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・ Dar Derafsh-e Khanomabad
・ Dar Derafsh-e Mohammad-e Amin Mirza
・ Dar Derafsh-e Qaleh
・ Dar Derafsh-e Seyyed Karim
・ Dar El Barka
・ Dar El Beïda
・ Dar El Beïda District
・ Dar El Hamra
・ Dar El Kebdani
・ Dar el Koudia Airfield
・ Dar el Makhzen (Tangier)
・ Dar El Menia
・ Dar El Tarbiah School
・ Dar el-Salam
・ Dar Emtedade Shab
Dar es Salaam
・ Dar es Salaam bus rapid transit
・ Dar es Salaam Community Bank
・ Dar es Salaam commuter rail
・ Dar es Salaam Institute of Technology
・ Dar es Salaam International Conference Centre
・ Dar es Salaam International Trade Fair
・ Dar Es Salaam Investment Bank
・ Dar es Salaam Jazz Band
・ Dar es Salaam Marine Reserve
・ Dar es Salaam pipistrelle
・ Dar es Salaam Region
・ Dar es Salaam School of Journalism
・ Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange
・ Dar es Salaam University College of Education


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Dar es Salaam : ウィキペディア英語版
Dar es Salaam

Dar es Salaam (from (アラビア語:دار السلام) ', literally "the residence of peace"; or simply Dar, formerly Mzizima) is the largest city of Tanzania and the largest city in eastern Africa by population, as well as a regionally important economic centre. It is Tanzania's most prominent city in arts, fashion, media, music, film and television. It is Tanzania's leading financial centre with the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (DSE) being the country's first and most important stock exchange market.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Welcome to Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange - Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange )〕 Dar es Salaam is the largest and most populous Swahili speaking city in the world. It is the capital of the Dar es Salaam Region administrative province and consists of three boroughs or administrative districts: northern Kinondoni, central Ilala, and southern Temeke. The city is the leading arriving and leaving point for most tourists who visit tourism areas in Tanzania like the national parks for safaris and the islands of Zanzibar. The region had a population of 4,364,541 as of the official 2012 census.〔(Population Distribution by Administrative Units, United Republic of Tanzania, 2013 )〕 Although Dar es Salaam lost its status as the nation's capital to Dodoma in 1974 (not completed until 1996), it remains the focus of the permanent central government bureaucracy. Most decisions made by people in power within the city of Dar es Salaam affect the entire nation of Tanzania.
==History==

In the 19th century, Mzizima (Kiswahili for "healthy town") was a coastal fishing village on the periphery of Indian Ocean trade routes. In 1865 or 1866, Sultan Majid bin Said of Zanzibar began building a new city very close to Mzizima〔 and named it Dar es Salaam. The name is commonly translated as "abode/home of peace", based on the Arabic ''dar'' ("house"), and the Arabic ''es salaam'' ("of peace").〔 Dar es Salaam fell into decline after Majid's death in 1870, but was revived in 1887 when the German East Africa Company established a station there. The town's growth was facilitated by its role as the administrative and commercial centre of German East Africa and industrial expansion resulting from the construction of the Central Railway Line in the early 1900s.
German East Africa was captured by the British during World War I and became Tanganyika, with Dar es Salaam the administrative and commercial centre. Under British indirect rule, separate European (e.g., Oyster Bay) and African (e.g., Kariakoo and Ilala) areas developed at a distance from the city centre. The city's population also included a large number of south Asians. After World War II, Dar es Salaam experienced a period of rapid growth.
Political developments, including the formation and growth of the Tanganyika African National Union, led to Tanganyika attaining independence from colonial rule in December 1961. Dar es Salaam continued to serve as its capital, even when in 1964 Tanganyika and Zanzibar merged to form Tanzania. In 1973, however, provisions were made to relocate the capital to Dodoma, a more centrally located city in the interior. The relocation process has not yet been completed, and Dar es Salaam remains Tanzania's primary city.
In 1967, the Tanzanian government declared the infamous ''Ujamaa policy'', that set Tanzania into a socialist path. The move slowed down the potential growth of the city as the government encouraged people not to move in cities but stay in Ujamaa socialist villages. But by 1980's the Ujamaa policy proved to be a failure into combating increasing poverty, hunger, and delayed development that Tanzania faced. This led to the 1980s liberalization policy that virtually ended socialism and its spirit within the Tanzania's government. The move led to increasing migration of rural dwellers from rural areas into cities with Dar es Salaam becoming the leading city in receiving migrants from rural areas.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=allAfrica.com: Tanzania: Construction Booms As Public, Private Sector Investments Soar )
Until the late 1990s, Dar es Salaam was not put into same category as Africa's leading cities like Nairobi, Johannesburg, Lagos, or Addis Ababa. But the 2000s decade became the turning point as the city experienced one of Africa's fastest urbanization rates, new local businesses were opened and prospered, Tanzanian banks headquartered in the city started to run more proper, the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange expanded, and the Dar es Salaam harbour proved to be the most important in Tanzania and prominent for entrepot trade with landlocked countries like Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, and Zambia. Currently, Dar es Salaam's construction boom is obvious, with the CBD skyline hosting many tall buildings, among them the 35-floor PSPF Tower, finished in 2015, and ''the Tanzania'' ''Port'' ''Authority (TPA) Tower'', currently under construction .〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Dar es Salaam」の詳細全文を読む



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