วันพุธที่ 26 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2551

Toronto

Toronto - Origins of One of the Great Cities of the World

The cosmopolitan Canadian city of Toronto now has a population of more than three million and the most ethnically diverse culture in the world. But three hundred years ago it was little more than a portage where the Humber River flows into Lake Ontario. It was known only to local natives and a few French voyageurs.

White Man Meets Indian

The first settlers in the Toronto area were native North American Indians. Different tribes had inhabited the area around Lake Ontario for at least ten thousand years. By the time Europeans first started exploring the region, the predominant Indian tribes were the Hurons and Petuns.

During the 1600s the Indian populations of much of this part of North America were devastated by diseases brought to the new world by European explorers and settlers. As Indian tribes were reduced by disease, tribes feuded with each other for their very survival. Indeed, some tribes did not survive.

This was the state of affairs in the southern Ontario region for much of the 1600s as Iroquois battled with Hurons. By 1688 however the Iroguois, who had moved into the Toronto area, were in turn displaced by the French, and gradually the southern Ontario region was dominated by the white man.

The Early French Period

The first European to reach the Toronto area is thought to have been Etienne Brule, who had served under Samuel de Champlain. Tradition has it that Brule "discovered" the Toronto site in 1615, but other scholars question whether Brule ever reached Lake Ontario at Toronto.

The first verifiable evidence of European presence in the area came with Roman Catholic missionaries working with the local natives in the 1660s and 1670s. Seasonal traders also regularly passed through the area by this time, the most famous of whom was the explorer Rene-Robert Cavelier de La Salle.

Toronto Develops Along With Canada

In 1834 the name of York was changed back to Toronto, and in 1841 Toronto became the capital of the newly minted Canada West region of the United Province of Canada.

In 1867 when the Canadian confederation was reformed and expanded, Toronto carried on as the capital city of the new provice of Ontario.

Toronto's population grew rapidly in the late 1800s, with the population going from 30,000 in 1851 to 181,000 in 1891. This rapid population growth was almost completely the result of immigration. The 1891 population figure also included recent annexations of many smaller, outlying towns such as Parkdale, Brockton Village, West Toronto, East Toronto, and many others.

Most of the immigration in the early and mid 1800s was from Britain and Ireland. As a result Toronto became a thoroughly English-Scottish-Irish town and remained that way until immigration patterns changed in the late 1800s.

Source: Free Articles


Toronto : Hot
http://www.c-om.org/toronto.html

ไม่มีความคิดเห็น: