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・ Giporlos, Eastern Samar
・ Gipperath
・ Gippeswyk Park
・ Gippi
・ Gippie's Kingdom
・ Gipping
・ Gipping Rural District
・ Gipple's Quarry Bridge
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Gippsland
・ Gippsland Art Gallery
・ Gippsland by-election, 2008
・ Gippsland Falcons
・ Gippsland Football League
・ Gippsland GA200
・ Gippsland Grammar School
・ Gippsland Independent Schools
・ Gippsland Lakes
・ Gippsland Lakes Coastal Park
・ Gippsland Lakes Discovery Trail
・ Gippsland languages
・ Gippsland massacres
・ Gippsland phantom cat
・ Gippsland Plains Rail Trail


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Gippsland : ウィキペディア英語版
Gippsland

Gippsland is an economic rural region that occupies much of the south-eastern part of Victoria, Australia.
Covering an area of , Gippsland lies to the east of the eastern suburbs of Greater Melbourne, to the north of Bass Strait, to the west of the Tasman Sea, to the south of the Black-Allan Line that marks part of the Victorian/New South Wales border, and to the east and southeast of the Great Dividing Range that lies within the Hume region and the Victorian Alps. The region is best known for its primary production such as mining, power generation and farming as well as its tourist destinations— Phillip Island, Wilsons Promontory, the Gippsland Lakes, Walhalla, the Baw Baw Plateau, and the Strzelecki Ranges.
As at the 2011 Australian census, the Gippsland region had a population of , that is generally broken down into the East Gippsland, South Gippsland, West Gippsland, and the Latrobe Valley statistical divisions. The principal centres of the region, in descending order of population, are , , , , , , , , and Phillip Island.
==History==
The area was originally inhabited by Indigenous Australians of the Gunai nation and parts of the Bunurong nation. Following European settlement, Samuel Anderson,〔The Andersons of Westernport "Horton and Morris"〕 a Scottish immigrant and explorer, who had arrived in Hobart, Tasmania in 1830, established the third permanent settlement in Victoria at Bass in Gippsland in 1835. His business partner Robert Massie joined him in 1837. Both had worked for the Van Diemen's Land Company at Circular Head Tasmania. Samuel's brothers Hugh and Thomas arrived at Bass shortly after. Sealers and wattle bark gatherers had frequented the area earlier but had not settled.
Further European settlement began following two separate expeditions to the area. Angus McMillan led the first European expedition through the area between 1839 and 1840, naming the area "Caledonia Australis". This was followed in March 1840 by Polish explorer Paweł Edmund Strzelecki, who unknowingly led his expedition across the same terrain already traversed by McMillan, and gave his own names to many natural landmarks and places. Following these expeditions, the area was officially given the title of "Gippsland", a name chosen by Strzelecki in honour of the New South Wales Governor, George Gipps, his sponsor.〔Wells, J. (2003), "Colourful Tales of Old Gippsland", p. 92.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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