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View Full Version : What's your town/city famous for?



MCHeshPants420
04-13-2005, 04:24 AM
I think I may have done this thread before (or at least someone has...), anyhow let's give it a(nother) whirl.

What's your town/city famous for?

My city has a pretty rich maritime history, Sir Francis Drake sank the Spanish Aramada here, the pilgrim fathers left for America from here and Charles Darwin left for the Galapagos Islands from here.

I can't think of owt that doesn't have something to do with boats/ships, erm...isn't Sharon Davies from round these parts? :unsure:

worldpease
04-13-2005, 04:48 AM
Tijuana B.C. Mexico
(B.C. stands for Baja California State)

Sadly, my city is "famous" for the killing of tourists, and the gun fights betwen drug dealers and the H Police Department).
but thats wrong... Yes, its true that has happened here, but is not like.
if you go out your house, you might be shot, No.
Tijuana is not that dangerus, besides, 'it all depends on what your "bussines" is',
if you just wanna have a good time vacatoning, go ahead, have fun, go touristic places, just don't get your self in trubble.

On a history note:
Its believed that in the late 1800 or early 1900, when there was no people or just
a couple of ranchers here near to the border (with San Diego Ca. US),
there was a very nice lady called "Juana", and whenever some one or a family
came trough this region to cross to the US, she geve them shelter, food, or whatevershe could to help,
so people started calling her "La Tia Juana" (the aunt Juana).
From there the name TiJuana.

wacko jacko
04-13-2005, 04:51 AM
aaaah that sweet worldpease but my town is famous for me! :yahoo:

ziggyjuarez
04-13-2005, 05:30 AM
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/a/a1/Bakersfield.jpg
this sign and it has a lot of gangsters in it.

Monkeee
04-13-2005, 05:41 AM
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/a/a1/Bakersfield.jpg
this sign and it has a lot of gangsters in it. omg we live so close i should come and visit you

ziggyjuarez
04-13-2005, 06:00 AM
omg we live so close i should come and visit you
where do you live?

Monkeee
04-13-2005, 06:25 AM
San Francisco!!! The Gangsta CITY!!!

GepperRankins
04-13-2005, 06:28 AM
is plymouth the place where some american rebels invaded planning to burn the town down, then when they got there they realised they forgot their matches.


i think some soldiers shot some miners in fev during the strike. there's a plaque down the lane about the featherstone massacre or something. i'll check next time i go down.

i live two miles away from the haribo factory where they make pontefract cakes

ziggyjuarez
04-13-2005, 06:32 AM
San Francisco!!! The Gangsta CITY!!!
did you ever go to alcatraz or the wax museum?i was going to go but never did :(

Monkeee
04-13-2005, 06:53 AM
we have a wax museum.....................? good god....

bigboab
04-13-2005, 07:27 AM
The town where I stay is the home of 'Johnny Walker' Whisky. :thumbsup: It is also the place where Robert Burns first published his poems.

Mr. Mulder
04-13-2005, 08:47 AM
A big cathedral, terrible drivers and I think Lesley Garrett comes from here :sick: there was also lots of medieval villages and so forth at some stage :ermm:

sArA
04-13-2005, 09:18 AM
My nearest town is home to the Hansom Cab......that is all :huh:

Samurai
04-13-2005, 09:40 AM
http://www.aviewoncities.com/img/london/map_eu_to_london.gif

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/6/6f/250px-174_7432.jpg

London - United Kingdom

Continent: Europe
Country: United Kingdom
Region: England
City: London

Coordinates: 51:30:00N 0:07:00W
Altitude: 14m / 49ft
Time Zone: Greenwich Meridian Time (GMT)

Distance to other cities

City km miles

Antwerp, FL 316 196
Berlin, DE 929 577
Boston, MA 5279 3280
Budapest, HU 1470 913
Chicago, IL 6378 3963
Dallas, TX 7657 4758
Detroit, MI 6054 3762
Houston, TX 7821 4860
Los Angeles, CA 8781 5456
Montréal, PQ 5238 3255
Munich, DE 920 572
New York, NY 5585 3471
Paris, FR 343 213
Philadelphia, PA 5710 3548
San Francisco, CA 8645 5372
Toronto, ON 5728 3559
Vancouver, BC 7604 4725
Warsaw, PL 1454 904
Washington, DC 5913 3674

http://www.aviewoncities.com/img/zzflags/eu-l.gif Union Flag
http://www.aviewoncities.com/img/zzflags/eu_gb-l.gif Country Flag - Great Britain
http://www.aviewoncities.com/img/zzflags/eu_gb_england-l.gif Region Flag - England
http://www.aviewoncities.com/img/zzflags/eu_gb_england_london-l.gif City Flag - London (I didn't even know we had a London Flag :slap: so now I've just learnt something new today after research!)

From Wiki

Although there is no evidence of a large pre-Roman settlement, the name London is thought pre-date the Romans, who founded a settlement called Londinium on the north bank of the Thames circa 50AD. This fortified settlement was the capital of the Roman province of Britannia.

After the fall of Roman Empire, Londinium was abandoned and a Saxon town named Lundenwic was established a mile or so to the west in what is now Aldwych, in the 7th century AD. The old Roman city was then re-occupied during the late 9th or early 10th century.

Westminster was once a distinct town, and has been the seat of the English royal court and government since the mediæval era. Eventually Westminster and London grew together and formed the basis of London, becoming England's largest - though not capital - city (Winchester was the capital city of England until the 12th century).

From the 16th to the early 20th centuries London flourished as the capital of the British Empire.

In 1666, the Great Fire of London swept through and destroyed a large part of the City of London. Re-building took over 10 years, but London's growth accelerated in the 18th century and by the early 19th century it was the largest city in the world.

London has grown steadily over centuries, surrounding and making suburbs of neighbouring villages and towns, farmland, countryside, meadows and woodlands, spreading in every direction.

Probably the most significant changes to London in the last 100 years were as a result of the Blitz and other bombing by the German Luftwaffe that took place during World War II. The bombing flattened large tracts of housing and other buildings across London. The rebuilding during the 1950s and after characterised by a wide range of architectural styles has resulted in a lack of unity in architecture that has become part of London's character. The Blitz killed over 30,000 Londoners.

In the early part of the 20th Century Londoners used coal for heating their homes, which produced large amounts of smoke. In combination with climatic conditions this often caused a characteristic smog, and London became known for its typical "London Fog", also known as "Pea Soupers". London is also sometimes referred to as "The Smoke", probably because of this.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/c/cc/250px-Trafalgar_square_night_small.jpg

Other useful facts...

Jack The Ripper

http://www.met.police.uk/history/images/jackr2.jpg

In the 1880's, the East End of London became the staging place for a series of sickening murders that caused outrage through the entire nation. Although the killer's identity has been wildly speculated upon, to this day the murderer is known only as Jack the Ripper...

Further Information - Jack The Ripper (http://www.casebook.org/intro.html)

The Black Death: Bubonic Plague

http://www.themiddleages.net/images/black_death.jpg

In the early 1330s an outbreak of deadly bubonic plague occurred in China. Plague mainly affects rodents, but fleas can transmit the disease to people. Once people are infected, they infect others very rapidly. Plague causes fever and a painful swelling of the lymph glands called buboes, which is how it gets its name. The disease also causes spots on the skin that are red at first and then turn black.

Since China was one of the busiest of the world's trading nations, it was only a matter of time before the outbreak of plague in China spread to western Asia and Europe. In October of 1347, several Italian merchant ships returned from a trip to the Black Sea, one of the key links in trade with China. When the ships docked in Sicily, many of those on board were already dying of plague. Within days the disease spread to the city and the surrounding countryside. An eyewitness tells what happened:

"Realizing what a deadly disaster had come to them, the people quickly drove the Italians from their city. But the disease remained, and soon death was everywhere. Fathers abandoned their sick sons. Lawyers refused to come and make out wills for the dying. Friars and nuns were left to care for the sick, and monasteries and convents were soon deserted, as they were stricken, too. Bodies were left in empty houses, and there was no one to give them a Christian burial."
The disease struck and killed people with terrible speed. The Italian writer Boccaccio said its victims often

"ate lunch with their friends and dinner with their ancestors in paradise."
By the following August, the plague had spread as far north as England, where people called it "The Black Death" because of the black spots it produced on the skin. A terrible killer was loose across Europe, and Medieval medicine had nothing to combat it.

In winter the disease seemed to disappear, but only because fleas--which were now helping to carry it from person to person--are dormant then. Each spring, the plague attacked again, killing new victims. After five years 25 million people were dead--one-third of Europe's people.

Even when the worst was over, smaller outbreaks continued, not just for years, but for centuries. The survivors lived in constant fear of the plague's return, and the disease did not disappear until the 1600s.

Medieval society never recovered from the results of the plague. So many people had died that there were serious labor shortages all over Europe. This led workers to demand higher wages, but landlords refused those demands. By the end of the 1300s peasant revolts broke out in England, France, Belgium and Italy.

The disease took its toll on the church as well. People throughout Christendom had prayed devoutly for deliverance from the plague. Why hadn't those prayers been answered? A new period of political turmoil and philosophical questioning lay ahead.


DISASTER STRIKES
Estimated population of Europe from 1000 to 1352.
1000 38 million
1100 48 million
1200 59 million
1300 70 million
1347 75 million
1352 50 million
25 million people died in just under five years between 1347 and 1352.

So, where does England, or London for that matter fit in? Well, during my school years I researched this project at the time, and found some startling evidence... Read on...

In the spring and summer of 1665 an outbreak of Bubonic Plague spread from parish to parish until thousands had died and the huge pits dug to receive the bodies were full.

Bubonic Plague was known as the Black Death and had been known in England for centuries. It was a ghastly disease. The victim's skin turned black in patches and inflamed glands or 'buboes' in the groin combined with compulsive vomiting, swollen tongue and splitting headaches made it a horrible, agonizing killer.

The plague started in the East, possibly China, and quickly spread through Europe. Whole communities were wiped out and corpses littered the streets as there was no one left to bury them.

It began in London in the poor, overcrowded parish of St. Giles-in-the-Field. It started slowly at first but by May of 1665, 43 had died. In June 6137 people died, in July 17036 and at its peak in August, 31159 people died. In all, 15% of the population perished during that terrible summer.

Incubation took a mere four to six days and when the plague appeared in a household, the house was sealed, thus condemning the whole family to death! These houses were distinguished by a painted red cross on the door and the words, 'Lord have mercy on us'. At night the corpses were brought out in answer to the cry,' Bring out your dead', put in a cart and taken away to the plague pits. One called the Great Pit was at Aldgate in London and another at Finsbury Fields.

The King, Charles II and his Court left London and fled to Oxford. Those people who could, sent their families away from London during these months, but the poor had no recourse but to stay.

Samuel Pepys in his Diary gives a vivid account of the empty streets in London, as all who could had left in an attempt to flee the pestilence.

It was believed that holding a posy of flowers to the noise kept away the plague and to this day judges are still given a nose-gay to carry on ceremonial occasions as a protection against the plague!

A song about the plague is still sung by children today.

Ring a Ring O' Roses,
A pocketful of posies,
Atishoo! Atishoo!
We all fall down!

"Ring a Ring O' Roses" is said to be a macabre parody on the horrors of the Great Plague. One of the first signs of the plague was a ring of rose-coloured spots, and the protection against this terrible disease was, in popular belief, a posy of herbs. Sneezing was taken as a sure sign that you were about to die of it, and the last line "We all fall down" omits the word, "dead"!

In 1666 the Great Fire of London destroyed much of the centre of London but also killed off most of the black rats and fleas that carried the plague bacillus.

The plague lasted in London until the late Autumn when the colder weather helped kill off the fleas.

For some brief facts, try here http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/uk.html


Hope this was informative :yahoo:


Samurai

Guillaume
04-13-2005, 09:47 AM
Strasbourg is the seat of the Council of Europe and the European Court of Human Rights and it hosts the new seat of the European Parliament (with Brussels).
Wiki. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strasbourg)

ziggyjuarez
04-13-2005, 09:49 AM
haha SnnY i told you people like wiki :p

lynx
04-13-2005, 01:38 PM
Me :01:

Dark Steno
04-13-2005, 01:48 PM
Me :01:
lynx :01:

30 years ago, my town just a place with oil palm estates.

ziggyjuarez
04-13-2005, 02:01 PM
is it an asian country?

HeavyMetalParkingLot
04-13-2005, 02:41 PM
The friendliest homeless people in the country, and oh yeah, something about the world's largest music festival.

Peerzy
04-13-2005, 03:29 PM
Having the 3rd highest percentage of chavs in the UK :01:

wacko jacko
04-13-2005, 03:36 PM
http://www.theallineed.com/news/0412/046510.jpg

http://www.origo.hu/galleries/Micha20031126121551/img/jako4n.jpg












http://www.apestore.com/clothesimages/clothes_mykid_05.jpg

RPerry
04-13-2005, 03:45 PM
My city would only be famous for all the hotel rooms they have for the tourists visiting Walt Disney World. I wish Disney would close, traffic gets worse all the time :angry:

DanB
04-13-2005, 03:46 PM
Epsom is famous for horse racing and its fine medicinal salt

lynx
04-13-2005, 04:03 PM
Epsom is famous for horse racing and its fine medicinal saltHave you had a dose recently? :shifty:

Virtualbody1234
04-13-2005, 05:52 PM
Underground city:

http://www.vieux.montreal.qc.ca/plaque/horizon/gares/eng/gare_5a.htm

GepperRankins
04-13-2005, 05:59 PM
Underground city:

http://www.vieux.montreal.qc.ca/plaque/horizon/gares/eng/gare_5a.htm
wow, i've gotta go there one day

Money Fist
04-13-2005, 06:07 PM
London, Brixton here
nothing but gangstas

Nas's concert was ended in a hurry
i love the headline
Nas Ducks Guns of Brixton (http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,16173,00.html?tnews) muahahahaha

Gripper
04-13-2005, 06:48 PM
Being the center of Sherwood forest before they cut down all the tree's

Loomis
04-13-2005, 06:57 PM
We have the world's Largest salmon:

http://www.roadsideattractions.ca/salmon.htm

from: http://images.google.ca/images?q=campbellton%20salmon&hl=en&lr=&sa=N&tab=wi

And that Ex-President Bush (the Sr.) came to fish salmon on the Restigouche River (complete with Secret Service agents and everything)

GepperRankins
04-13-2005, 07:09 PM
how did so many people get the picture of the salmon jumping at the same time?

bigboab
04-13-2005, 07:21 PM
how did so many people get the picture of the salmon jumping at the same time?

It must have been salmon enchanted evening. :blink:

ziggyjuarez
04-13-2005, 07:22 PM
Daaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaamn thats a big fish

Lilmiss
04-13-2005, 11:12 PM
That's classified information, I don't want to die. :fear:

peat moss
04-14-2005, 04:15 AM
The pot ! :)


http://www.vancouver-bc.com/index.html

fkdup74
04-14-2005, 04:25 AM
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/a/a1/Bakersfield.jpg
this sign and it has a lot of gangsters in it.

no fucking way :lol:
this place is gettin too small :ph34r:
monkeee doesnt know what close is,
i could be on your doorstep in 20 minutes :shifty:

but anyway, you got Buck Owens too, not just the sign :P
who, btw, saved that sign's ass from getting demolished
there was a country song about Bakersfield :sick:
"Every Which Way But Loose" was flimed mostly in Bakersfield
(old Eastwood movie)

and.......Bakersfield invented.......TEH NASCAR TRUCK SERIES!!!!!!!!!! WOOHOO!!!!!!!! :D
Rick Mears & Kevin Harvick are from Bakersfield

meh....Bakersfield is teh famous :P

lee551
04-14-2005, 04:49 AM
the town i live near was the only one to have an actual riot in north dakota. it was during a 1969 woodstock-inspired gathering called zip-to-zap.



May 10, 1969: The Zip to Zap. Between 2,000 and 3,000 revelers, prompted by a NDSU Spectrum article that was carried across the country by The Associated Press, descend on Zap, a town of 300 in western North Dakota. The revelry gets out of hand and the National Guard clears out the town.




Historical Information
On May 10, 1969, Zap had the only official riot in North Dakota where the National Guard was called in to disperse the crowd. It was called the "Zap In" and people from all over the United States "Zipped to Zap".


nifty. :shifty:

ziggyjuarez
04-14-2005, 06:33 AM
no fucking way :lol:
this place is gettin too small :ph34r:
monkeee doesnt know what close is,
i could be on your doorstep in 20 minutes :shifty:

but anyway, you got Buck Owens too, not just the sign :P
who, btw, saved that sign's ass from getting demolished
there was a country song about Bakersfield :sick:
"Every Which Way But Loose" was flimed mostly in Bakersfield
(old Eastwood movie)

and.......Bakersfield invented.......TEH NASCAR TRUCK SERIES!!!!!!!!!! WOOHOO!!!!!!!! :D
Rick Mears & Kevin Harvick are from Bakersfield

meh....Bakersfield is teh famous :P
wow never knew that.haha i got two people close to me :01:

uNz[i]
04-14-2005, 09:01 AM
South Australia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Australia) and its capitol city, Adelaide (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adelaide).


South Australia was only established as a commercial venture in 1831 by the South Australia Company through the sale of land to free settlers. This differed from other Australian states, which were either established as penal colonies or made use of convict labour. It is for this reason that South Australia was legally established as a "province" of Great Britain, as opposed to a colony

Good things its famous for: :01:
Festivals - lots of 'em!
This is gonna piss off our French members, but its the truth. :P The best wines in the world come from S.A's Barossa Valley.
The internationally famous Adelaide Pie Cart, which sells delicious Balfour's meat pies, pasties, cakes and the mighty pie floater.
The annual Christmas pageant that has been held here for over 100 years.
General Motors Holden, which exports cars all over the world. They build the Pontiac GTO at the Elizabeth plant, which is sold here as the even nicer Holden Monaro.
Was home to Douglas Mawson, the now legendary Antarctic explorer.
Jumping off point for Ayers, Flinders and Sturt, who opened up the outback, blazed trails (mainly on foot) west across the Nullabor to Perth, Western Australia, and north to Darwin, Northern Territory back in the 1800's.

Bad things its famous for: :no:
Hottest and dryest place in Australia, therefore has the highest incidence of breathing disorders and skin cancers just about anywhere in the world.
Murder capitol of Australia. More people are killed here annually than any other city in Australia.
A paedophile ring known as "The Family" who are rumoured to occupy top positions in politics, law enforcement and the media. However, nothing has been proven after many years of investigations...
The Snowtown 'bodies in barrels' murders.
The (still unsolved after more than 30 years) Beaumont children kidnapping/disappearance case.

Looking over that bad things list, it's a bloody miracle I'm still alive... :ermm: