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Libreville |
Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.01 sec. |
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Libreville (lēbrəvēl`), city (1993 est. pop. 362,400), capital of Gabon, a port on the Gabon River estuary, near the Gulf of Guinea. Primarily an administrative center, it is also a trade center for a lumbering region. The city was founded in 1843 as a French trading station. Freed slaves were sent there, and in 1848 it was named Libreville [Fr.,=freetown]. It was the chief port of French Equatorial Africa before the development (1934–46) of Pointe-Noire Pointe-Noire (pwăNt-nwär), city (1984 pop. 294,203), SW Republic of the Congo, Africa, a port on the Atlantic Ocean. ..... Click the link for more information. , in the Congo. Gabon's school of administration and school of law are in Libreville. An international airport is nearby. LibrevilleCity (pop., 1993: 362,386), capital of Gabon, located on the northern shore of the Gabon Estuary. Pongoue people first settled the region after the 16th century, followed by the Fang in the 19th century. The French built a fort on the estuary's northern bank in 1843, and in 1849 a settlement of freed slaves and a group of Pongoue villages were given the name Libreville. In 1850 France abandoned its fort and resettled on the plateau, now the commercial and administrative centre of the city. It is well industrialized and is Gabon's educational centre. Libreville was the capital of French Equatorial Africa from 1888 to 1904. |
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Speaking from Libreville, Gabon, where they arrived late Friday after a day of futile efforts to bring Mobutu and Kabila together aboard a South African warship, senior members of the delegation of President Clinton's special envoy to Zaire, Bill Richardson, said that with heavy Angolan support Kabila was now preparing to take the capital, Kinshasa, by force if necessary. Under resolution 1055 (1996), adopted unanimously on 8 May, the Council also urged the Angolan Government and UNITA to abide strictly by the obligations they had undertaken in 1994 on signing the Lusaka Protocol, as well as with commitments made by Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos and UNITA leader Jonas Savimbi on 1 March in Libreville, Gabon. He had been living in Libreville, Gabon, since 1961, made yearly visits to Italy, and had never visited other African countries. |
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