A
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 fixed by
law. Alternate terms include
capital
city and
political capital; the latter
phrase has
a second meaning based
on an alternative sense of
capital. Usually, a capital
city is the largest city in that country but not always.
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, where
major substate jurisdictions have an element of
sovereignty. In
unitary
states, "administrative center" or other similar terms are
typically used. For example, the seat of government in a
U.S. state is usually called its "capital", but
the main city in a region of England is usually not, even though in
Ireland, a county's main town is usually regarded as its capital.
At lower administrative subdivisions, terms such as
county town,
county
seat, or
borough seat are usually
used.
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 amalgamation.
This was the case for London
, Berlin
, and
Moscow
. The capital naturally attracts the
politically motivated and those whose skills are needed for
efficient administration of government such as
lawyers,
journalists, and
public policy researchers. A
capital that is the prime economic, cultural, or intellectual
center is sometimes referred to as a
primate city.
Such is certainly the case with Paris
, London
and Madrid
among
national capitals, and Milan
, Irkutsk
or Phoenix
in their
respective state or province.
Capitals are sometimes sited to discourage further growth in an
existing major city.
Brasília
was situated in Brazil
's interior
because the old capital, Rio de Janeiro
, and southeastern Brazil in general, were
considered over-crowded.
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, as occurred with Babylon
and Cahokia
.
Many
present-day capital cities, such as New Delhi
, Abuja
, Ankara
, Brasília
, Canberra
, Astana
, Islamabad
, Ottawa
and Washington,
D.C.
are planned cities were
built as an alternative to the seat of government residing in an
established population centre for various reasons. In many
cases in their own right they have become gradually established as
new business or commercial centres.
Unorthodox capital city arrangements
A number of cases exist where states have multiple capitals, and
there are also several states that have no capital. In other cases,
the
official capital is not the
effective one for
pragmatic reasons. That is, the city known as
the capital
is not the seat of government. Occasionally, the official
capital may host the seat of government, but is not the
geographic origin of political decision-making. The following list
specifies the details observed in sovereign states.
- Benin
: Porto-Novo
is the official capital, but Cotonou
is the seat
of government.
- Bolivia
: Sucre
is still the constitutional capital, but most of the
national government long abandoned that region for La
Paz
.
- Chile
: Santiago
is the capital even though the National
Congress of Chile
is in Valparaíso
.
- Côte d'Ivoire
: Yamoussoukro
was designated the national capital in 1983, but
most government offices and embassies are still located in Abidjan
.
- Czech Republic
: Prague
is the sole
constitutional capital. However, Brno
is home to
all three of the country's highest courts,
making it the de facto capital of the Czech judicial
branch.
- France
: The French
constitution does not recognize any capital city in France.
Paris
is de
facto capital of France (seat of the Presidency, the
Government, the National Assembly and the Senate), but the
parliament holds its joint congresses in Versailles.
- Germany
: The official capital Berlin
is home to
seat to the parliament. However, various ministries are located in
the former West
German
capital of Bonn
, which has
now the title Federal City.
The
judicial branch is divided between Karlsruhe
, Kassel
, and
Leipzig
.
- Malaysia
: Kuala
Lumpur
is the constitutional capital but the federal
administrative centre was moved 30 kilometres south to Putrajaya
in the late 1990s. The parliament remains in
Kuala Lumpur.
- Myanmar
(Burma
): Naypyidaw
was designated the national capital in 2005, the
same year it was founded, but most government offices and embassies
are still located in Yangon
(Rangoon
).
- Nauru: Nauru, a tiny country of only 21
square kilometres (8 sq mi), has no distinct capital city, and thus
has a capital district instead.
- The Netherlands
: Amsterdam
is the constitutional national capital even though
the Dutch government, parliament, supreme court and the residential
palace
of the queen are all located in The Hague
. (For more details see: Capital of
the Netherlands
).
- Sri
Lanka
: Sri Jayawardenapura Kotte
is the official capital and the location of the
parliament, while the former capital, Colombo
, is now designated as the "commercial
capital". However, many government offices are still located
in Colombo. Both cities are in the Colombo
District
.
- South Africa:
The administrative capital is Pretoria
, the legislative capital is Cape Town
, and the judicial capital is Bloemfontein
. This is the outcome of the compromise that
created the Union of South
Africa in 1910.
- Switzerland
: Bern
is the
Federal City of Switzerland
and functions as de facto capital. However, the Swiss Supreme Court is
located in Lausanne
.
- Tanzania: Dodoma
was
designated the national capital in 1973, but most government
offices and embassies are still located in Dar es Salaam
.
- Monaco
, Singapore
and the Vatican City
are city-states, and thus
do not have a capital city distinct from the country as a
whole.
Capitals that are not the seat of government
Countries in the world where capital and seat of government are
currently separated:
International entities
Capital as 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 affair. For example:
- Ruined and almost uninhabited Athens
was made
capital of newly independent Greece
with the
romantic notion of reviving the glory of Ancient Greece. Similarly, following
the Cold War and German reunification, Berlin
is now
once again the capital of Germany. Other restored
capital cities include Moscow
after the
October Revolution.
- A symbolic relocation of a capital city to a geographically or
demographically peripheral location may be for either economic or strategic reasons (sometimes known as a
"forward capital" or spearhead capital). Peter I of Russia moved his government
from Moscow
to Saint
Petersburg
to give the Russian Empire
a western
orientation. The Ming Emperors moved
their capital to Beijing from more central
Nanjing
as to better supervise the border with the Mongols
and Manchus. During the 1857 war of independence,
Indian rebels
considered Delhi
their
capital and Bahadur Shah Zafar
was proclaimed emperor, though the ruling British had their capital in Calcutta
. In 1877 the British formally held a
'Durbar' in Delhi, proclaiming Queen Victoria as 'Empress of India'. Delhi finally became the
colonial capital after the Coronation
Durbar of King-Emperor George V, continuing as
Independent India's capital from 1947. Other examples
include Abuja
, Astaná
, Brasília
, Helsinki
, Islamabad
, Naypyidaw
and Yamoussoukro
.
- The
selection or founding of a "neutral" capital city — i.e. one
unencumbered by regional or political identity — was meant to
represent the unity of a new state when Bern
, Canberra
, Madrid
, Ottawa
, and
Washington,
D.C.
became capitals. 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.
- During the American Civil War, tremendous resources
were expended to defend Washington, D.C.
, which bordered the Confederate States of America,
from Confederate attack, even though the then-small federal government
could have been moved relatively easily in the era of railroads and telegraph. Likewise, great resourses were expended
by the Confederacy, in defending, and by the Union, in attacking,
the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia
.
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 Germany
focused on the capture of Paris
.
Capital cities
Listed below are capital cities located outside the largest urban
area of a given country.
Capitals located in the 2nd largest city
Capitals located in the 3rd largest city
Capitals located in the 4th largest city
Capitals located in the 5th largest city
Capitals located in the 6th largest city
Capitals located in the 7th largest city
Capitals located in the 8th largest city
Capitals located in the 9th largest city
Capitals located in the 10th largest city
Capitals located in the 15th largest city
Capitals located in the 22nd largest city
Unless otherwise stated population data is based on figures
presented in their respective Wikipedia articles.
There is
insufficiently recent population data to rank the size of the new
Burmese capital Naypyidaw
.
Distance to the capital
The greatest distance between a capital and the remotest part of
the country is from
Other great distances are
Distances Between Capital Cities (Nearest & 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
.
References
- Geonames.com)
- Geonames.com
- Geonames.com
- Geonames.org
- Geonames.org
- Geonames.com
- Geonames.com
- Mongabay.com
See also