugersdorp
Richards Bay
Gcuwa
Libode
Witbank
Burgersfort
Ngwaritsi
Mafikeng
KwaMhlanga
Flagstaff
Idutywa
Bizana
Mdutjana
Greater Giyani
Mogwase
Lebowakgomop
Ladysmith
Highveld Ridge
Eshowe
Groblersdal
Duiwelsklook
Port Shepstone
Ulundi
Carletonville
|
Cape Jazz
The Flag of Cape Town is the official flag of the City of Cape Town, South Africa.
The current flag (featuring a silhouette of Table Mountain) replaced the previous flag (which consisted of the Seal of Cape Town on a blue field) in 1996.
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The current flag (featuring a silhouette of Table Mountain) replaced the previous flag (which consisted of the Seal of Cape Town on a blue field) in 1996.
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Latin}}}
Official status
Official language of: Vatican City
Used for official purposes, but not spoken in everyday speech
Regulated by: Opus Fundatum Latinitas
Roman Catholic Church
Language codes
ISO 639-1: la
ISO 639-2: lat
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Official status
Official language of: Vatican City
Used for official purposes, but not spoken in everyday speech
Regulated by: Opus Fundatum Latinitas
Roman Catholic Church
Language codes
ISO 639-1: la
ISO 639-2: lat
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City of Cape Town (Afrikaans: Stad Kaapstad; Xhosa: Isixeko saseKapa; officially the City of Cape Town Metropolitan Municipality; colloquially the Cape Town Unicity; formerly the Cape Metropolitan Administration
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Note: This list is incomplete
This is a list of Mayors of Cape Town in South Africa:
City of Cape Town Metropolitan Council (Unicity) (December 2000 - Present)
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This is a list of Mayors of Cape Town in South Africa:
City of Cape Town Metropolitan Council (Unicity) (December 2000 - Present)
- Helen Zille (March 2006 - present) (DA)
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In office
2006 -
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Political party Democratic Alliance
Helen Zille (9 March, 1951 -) is the Mayor of Cape Town in South Africa's Western Cape province and leader of the Democratic Alliance political
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2006 -
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Political party Democratic Alliance
Helen Zille (9 March, 1951 -) is the Mayor of Cape Town in South Africa's Western Cape province and leader of the Democratic Alliance political
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Area is a physical quantity expressing the size of a part of a surface. The term Surface area is the summation of the areas of the exposed sides of an object.
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Units
Units for measuring surface area include:- square metre = SI derived unit
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square mile is an imperial and US unit of area equal the area of a square of one statute mile. It should not be confused with the archaic miles square, which refers to the number of miles on each side squared.
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Population density is a measurement of population per unit area or unit volume. It is frequently applied to living organisms, humans in particular.
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Biological population densities
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time zone is a region of the Earth that has adopted the same standard time, usually referred to as the local time. Most adjacent time zones are exactly one hour apart, and by convention compute their local time as an offset from UTC (see also Greenwich Mean Time).
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Time zones of Africa:
black UTC-1: Cape Verde Time.
green UTC: Western European Time Greenwich Mean Time.
blue UTC+1: Central European Time West Africa Time.
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black UTC-1: Cape Verde Time.
green UTC: Western European Time Greenwich Mean Time.
blue UTC+1: Central European Time West Africa Time.
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UTC+2 corresponds to the following time zones:
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- Eastern European Time
- Egypt Standard Time
- Central Africa Time
- Israel Standard Time
- South Africa Standard Time
- Central European Summer Time
- West Africa Summer Time
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Afrikaans}}}
Official status
Official language of:
'''The template is deprecated. Please use instead.
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Official status
Official language of:
'''The template is deprecated. Please use instead.
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Dutch}}}
Writing system: Latin alphabet (Dutch variant)
Official status
Official language of: Aruba
Belgium
European Union
European Union
Netherlands Antilles
Suriname
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Writing system: Latin alphabet (Dutch variant)
Official status
Official language of: Aruba
Belgium
European Union
European Union
Netherlands Antilles
Suriname
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Xhosa}}}
Official status
Official language of: South Africa
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: xh
ISO 639-2: xho
ISO 639-3: xho
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Official status
Official language of: South Africa
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: xh
ISO 639-2: xho
ISO 639-3: xho
For the Xhosa people, see .
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The table below provides a list of all cities (or municipalities) in South Africa with a population larger than 100 000. Populations are from the 2001 Census.
Rank Municipality
1 Johannesburg, Gauteng
2 Durban, KwaZulu-Natal 3 090 117
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Rank Municipality
1 Johannesburg, Gauteng
2 Durban, KwaZulu-Natal 3 090 117
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In South Africa, a metropolitan municipality or Category A municipality is a municipality which executes all the functions of local government for a city or conurbation.
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City of Cape Town (Afrikaans: Stad Kaapstad; Xhosa: Isixeko saseKapa; officially the City of Cape Town Metropolitan Municipality; colloquially the Cape Town Unicity; formerly the Cape Metropolitan Administration
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capital (also called capital city or political capital — although the latter phrase has a second meaning based on an alternative sense of "capital") is the center of government.
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The Western Cape is a province in the south west of South Africa. The capital is Cape Town. Prior to 1994, the region that now forms the Western Cape was part of the huge (and now defunct) Cape Province.
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A legislature is a type of representative deliberative assembly with the power to adopt laws.
Legislatures are known by many names, the most common being parliament and congress, although these terms also have more specific meanings.
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Legislatures are known by many names, the most common being parliament and congress, although these terms also have more specific meanings.
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South Africa
This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
South Africa
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This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
South Africa
- Constitution
- Government
- Executive
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Cape floristic region is a floristic region located in South Africa. It is the only floristic region of the Cape (South African) Floristic Kingdom, and includes only one floristic province, known as the Cape floristic province.
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Table Mountain is a flat-topped mountain forming a prominent landmark overlooking the city of Cape Town in South Africa. It is a significant tourist attraction, with many visitors using the cableway to take a ride to the top.
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Cape Point is a promontory at the south-east corner of the Cape Peninsula, which is a mountainous and very scenic landform that runs north-south for about thirty kilometres at the extreme southwestern tip of the African continent in the Republic of South Africa.
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Tourism is travel for predominantly recreational or leisure purposes or the provision of services to support this leisure travel. The World Tourism Organization defines tourists
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Motto
"Je maintiendrai" (French)
"Ik zal handhaven" (Dutch)
"I shall stand fast"1
Anthem
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"Je maintiendrai" (French)
"Ik zal handhaven" (Dutch)
"I shall stand fast"1
Anthem
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East Africa or Eastern Africa is the easternmost region of the African continent, variably defined by geography or geopolitics. In the UN scheme of geographic regions, 19 territories constitute Eastern Africa:
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