A capital city (or just, capital) is the area of a ''country, province, region, or state'' considered to enjoy primary status; although there are exceptions, a capital is typically a city that physically encompasses the offices and meeting places of the seat of government and is usually fixed by law or by the constitution. An alternative term is political capital, but this phrase has a second meaning based on an alternate sense of the word ''capital''. The capital is often, but not necessarily, the largest city of its constituent area.
The word ''capital'' derives from the Latin ''caput'' meaning "head".
The seats of government in major sub-state jurisdictions are often called "capitals," but this is typically only the case in countries with some degree of federalism, where major sub-state legal jurisdictions have elements of sovereignty. In unitary states, an "administrative centre" or other similar term is typically used for such locations besides the national capital city. For example, the seat of government in a state of the United States is usually called its "capital", but the main city in a region of the United Kingdom is usually not called such, even though in Ireland, a county's main town is usually called its "capital". On the other hand, the four main subdivisions of the United Kingdom do have capital cities: Scotland – Edinburgh, Wales – Cardiff, Northern Ireland – Belfast, and England – London. Counties in England, Wales and Scotland have historic county towns, which are often not the largest settlement within the county and often are no longer administrative centres, as many historical counties are now only ceremonial, and administrative boundaries are different.
In Canada, there is a federal capital, and the ten provinces and three territories all have capital cities. The states of such countries as Mexico, Brazil (including the famous cities of Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, capitals of their respective states), and Australia all have capital cities. For example, the six state capitals of Australia are Adelaide, South Australia; Brisbane, Queensland; Hobart, Tasmania; Melbourne, Victoria; Perth, Western Australia; and Sydney, New South Wales. In Australia, the term "capital cities" is regularly used, to refer to the aforementioned state capitals plus the federal capital Canberra and Darwin, the capital of the Northern Territory.
In the Federal Republic of Germany, each of its constituent states (or ''Länder'' - plural of ''Land'') has its own capital city, such as Wiesbaden, Mainz, Düsseldorf, Stuttgart, and Munich. Likewise, each of the republics of the Russian Federation has its own capital city.
In the lower administrative subdivisions in various English-speaking countries, terms such as county town, county seat, and borough seat are usually used.
Origins of capital cities
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 federation. Examples are
Ancient Baghdad,
Berlin,
Constantinople,
London,
Athens,
Madrid,
Moscow,
Ancient Rome,
Beijing,
Stockholm,
Tokyo, and
Vienna. The capital city naturally attracts politically motivated people and those whose skills are needed for efficient administration of national or imperial governments, such as
lawyers,
political scientists,
bankers,
journalists, and
public policy mavens. Some of these cities are or were also religious centres, e.g.
Constantinople (more than one religion), Rome (the
Roman Catholic Church),
Jerusalem (more than one religion),
Ancient Baghdad, London (the
Anglican Church), Moscow (the
Russian Orthodox Church), Belgrade (the
Serbian Orthodox Church), Paris, and Peking.
A capital city that is also the prime economic, cultural, or intellectual centre of a nation or an empire is sometimes referred to as a primate city. Examples are Athens, Beijing, Belgrade, Brussels, Bucharest, Budapest, Buenos Aires, Cairo, Copenhagen, Dublin, Lima, Lisbon, London, Madrid, Manila, Montevideo, Mexico City, Nairobi, Paris, Prague, Rome, Seoul, Sofia, Stockholm, Tokyo, Vienna, Vilnius, and Warsaw.
The convergence of political and economic or cultural power is by no means universal. Traditional capitals may be economically eclipsed by provincial rivals, e.g. Nanking by Shanghai, Quebec City by Montreal, Edinburgh by Glasgow and numerous US state capitals. The decline of a dynasty or culture could also mean the extinction of its capital city, as occurred at Babylon and Cahokia.
Although many capitals are defined by constitution or legislation, many long-time capitals have no legal designation as such: for example Bern, Edinburgh, Lisbon, London, Melbourne, Paris, Toronto and Wellington. They are recognised as capitals as a matter of convention, and because all or almost all the country's central political institutions, such as government departments, supreme court, legislature, embassies, etc., are located in or near them.
Planned capital cities
Many current capital cities were deliberately planned by government to house the seat of government of the nation or subdivision. Some planned capitals include
Abuja, Nigeria (1991);
Aracaju, Sergipe, Brazil (1855);
Ankara, Turkey (1923);
Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil (1897);
Dhaka, Bangladesh (1971);
Brasília, Brazil (1960);
Canberra, Australia (1927);
Goiânia, Goiás, Brazil (1933);
Islamabad, Pakistan (1960);
Frankfort, Kentucky (1792);
Jefferson City, Missouri (1821);
Jhongsing New Village, Taiwan,
Republic of China (1955);
New Delhi, India (1911);
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (1889);
Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada (1857);
Palmas, Tocantins, Brazil (1989);
Quezon City, Philippines (1948–1976);
Raleigh, North Carolina, USA (1792);
Washington D.C., USA (1800); and
Wellington, New Zealand (1865).
These cities satisfy one or both of the following criteria:
# A deliberately planned city that was built expressly to house the seat of government, superseding a capital city that had been located in an established population center. There have been various reasons for this, including overcrowding in that major metropolitan area, and the desire to place the capital city in a location with a better climate (usually a less tropical one).
# A town that was chosen as a compromise among two or more cities (or other political divisions), none of which was willing to concede to the other(s) the privilege of being the capital city. Usually, the new capital is geographically located roughly equidistant between the competing population centers.
Some examples of the second situation include:
Canberra, Australia, which was chosen as a compromise located between Melbourne and Sydney.
Frankfort, Kentucky, which is midway between Louisville and Lexington, Kentucky.
Ottawa, Canada, which is located along the boundary between the Province of Quebec and the Province of Ontario - the two most populous of the ten provinces, and also roughly midway between the two most populous cities of Canada, Montreal, Quebec, and Toronto, Ontario.
Wellington, New Zealand, which is located at the southern tip of the North Island of New Zealand, the more populous island, immediately across the Cook Strait from the South Island. The capital city was moved there from Auckland, at the northern extremity of the North Island, due to fears that the then gold-rich South Island would decide to become a separate colony.
Changes in a nation's political regime sometimes result in the designation of a new capital. The newly independent Kazakhstan moved its capital to the existing city of Aqmola. Naypyidaw was founded in Burma's interior as the former capital, Rangoon, was claimed to be too overcrowded.
Washington, DC, USA
When the
United States of America established its present
constitution in 1787, the question of its capital city arose. Several cities wished to be the national capital, including
Boston;
New York City;
Philadelphia; and
Richmond, Virginia; but none of these was willing to concede this honor to any of the others. There was also rivalry between the proposed thirteen
states as to which one would contain the capital city. A compromise was reached to establish a federal district separate from any of the states, which would contain a new capital city. The capital district was given the name
District of Columbia, and the capital city of
Washington was founded within it. In 1800, Washington was ready to house the
federal government.
The District of Columbia was the first such district to be set aside for a capital city, and this arrangement has been followed by Australia (the Australian Capital Territory), Mexico (the Federal District), Pakistan (Islamabad Capital Territory) and Brazil (Distrito Federal).
Unusual capital city arrangements
A number of cases exist where states have multiple capitals, and there are also several states that have no capital.
Chile: Santiago is the capital even though the National Congress of Chile meets in Valparaíso.
Czech Republic: Prague is the sole constitutional capital. Brno is home to all three of the country's highest courts, making it the ''de facto'' capital of the Czech judicial branch.
Finland: During the summer, the President resides at the Kultaranta in Naantali; presidential sessions of the government are held there as well.
France: The French constitution does not recognise 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 the parliament. Various ministries are located in the former West German capital of Bonn, which now has the title Federal City.
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 , has no distinct capital city, and thus has a capital district instead.
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:
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 ago abandoned that region for La Paz.
Côte d'Ivoire: Yamoussoukro was designated the national capital in 1983, but most government offices and embassies are still located in Abidjan.
Netherlands: Amsterdam is the constitutional national capital even though the Dutch government, parliament, supreme court, and the residential and work palace of the queen are all located in The Hague. (''For more details see: Capital of the Netherlands'').
International entities
European Union (
see details):
Brussels is generally considered as the capital of the
European Union alongside
Strasbourg where the
European Parliament has its main seat and votes because it hosts the major
institutions of the EU. The
judiciary and some of the executive's work are located in
Luxembourg and other bodies and agencies in other cities. Although the main seats are fixed in the EU's
treaties which form its legal basis, they do not use the term "capital" for any city.
United Nations: New York City is the main meeting place of the highest bodies of the UN, but significant parts of its structure exist in other cities, such as Vienna, Geneva and The Hague.
African Union: Addis Ababa and Midrand
Union of South American Nations: Cochabamba and Quito
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 civilian frontiersmen. 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 were taken. In their military strategies, traditional enemies of France such as Prussia (in the Franco-Prussian War of 1871) focused on the capture of Paris.
Distances between capital cities (nearest and farthest)
Nearest capital cities
:The closest 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 two second closest capital cities between two sovereign countries are Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo, which are about 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 apart.
Farthest away from each other
:The capitals farthest away from each other are Wellington, New Zealand, and Madrid, Spain, which are apart. This is very nearly the maximum possible, since they are only away from being antipodes, or directly opposite each other on a globe.
Farthest away among two sovereign countries that share a border
:The greatest distance between the capitals of two sovereign countries that share a border is , between Pyongyang, North Korea and Moscow, Russia.
Farthest away from the closest other capital city (remoteness)
:The longest distance from one capital of a sovereign country to the one closest to it is between Wellington, New Zealand, and Canberra, Australia. The relation is reciprocal - each one is nearer to the other than to the capital of any other sovereign country.
See also
List of capital cities
List of former national capitals
South American capital cities
Temporary capital
List of capital cities by altitude
List of capital cities by relative size
References
Category:Administrative divisions
Category:Capitals
kbd:Къалэ нэхъышъхьэ
af:Hoofstad
als:Hauptstadt
am:ዋና ከተማ
ang:Hēafodstōl
ar:عاصمة
an:Capital (politica)
arc:ܐܪܫܟܝܬܐ
ast:Capital (política)
az:Paytaxt
bjn:Indung banua
zh-min-nan:Siú-to͘
ba:Баш ҡала
be:Сталіца
be-x-old:Сталіца
bcl:Kapitolyo
bi:Kapitol
bg:Столица
bar:Haptstod
bs:Glavni grad
br:Kêr-benn
ca:Capital
cv:Тĕп хула
ceb:Kapital
cs:Hlavní město
cy:Prifddinas
da:Hovedstad
pdc:Haaptschtadt
de:Hauptstadt
dsb:Stolica
et:Pealinn
el:Πρωτεύουσα
es:Capital (política)
eo:Ĉefurbo
eu:Hiriburu (politika)
fa:پایتخت
hif:Capital
fo:Høvuðsstaður
fr:Capitale
fy:Haadstêd
fur:Capitâl
ga:Príomhchathair
gv:Preeu-valley
gl:Capital (política)
gu:રાજધાની
got:𐌷𐌰𐌿𐌱𐌹𐌳𐌰𐌱𐌰𐌿𐍂𐌲𐍃/Haubidabaurgs
ko:수도
haw:Kapikala
hy:Մայրաքաղաք
hi:राजधानी
hsb:Stolica
hr:Glavni grad
ilo:Kapitolio
id:Ibu kota
ia:Capital
os:Сæйраг сахар
zu:IsiQongo
is:Höfuðborg
it:Capitale (città)
he:עיר בירה
jv:Ibu kutha
kl:Illoqarfiit pingaarnersaat
kn:ರಾಜಧಾನಿ
krc:Ара шахар
ka:დედაქალაქი
csb:Stolëca
kk:Елорда
rw:Umurwa
sw:Mji mkuu
kv:Юркар
kg:Mbanza ya kimfumu
ht:Kapital
ku:Paytext
lo:ນະຄອນຫລວງ
la:Caput (urbs)
lv:Galvaspilsēta
lt:Sostinė
li:Houfsjtad
ln:Mbóka-mokonzi
lmo:Capital
hu:Főváros
mk:Главен град
mg:Renivohitra
ml:തലസ്ഥാനം
mt:Belt kapitali
mi:Tāone matua
xmf:ნანანოღა
arz:عاصمه
mzn:نیشتگاه
ms:Ibu negara
mwl:Capital
mn:Нийслэл хот
my:မြို့တော်
nah:Tēcuacān
nl:Hoofdstad
nds-nl:Heufdstad
new:तलैनकरम् (सन् २००६या संकिपा)
ja:首都
nap:Capitale (città)
no:Hovedstad
nn:Hovudstad
nrm:Capitale
oc:Capitala
mhr:Рӱдола
uz:Poytaxt
pnb:راجگڑھ
pap:Kapital
ps:پلازمېنه
koi:Канкар
tpi:Kapitol
nds:Hööftstadt
pl:Stolica
pnt:Πρωτεύουσα
pt:Capital
crh:Paytaht
ro:Capitală
rmy:Sherutno foro
rm:Chapitala
qu:Uma llaqta
rue:Головне місто
ru:Столица
sah:Киин куорат
se:Oaivegávpot
sc:Capitale
sco:Caipital ceety
sq:Kryeqyteti
si:අගනුවර
simple:Capital (city)
sk:Hlavné mesto
sl:Glavno mesto
cu:Стольнъ градъ
szl:Stolica
ckb:پایتەخت
srn:Mamafoto
sr:Главни град
sh:Glavni grad
su:Ibu kota
fi:Pääkaupunki
sv:Huvudstad
tl:Kabisera
ta:தலைநகரம்
roa-tara:Capitale, cetate
tt:Башкала
te:రాజధాని
th:เมืองหลวง
tr:Başkent
tk:Paýtagt
udm:Шоркар
uk:Столиця
ur:دارالحکومت
za:Soujduh
vec:Cavedal
vi:Thủ đô
vo:Cifazif
fiu-vro:Pääliin
zh-classical:京
war:Ulohan
wuu:首都
yi:הויפטשטאט
yo:Olúìlú
zh-yue:首都
zea:Oôdstad
bat-smg:Suostėnė
zh:首都