Belfast

Belfast
/bel"fast, -fahst, bel fast", -fahst"/, n.
a seaport in and capital of Northern Ireland, on the E coast. 374,300.

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District, seaport, and capital (pop., 1999 est.: 297,200) of Northern Ireland.

On the River Lagan, the site was occupied in the Stone and Bronze ages, and the remains of Iron Age forts can still be seen. Belfast's modern history began in the early 17th century when Sir Arthur Chichester developed a plan for colonizing the area with English and Scottish settlers. Having survived the Irish insurrection of 1641, the town grew in economic importance, especially after a large immigration of French Huguenots arrived after the rescinding of the Edict of Nantes (1685) and strengthened the linen trade. It became a centre of Irish Protestantism, setting the stage for sectarian conflict in the 19th–20th centuries. Fighting was renewed in the 1960s and did not subside until a peace agreement was reached in 1998. The city is Northern Ireland's educational and commercial hub.

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      city, seat (1827) of Waldo county, southern Maine, U.S., on the Passagassawakeag River where it empties into Penobscot Bay on the Atlantic coast opposite Castine, 34 miles (55 km) south-southwest of Bangor. Settled in 1770 and named for Belfast, Ireland, it soon developed as a seaport and became a port of entry. Distinguished architecture of the sailing era remains. Its harbour is now used mainly by tugboats and pleasure craft. Tourism, the sardine industry, and light manufacturing are its main economic assets. The Penobscot Marine Museum is 4 miles (6 km) to the northeast in Searsport. Fort Knox (built in 1844) and Lake St. George state parks are nearby. Inc. town, 1773; city, 1853. Pop. (1990) 6,355; (2000) 6,381.

Irish  Béal Feirste 
 city, district, and capital of Northern Ireland, on the River Lagan, at its entrance to Belfast Lough (inlet of the sea). It became a city by royal charter in 1888. After the passing of the Government of Ireland Act, 1920, it became the seat of the government of Northern Ireland. The district of Belfast has an area of 44 square miles (115 square km).

      The site of Belfast was occupied during both the Stone and Bronze ages, and the remains of Iron Age forts are discernible on the slopes near the city centre. A castle, probably built there about 1177 by John de Courci, the Norman conqueror of Ulster, seems to have survived until the beginning of the 17th century. The city's name is derived from the Gaelic Béal Feirste (Mouth of the Sandbank [or Crossing of the River]). Belfast's modern history began in 1611 when Baron Arthur Chichester (Chichester, Arthur Chichester, Baron) built a new castle there. He did much to encourage the growth of the town, which received a charter of incorporation in 1613. Belfast survived the Irish insurrection of 1641, and by 1685 it had a population of about 2,000, largely engaged in brick, rope, net, and sailcloth making. By the late 1730s the castle had been destroyed, but Belfast was beginning to acquire economic importance, superseding both Lisburn as the chief bridge town and Carrickfergus as a port. It became the market centre of the Ulster linen industry, developed by French Huguenot refugees under the patronage of William III of Great Britain at the end of the 17th century. Attempts to establish a cotton industry there were short-lived, but following mechanization of the spinning and weaving of linen, Belfast became one of the greatest linen centres in the world. By the 17th century, the town was a busy port with small shipbuilding interests, which became firmly established after William Ritchie founded a shipyard (1791) and a graving (dry) dock (1796). Since the Industrial Revolution, the chief shipbuilding firm has been Harland and Wolff (builders of the ill-fated “Titanic”). The city was severely damaged by air raids in 1941. Beginning in the 1970s, Belfast's traditional manufacturing specialties, linen and shipbuilding, began a long decline. These sectors are now overshadowed by service activities, food processing, and machinery manufacture.

 A Roman Catholic civil rights campaign was inaugurated in Ulster in 1968, and from 1969 street riots and increasing violence took place in Belfast. After British troops were called in to police Catholic–Protestant disorders, the riots were marked by an increased use of firearms and bombs by both Catholic and Protestant extremists and by the slaying of civilians, police, and soldiers. Unremitting violence continued into the 1990s, but a tentative cease-fire in 1994 and the Belfast Agreement of 1998 (Belfast Agreement) brought an end to the fighting. Since the conclusion of the peace accord, Belfast has attracted considerable investment, and its economy has improved. In 2000, Northern Ireland's new regional legislature and government took office in suburban Stormont.

 The city is the shopping, retail, educational, commercial, entertainment, and service centre for Northern Ireland and the seat of many of its largest businesses and hospitals. Educational institutions in Belfast include Queen's University at Belfast (founded in 1845 as the Queen's College), the University of Ulster at Belfast (1849), and Union Theological College (1853). From the city's airport at Aldergrove, 13 miles (21 km) northwest, services are maintained with some principal international cities. Belfast is Northern Ireland's chief port, and there are ferry services to Liverpool in England, Stranraer in Scotland, and Douglas on the Isle of Man. Belfast suffered a pronounced population decline during the 1970s and '80s as a result of the sectarian violence and a loss of manufacturing jobs; however, its population began to stabilize during the 1990s. Pop. (2001) city and district, 348,291.
 

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Universalium. 2010.

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