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Toronto |
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TorontoPort and capital of Ontario, Canada, at the mouths of the Humber and Don rivers on Lake Ontario; population (1999 est) 2,529,300, metropolitan area (2001 est) 4,881,400. In 1998 the former area of Metropolitan Toronto merged with York, East York, Etebicoke, Scarborough, North York, and Toronto to form the City of Toronto. It is a major shipping point on the St Lawrence Seaway, and Canada's main financial, business, commercial, and manufacturing centre. Industries include shipbuilding, food-processing, publishing, biotechnology, information technology, and the production of fabricated metals, aircraft, farm machinery, cars, chemicals, and clothing. It is also a tourist and cultural centre, with a thriving film industry. HistoryOriginally a Native Canadian meeting place and crossroads of trade, its strategic position on the Toronto Passage overland route between lakes Huron and Ontario was fought over by the French, Americans, and English. French fur traders were using the passage to carry canoes between the lakes in 1615. Fort Rouillé, established by the French in 1749, was destroyed by the British in 1759.The area was settled by Loyalists after the American Revolution, and in 1787 the site of present-day Toronto was bought from Native Canadian Mississauga peoples for £1,700. The plot was chosen by Lord Dorchester, governor of Canada, as the seat of government for the newly created province of Upper Canada in May 1793; it was named York after Frederick Augustus, Duke of York. The city was occupied by US forces in 1813 when legislative buildings and archives were burned; the mace of government, which was carried away, was returned by President Theodore Roosevelt at the centennial celebrations in 1934. Self-government was granted to the town of York in 1817, and it was incorporated as a city under the name of Toronto in 1834. The expansion of the city gained impetus from the completion of the Erie Canal in 1825, the arrival of the railway in the mid-19th century, and the discovery of vast mineral deposits to the northwest at the beginning of the 20th century. Becoming increasingly ethnically diverse in the late 20th century, Toronto is now a very multicultural city; in 2001 over half its residents were foreign-born and over 100 languages were spoken in the city.
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