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Australia's capital city, Canberra,
had a difficult birth, punctuated by
political infighting, wars and the
Great Depression, but it is now a
thriving modern city which, together
with its surrounds, makes up
Australia's Capital Territory.
Canberra lies 95 miles (150km) in
from the East Coast, by road 175
miles (280km) from Sydney and 415
miles (660km) from Melbourne.
Like most capitals of the world,
Canberra boasts an architectural
heritage in its civic and Government
buildings, but Canberra is also
blessed with some of the loveliest
surroundings of any national
capital. There are more than 30
Australian artistic and cultural
institutions located in Canberra,
ranging from the Australian War
Memorial to Parliament House,
surmounted by a colossal
stainless-steel flagpole and set in
23 hectares of gardens. In the
centre of Lake Burley Griffin, the
impressive Captain Cook Memorial Jet
shoots a six-ton column of water 482
feet (147m) into the air, while on
the shore the National Gallery of
Australia houses the country's
premier public art collection
spanning about 5,000 years of
international art.
Canberra is also known for its
spring festival, Floriade, when the
parks and gardens surrounding Lake
Burley Griffin explode with
colourful displays of massed tulips
and other blooms. The city, with its
many parklands, is especially
beautiful in spring and autumn |