Paramaribo

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Paramaribo
The street Waterkant in Paramaribo
The street Waterkant in Paramaribo
Nickname: Par'bo
The location of Paramaribo in Suriname
The location of Paramaribo in Suriname
Coordinates: 5°52′N 55°10′W / 5.867, -55.167
Country Suriname
District Paramaribo District
Time zone ART (UTC-3)

Paramaribo (nickname: Par'bo) is the capital and largest city of Suriname, located on banks of the Suriname River in the Paramaribo District. Paramaribo has a population of roughly 250,000 people. The historic inner city of Paramaribo is a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2002.

Contents

Historic Inner City of Paramaribo*
UNESCO World Heritage Site

Colonial style houses, Waterkant, Paramaribo.
State Party Flag of Suriname Suriname
Type Cultural
Criteria ii, iv
Reference 940
Region Latin America and the Caribbean
Inscription History
Inscription 2002  (26th Session)
* Name as inscribed on World Heritage List.
Region as classified by UNESCO.

The area, a trading post started by the Dutch, was taken by the British in 1630, and in 1650 the city became the capital of the new English colony. The area changed hands often between the British and Dutch but it was in Dutch hands again in 1667 and under Dutch rule from 1815 until the independence of Suriname in 1975. The citizens are chiefly of Asian Indian, indigenous, African, and Dutch descent.

In January 1821 a fire in the city centre destroyed over 400 houses and other buildings. A second fire in September 1832 destroyed another 46 houses on the western part of the Waterkant.

The Government House in 1955, currently the Presidential Palace
The Government House in 1955, currently the Presidential Palace

The city is located on the Suriname River, approximately 15 km inland from the Atlantic Ocean, in the Paramaribo district.

Paramaribo is centred around the Onafhankelijkheidsplein (Independence Square), which contains both the Presidential Palace and the National Assembly.

Immediately the square is Palmentuin Park. Other notable places are the Surinaams museum, Numismatisch Museum, Fort Zeelandia (dating from the 17th century, a market and canals that are reminiscent of the Netherlands. There is a wide variety of Dutch colonial buildings in the city including the Cupchiik coliseum.

There is a wide variety of religious buildings in the city owing its ethnic diversity. There are two synagogues, several mosques, two mandirs, a Dutch Reformed church and a Roman Catholic cathedral (Roman Catholic St Peter and St Paul Cathedral) built in 1885 of wood. It is thought to be the largest wooden building in the Americas, however it is currently closed for repairs and restoration.

Paramaribo has a population of roughly 250,000 people, more than half of the population of Suriname

Paramaribo is famed for its diverse ethnic makeup, including Hindustani, East Indians, Creoles, Maroons, Javanese, Native Americans, Chinese, and Europeans (primarily of Dutch and English descent).

The city's major exports are gold, bauxite, sugar cane, rice, cacao, coffee, rum, and tropical woods. Cement and paint are manufactured in the city.

There are many hotels in the city, the main one being the Torarica Hotel, which also has a casino and is generally regarded as the best and largest hotel in Suriname. Others include the Ambassador, Combi Inn, De Luifel, Eco-Resort, Fanna Guesthouse, Guesthouse Amice, Hotel Savoie, Krasnapolsky, Lisa's Guesthouse, Solana Guesthouse and YMCA Guesthouse.

Paramaribo is served by the Johan Adolf Pengel International Airport and Zorg-en-Hoop for local flights.

On Sundays and holidays there is a popular bird song competition. Black twatwas (large-billed seed finch, Oryzoborus crassirostris) are the most common birds used. This bird is in the CITES- appendix I.

Suriname has only one cinema, which is located in the capital.

Paramaribo is the birthplace of several football players; Some of them later represented The Netherlands:

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