Capital Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
- This article concerns places that serve as centers of government and politics. For alternative meanings see capital (disambiguation)
The seats of government of major substate jurisdictions are also usually called capitals, but at lower administrative subdivisions terms such as county town, county seat, or borough seat are used.
A number of cases exist where states or other entities have multiple capitals. In South Africa, for example, the administrative capital is Pretoria, the legislative capital is Cape Town, and the judicial capital is Bloemfontein, the outcome of the compromise that created the Union of South Africa in 1910.
In others, the "effective" and "official" capital may differ for pragmatic reasons, resulting in a situation where a city known as "the capital" is not, in fact, host to the seat of government:
- Yamoussoukro was designated the national capital of Côte d'Ivoire in 1983, but as of 2004 most government offices and embassies were still located in Abidjan
- Sucre is still the constitutional capital of Bolivia, but most of the national government long abandoned that region for La Paz
- Amsterdam is the nominal national capital of The Netherlands even though the Dutch government, head of state and supreme court are all located in The Hague.
As the focal point of power for the region or country, 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. Older capitals have often developed into prime economic, cultural, or intellectual centers as well. Such is certainly the case with Paris, France and Buenos Aires, Argentina among national capitals, and Irkutsk or Salt Lake City, Utah in their regions. Yet such concentration may be controversial. The siting of Brasilia in Brazil's heartland was done in part to represent the government's separation from the crowded and corrupt old capital, Rio de Janeiro. The government of South Korea announced in 2004 it would move its capital from Seoul to Yeongi-Gongju — even though the word "Seoul" itself means capital in the Korean language.
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 Thebes by Alexandria, Nanjing by Shanghai, or Edinburgh by Glasgow. The decline of a dynasty or culture could mean the extinction of its capital city as well, as occurred with Babylon and Cahokia. And many modern capital cities, such as Abuja and Ottawa, were deliberately fixed outside existing economic areas and have not established themselves as new commercial or industrial hubs since.
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:
This is an Article on Capital. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Capital Capital as symbol
Lists of capitals
