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  1. 6 days ago · Canberra, federal capital of the Commonwealth of Australia. It occupies part of the Australian Capital Territory, in southern Australia, and is about 150 miles (240 km) southwest of Sydney. Canberra lies astride the Molonglo River, which is a tributary of the Murrumbidgee River.

  2. Canberra is the capital city of Australia. There are 403,468 people who live there. [2] It does not belong to a state but it is in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT). Canberra was started in 1913 and in the middle of the city is Lake Burley-Griffin. This lake was created especially for the city.

  3. Canberra was built to be the capital city of Australia, taking up all of Australian Capital Territory surrounded by the southeast of New South Wales. A planned city with national monuments, museums, and galleries all built around large man-made lakes.

  4. Canberra is the federal capital of the Commonwealth of Australia located at the northern end of the Australian Capital Territory (ACT). With a population of approximately 350,000, it is Australia's largest inland city. Canberra began as an entirely purpose-built, planned city.

  5. There is little doubt that ‘Canberra’ is an anglicised version of the Aboriginal words, which is said to mean ‘meeting place’. Robert Campbell’s station was the second to be established in the Canberra district. Campbell, a wealthy Scottish merchant, was promised a 4 000-acre (1 618 hectares) grant as compensation for the loss of one of his ships.

  6. Canberra is a city with two distinct lives, firstly as the purpose-built capital of a nation and the other – our home.

  7. The Early History of the ACT. Federation and the National Capital. The Siting and Naming of Canberra. Canberra, the Seat of Government. Walter Burley Griffin. Marion Mahony Griffin. Charles Weston and the Greening of Canberra. Building Canberra up to 1958. Canadian Flagpole. Building Canberra from 1958–1988. Parliament House.

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