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Port-au-Prince
(redirected from Port Au Prince)

   Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.06 sec.
Port-au-Prince (pôrt-ə-prĭns`, Fr. pôr-tō-prăNs`), city (1995 est. pop. 846,200), capital of Haiti, SW Haiti, on a bay at the end of the Gulf of Gonaïves. The country's chief seaport, it exports mainly coffee and sugar. The city has food-processing plants; soap, textile, and cement industries; and other light manufacturing. It was founded in 1749 by French sugar planters. In 1770, it replaced Cap-Haïtien as capital of the French colony of Saint-Domingue (as Haiti was then known), and in 1804 it became the capital of newly independent Haiti. Port-au-Prince has remained unsanitary and economically backward, however, and has suffered frequently from earthquakes, fires, and civil warfare. The city is laid out like an amphitheater, with business and commercial quarters along the water and residences on the hills above. Landmarks include the French-built quay (1780), the Univ. of Haiti, the National Palace, the National Museum, and the Basilica of Notre Dame.

Port-au-Prince

City (metro. area pop., 1997: 1,556,000), seaport, and capital of Haiti, West Indies, on the southeastern shore of the Golfe de la Gonâve. Founded by the French in 1749, it was destroyed by earthquakes in 1751 and 1770 and has frequently suffered from fires and civil strife. In 1807 the port was opened to foreign commerce. It is the country's principal port and commercial centre, producing sugar, flour, cottonseed oil, and textiles.


Port-au-Prince
the capital and chief port of Haiti, in the south on the Gulf of Gonaïves: founded in 1749 by the French; university (1944). Pop.: 2 090 000 (2005 est.)


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As the acting house manager of the Three Angels Orphanage in Port Au Prince, Haiti, Angela Fairfield is touching the lives of the most vulnerable victims of that impoverished country's turmoil.
To ensure the vote does pass off peaceably, Haiti also needs to tackle the rising lawlessness that has gripped the capital Port au Prince since the interim government came to power.
When trouble arose in hot spots such as Liberia and Haiti, Marines answered the call and journeyed to Monrovia and Port Au Prince.
 
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