List of purpose-built national capitals
(Redirected from Lists of purpose-built capital cities)
This is a list of capital cities that were specially designed, planned, and built to be a national or regional capital.
Built
editCurrent national capitals
editCity | Country | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Abuja | Nigeria | 1991 | In 1976, Nigeria's military government made plans for a new capital city. In 1991, it was moved from Lagos to provide a capital that was independent of the three major ethnic groups, the Yoruba, Igbo, and Hausa-Fulani, in an area in the country's interior. A new capital granted relief to the congestion and overcrowding of Lagos. |
Ankara[a] | Turkey | 1923 | Having served as the capital of the ancient Celtic state (280–64 BC) and Roman province of Galatia (25 BC–7th century), on 23 April 1920, the Grand National Assembly of Turkey was established in Ankara. Ankara became the new Turkish capital on the establishment of the Republic on 29 October 1923, succeeding the former Turkish capital Constantinople, now known as Istanbul. |
Astana[a] | Kazakhstan | 1998 | After Kazakhstan became independent following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the city's original name was restored in the modified form Akmola.[1] On 6 July 1994, the Supreme Council of Kazakhstan adopted the decree "On the transfer of the capital of Kazakhstan".[2] On 10 December 1997, the capital was moved to Akmola, which was then renamed Astana in 1998.[3] On 10 June 1998, Astana was proclaimed the capital.[4] On 16 July 1999, Astana was awarded the medal and title City of Peace by UNESCO.[2] |
Baghdad | Iraq | 762 | Victorious Abbasid rulers wanted their own capital to rule from. Choosing a site north of the defeated Sassanid's capital of Ctesiphon (and also just north of where ancient Babylon once stood), on 30 July 762 the caliph Al-Mansur commissioned the construction of the city. |
Belmopan | Belize | 1970 | In 1970, the capital of Belize was moved to Belmopan after 1961's Hurricane Hattie caused extensive damage to the former capital Belize City. |
Brasília | Brazil | 1960 | In 1960, the capital was moved from Rio de Janeiro because of overcrowding, to encourage inland growth and to make the capital's location more regionally neutral (as was stated in the Brazilian constitution in 1891) and to eliminate the vulnerability to attacks by sea. |
Bridgetown | Barbados | 1628 | Moved from James Town to Bridgetown in 1628, due to better topography for a better shipping harbor. |
Canberra | Australia | 1927 | The federal constitution adopted in 1901 required a new capital to be situated within the state of New South Wales but at least 100 miles (160 km) from Sydney. This was a compromise between the claims of Sydney and Melbourne, Australia's two largest cities. The Australian Capital Territory was created in 1911 and Canberra was formally established in 1913; however it was not until 1927, with the relocation of federal parliament, that it was designated as the capital. |
Dodoma[a] | Tanzania | 1996 | From 1996, moved from Dar es Salaam |
Gaborone | Botswana | 1964 | In 1964, it moved from Mahikeng, South Africa, when Botswana became an independent country.[5] |
Islamabad | Pakistan | 1960 | In 1960, the capital was temporarily shifted from Karachi to Rawalpindi, the move being completed in 1966. Once it was ready, Islamabad became the capital. It was created to diversify development across the country, rather than for it to be centered in the south, along the Arabian Sea coast. |
Lima | Peru | 1535 | Moved in 1535. Cuzco had been the inland capital of the Inca Empire, but when the Spanish Empire took control of Peru, Lima was founded along the Pacific Ocean to be the capital. Francisco Pizarro founded Lima on the coast to take advantage of being closer to the Isthmus of Panama and the Spanish Empire's colonies in North America and more protected from the war-torn highlands of Peru. |
Naypyidaw | Myanmar | 2005 | In 2005, it was moved from Yangon (Rangoon) to have their military government more centrally located geographically, "so as to keep an eye on" rebel groups forming and training for coups in the jungles and away from the political activities of Yangon. |
New Delhi | India | 1912 | In 1912, the capital was moved from Calcutta (now Kolkata) to New Delhi, now part of the larger city of Delhi, which had previously served as the capital of the Mughal Empire. |
Ngerulmud | Palau | 2006 | In 2006, the capital was moved from Koror City. |
Nouakchott | Mauritania | 1958 | In 1958, the capital was moved from Saint-Louis, Senegal by President Moktar Ould Daddah. |
Oslo (formerly Christiania) | Norway | 1624 | After a fire devastated medieval Oslo in 1624, King Christian IV ordered the city to be rebuilt further west, closer to the fortress, and renamed Christiania. Beginning in 1859, the former site of Oslo has been included in the city's borders. The city re-adopted the name Oslo in 1925. |
Palikir | Federated States of Micronesia | 1989 | From 1989, moved from Kolonia |
Pretoria | South Africa | 1860 | Pretoria was founded in 1855 by Marthinus Pretorius, a leader of the Voortrekkers, who named it after his father Andries Pretorius and chose a spot on the banks of the Apies rivier (Afrikaans for "Monkeys river") to be the new capital of the South African Republic (Dutch: Zuid Afrikaansche Republiek; ZAR). |
Putrajaya | Malaysia | 2002 | In February 2001, Putrajaya was designated as the administrative capital of Malaysia, as the executive branch of government (Cabinet, federal ministries and agencies) was moved from Kuala Lumpur to Putrajaya. The seat of the judicial branch of government was also relocated to Putrajaya. However, Kuala Lumpur remains the official capital as well as the seat of the head of state and the legislative branch (Parliament of Malaysia). |
Seoul | South Korea | 1394 | Joseon's first King Taejo, planned the construction of the Hanyang city in October 1394, to replace Gaegyeong, old Goryeo's capital city. Government buildings were planned to be crowded along the street in front of the main palace Gyeongbokgung, to implement instructions from confucian ideology. This traditional city center of Hanyang is part of modern Downtown Seoul. |
Valletta | Malta | 1571 | In 1571, as a result of the Great Siege of Malta six years earlier, the capital was moved from Birgu to Valletta. The new capital city was built on the Sciberras Peninsula between 1566 and 1571, and was named for the Grandmaster Jean Parisot de Valette. |
Washington | United States | 1800 | In 1800, the capital of the United States was moved here from its temporary capital in Philadelphia, after years of construction in the federal District of Columbia. The U.S. Constitution had authorized the federal government to set aside a federal district as a national capital. The move was part of the Compromise of 1790 between Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton allowing the U.S. Department of the Treasury to assume state governments' debts as a national debt in exchange for locating the capital in the South. Virginia and Maryland each ceded land for the capital. |
Yamoussoukro[a] | Ivory Coast | 1983 | From 1983, moved from Abidjan |
Subnational
editCity | Administrative unit | Parental country | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Austin | Texas | United States | 1839 | The Republic of Texas (1839–1847) had five temporary capitals and one official capital, Houston, before its second president Mirabeau B. Lamar moved the capital to the new city of Austin. |
Historical
editCity | Country | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Itjtawy | Ancient Egypt (Middle Kingdom) | 1971 BC | Established by Pharaoh Amenemhat I of the Twelfth Dynasty. Remained capital through the Thirteenth Dynasty; abandoned during or shortly after the reign of Merneferre Ay for unknown reasons. Exact site is unclear but usually linked to the archaeological site of Lisht. |
Akhetaten | Ancient Egypt (New Kingdom) | 1346 BC | Established by Pharaoh Akhenaten of the Eighteenth Dynasty. Abandoned in 1332 BC, shortly after his death. Now known as "Amarna" from the name of the archaeological site. |
Pi-Ramesses | Ancient Egypt (New Kingdom) | 13th century BC | Established by Pharaoh Ramesses II of the Nineteenth Dynasty. The exact year in which the capital was moved is unclear, but it is known to have occurred before the end of Ramesses II's 66-year reign in 1213 BC. Remained capital through the Twentieth Dynasty; abandoned c. 1060 BC due to silting of the branch of the Nile on which it was situated. Exact site is unclear but usually linked to the archaeological site of Qantir. |
Pasargadae | Achaemenid Empire | 6th century BC | Established by Cyrus the Great. The exact extent and function of the capital is unclear. Possibly abandoned after the establishment of Persepolis by Darius the Great. |
Persepolis | Achaemenid Empire | 6th century BC | Established by Darius the Great. The exact extent and function of the capital is unclear; its functions appear mostly ceremonial and it may have been occupied only seasonally. Nevertheless usually cited as capital of the Achaemenid Empire by most contemporary sources. |
Ava (Inwa) | Ava Kingdom | 1365 | Founded in 1365, Ava (Inwa) was the capital of successive Burmese kingdoms from the 14th to 19th centuries. |
Ayutthaya | Ayutthaya Kingdom ( Thailand) | 1350 | Founded by Uthong after a smallpox outbreak in Lop Buri in 1350 |
Constantinople | Roman Empire | 330 | Established by Constantine the Great to be a capital for the Eastern Roman Empire. After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, it became the only capital of the empire. Established on the site of old Byzantium, the new city almost completely replaced the old one. After the fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1453 it became the capital of the Ottoman Empire until its dissolution after World War I, when the Republic of Turkey established its new capital in Ankara. It also served as the capital of the Latin Empire after the Fourth Crusade in the 13th century. |
Fujiwara-kyō | Japan | 694 | In 694, the capital was moved there from Asuka, but moved out to Nara in 710. |
Quezon City | Philippines | 1948 | The city was created in 1939 by President Manuel L. Quezon. In 1948, the capital was moved from Manila to the new, neighbouring city. However, the capital was reverted to Manila in 1976. |
Kyoto | Japan | 794 | In 794, the capital was moved from Nagaokakyō to Kyoto, but it was moved again to Tokyo (Edo) in about 1868, when the Emperor of Japan moved during the Meiji Restoration and the end of the Tokugawa Shogunate. (see article capital of Japan). |
Karlsruhe | Baden-Durlach (modern-day Germany) | 1715 | In 1715, it was moved from Durlach to Karlsruhe, which became the capital of the unified Baden in 1771. Karlsruhe remained the capital of the Grand Duchy of Baden after German unification following the Franco-Prussian War of 1871; it ceased being the capital of any territorial entity in 1945, at the end of World War II. |
Mandalay | Burma | 1859 | Mandalay was built during 1857–1859 by King Mindon, and it was the last royal capital of the Burmese Kingdom. The site was chosen in accordance to a supposed prophecy by The Buddha. Mandalay is now the second largest city in Myanmar. |
Pinya | Pinya Kingdom | 7 February 1313 | Founded in 1313, Pinya was the capital of the central Burmese kingdom of Pinya from 1313 to 1365. |
Pella | Ancient Macedonia | c. 400 BC | Moved from Aigai due to more fertile land and suitable location for a port, connected to the sea by a navigable inlet. |
Saint Petersburg | Russian Empire | 1712 | Built by Peter the Great in the beginning of 18th century on territory captured from Sweden in the Great Northern War, capital since 1712. The Bolsheviks finally settled on Moscow in 1918. |
Victoria City | Hong Kong | 1841 | Stanley was the temporary administrative centre until the colonial government moved to the newly built Victoria City. |
Currently proposed or under construction
editCity | Country | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Djibloho – Ciudad de la Paz | Equatorial Guinea | TBA | Djibloho is under construction and is expected to replace Malabo as Equatorial Guinea's capital city. |
Little Bay | Montserrat | TBA | Little Bay is a town under construction in Montserrat, intended to replace the previous capital, Plymouth, which was destroyed by the eruption of the Soufrière Hills volcano in 1997. |
New Administrative Capital | Egypt | TBA | In March 2015, Egypt proposed building a New Administrative Capital, currently undergoing a naming process.[6] It is now under construction and lies east of the present capital Cairo. The city is projected to be home to more than 40 million people by 2050.[7] |
Nusantara | Indonesia | TBA | Nusantara is under construction since July 2022 and is expected to replace Jakarta as the capital of Indonesia on or before 16 August 2024.[8] For decades, Indonesia has mulled the relocation of its capital from Jakarta, which is overcrowded and subsiding rapidly. On 26 August 2019, President Joko Widodo announced that the future Indonesian capital will be carved from Penajam North Paser and Kutai Kartanegara regencies in East Kalimantan province.[9][10] The proposed capital was named Nusantara on 16 January 2022.[11] |
Ramciel | South Sudan | TBA | In February 2011, the Autonomous Government of Southern Sudan adopted a resolution to study moving the capital of the new Republic of South Sudan that was to be created in July of that year to a new, planned city. In September 2011, the government of South Sudan approved a project to build a new capital at Ramciel in Lakes state; it is projected that the project will take at least five years. |
Subnational
editCity | Administrative unit | Parental country | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Arawa | Bougainville | Papua New Guinea | TBA[b] | The town was largely destroyed during the Bougainville Civil War,[citation needed] resulting in the relocation of the capital to Buka, though there are plans to rebuild Arawa and make it the capital again.[12] |
Former proposals and attempts
editThis section needs expansion with: more details. You can help by adding to it. (April 2021) |
- Welthauptstadt Germania was the proposed renewal of Berlin, (Nazi Germany) as a planned "world capital", although only a small portion was built between 1937 and 1943. Many of the plans were designed by Albert Speer. Progress was halted by the failure of Operation Barbarossa during World War II.
- Al-Karamah was intended to be the permanent capital of the United Arab Emirates located between Abu Dhabi and Dubai, but it was never built.[13]
- Viedma, the capital of the Río Negro Province, was proposed by President Raúl Alfonsín as a new capital for Argentina in 1986, replacing Buenos Aires. The idea was to change the centralization in the port of Buenos Aires, and promote development in Patagonia. The economic collapse of the Alfonsín government halted the project that had been approved by Law.[14]
See also
editNotes
editReferences
edit- ^ Pospelov, Evgeni M. (1993). Имена городов: вчера и сегодня (1917–1992). Топонимический словарь [City Names: Yesterday and Today (1917–1992). Toponymic Dictionary] (in Russian). Русские словари. pp. 24–25.
- ^ a b "Astana – the capital of the Republic of Kazakhstan". e-history.kz. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
- ^ "Timeline: Kazakhstan". BBC News. 31 January 2012. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
- ^ "Astana – the capital of the Republic of Kazakhstan". Official site of the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan. Archived from the original on 17 March 2015. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
- ^ Njeru, Purity (2009). "History of Gaborone". Nairobi, Kenya: The African Executive. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 20 June 2009.
- ^ "مسابقة هوية مصر". www.egbranding.eg. Retrieved 4 November 2021.
- ^ Kingsley, Patrick (16 March 2015). "A new New Cairo: Egypt plans £30bn purpose-built capital in desert". the Guardian. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
- ^ Faris Mokhtar; Rieka Rahadiana (2 August 2022). "Indonesia Breaks Ground on Nusantara as Jakarta Sinks". Bloomberg.
- ^ "Indonesia plans to relocate its capital from Jakarta". SBS News. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
- ^ Kusuma, Hendra (26 August 2019). "Resmi! Jokowi Putuskan Ibu Kota RI Pindah ke Kaltim". detikfinance (in Indonesian). Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- ^ "Head Of Bappenas Suharso: Name Of The Capital City Of The Archipelago". VOI - Waktunya Merevolusi Pemberitaan. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
- ^ The Report: Papua New Guinea 2016. Oxford Business Group. 19 September 2016. ISBN 9781910068649. Retrieved 1 September 2020 – via Google Books.
- ^ Ibrahim Al Abed; Peter Hellyer (1 June 2001). United Arab Emirates: a new perspective. Trident Press Ltd. p. 131. ISBN 978-1-900724-47-0. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
- ^ Santi, Matías Di (9 September 2010). "El traslado de la capital a Viedma". Chequeado (in Spanish). Retrieved 20 November 2021.