New Edinburgh

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English

The location of New Edinburgh¹ indicated on the Isthmus of Panama, ashore of the Gulf of Darién.

Etymology

Named for Edinburgh, both then and now the capital city of Scotland.

Proper noun

New Edinburgh

  1. (history) The capital of the short-lived Scottish colony of New Caledonia (1698–1700), now Sukunya, a.k.a. Puerto Escocés (Spanish for “Port Scotland”).
  2. A community founded in 1783, currently located in the District of Clare, Digby County, in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia.
  3. A settlement in the Canadian province of Ontario, established in 1829, incorporated as a village of that name in 1867, and annexed by the City of Ottawa in 1887, of which it now forms a neighbourhood in its Rideau-Rockcliffe Ward. (The affluent neighbourhood is notable as the location of the official residences of both the Governor General and the Prime Minister of Canada.)

Translations

Further reading