Tuesday 25 June 2024

TRAVEL TUESDAY 450 - KINSHASHA, CONGO

“A mistreated woman will drown her husband in tears” – Proverb of the Congo

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Kinshasa (Lingala: Kinsásá), formerly named Léopoldville until June 30, 1966, is the capital and largest city of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Once a site of fishing and trading villages along the Congo River, Kinshasa is now one of the world's fastest-growing megacities. Kinshasa's 2024 population was estimated at 17,032,322. It is the most densely populated city in the DRC and the most populous city in Africa, Africa's third-largest metropolitan area and the leading economic, political, and cultural centre of the DRC.
Kinshasa houses several industries, including manufacturing, telecommunications, banking, and entertainment. The city also hosts some of DRC's significant institutional buildings, such as the Palais du Peuple, Palais de la Nation, Court of Cassation, Constitutional Court, Cité de l'Union Africaine, Palais de Marbre, Stade des Martyrs, Immeuble du Gouvernement, Kinshasa Financial Centre, and multiple federal departments and agencies.
Covering 9,965 square kilometres, Kinshasa stretches along the southern shores of the Pool Malebo, forming an expansive crescent across flat, low-lying terrain at an average altitude of about 300 meters. Situated between latitudes 4° and 5° and longitudes East 15° and 16°32, Kinshasa shares its borders with the Mai-Ndombe Province, Kwilu Province, and Kwango Province to the east; the Congo River delineates its western and northern perimeters, constituting a natural border with the Republic of the Congo; to the south lies the Kongo Central Province. Across the river sits Brazzaville (seen in the distance upper right of photo), the smaller capital of the neighbouring Republic of the Congo, forming the world's second-closest pair of capital cities despite being separated by a four-kilometre-wide unbridged span of the Congo River.
Kinshasa is the largest nominally Francophone urban area globally, with French being the language of government, education, media, public services and high-end commerce, while Lingala is used as a lingua franca in the street.

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4 comments:

  1. Thanks for the history. Thanks for hosting and I hope that you have a wonderful week.

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  2. Thank you dear. You're a good traveling companion Aloha

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  3. They were colonised by the Belgians? I always mix the two Congos up....(because my geography is terrible....I am amazed at how little I know!)

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  4. Amazing, Great to read about Kinshasa, Thanks for sharing.

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