Port Fitzhubert

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Port Fitzhubert
reHuni
City
Dar es Salaam at a bird's view.jpg
Motto(s): 
Runyararo uye kurongeka (weRwizi)
Peace and honour
CountryFile:RwizikuruFlag.PNG Rwizikuru
DistrictParunoguma
Founded1863
Government
 • MayorMunaki Nhiwatiw
Population
 (2011)
 • City2,859,687
 • Rank1st in Rwizikuru
 • Urban
2,859,687
 • Metro
5,353,606
Time zoneUTC-6 (Rwizi Standard Time)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-6 (not observed)

Port Fitzhubert is the largest city of Rwizikuru and seat of the district of Parunoguma, situated on the estuary of the Rwizikuru River where it empties into the Banfura Sea of the Vehemens Ocean. With a population of around three million within its city limits, and over five million in its metropolitan area which spans the districts of Parunoguma and Chekumabvazuva.

Etymology

The name of Port Fitzhubert derives from Charles Fitzhubert, the first Estmerish official to claim present-day Rwizikuru for Estmere, doing so in 1863. He named it after himself, and envisioned it becoming a major center for Estmerish activities in Bahia.

In the 1960s, the independent government suggested restoring its precolonial name, reHuni, which derives from weRwizi word for wood, as a shortening of Guta reHuni, or town of wood, as opposed to Guta reMabwe (present-day Chekumabvazuva) across the Rwizikuru River. However, Izibongo Ngonidzashe vetoed the idea.

History

Pre-colonial era

Prior to the colonial era, the site of what is now Port Fitzhubert was a fishing village known as reHuni. While it was populated, with the earliest known habitation dating to around 600 BCE, it was not continuously inhabited, with the site being abandoned in 300 BCE, and resettled around 400 CE.

It was not considered to be the seat of power, with the veRwizi Empire, which existed from the 1100s CE to around the mid-1600s CE being based near present-day Munzwa. After the collapse of the veRwizi Empire after a series of wars against the Wopoto Empire, Rehuni fell under the jurisdiction of Guta reMabwe on the site of neighboring Chekumbvazuva, where it was ruled by the Mubako dynasty.

Colonial era

Port Fitzhubert, late 1930s

In 1863, Charles Fitzhubert and 250 soldiers established a fort in present-day Port Fitzhubert. This led to conflicts with the Mubako, who had governed the area around Chekumbvazuva and present-day Port Fitzhubert. However, with the help of gunboat diplomacy, by 1865, he was able to defeat native soldiers, and establish a settlement in Port Fitzhubert.

Fitzhubert organized the city along Estmerish lines, instituting a grid with nine avenues going north to south, going west from the main harbor on the Rwizikuru River, and twelve streets, going from the beaches northward, and centered on a central square, where he envisioned government buildings would be located at.

(TBC)

Republic

Monarchy

Contemporary era

Since the 1990s, the city of Port Fitzhubert

Geography

The city of Port Fitzhubert is situated on the western bank of the Rwizikuru River estuary, where it exits into the Banfura Sea. The area is generally flat and low-lying, with the highest point being Signal Hill (weRwizi: Chikomo Signal), at a mere forty-three meters (142 feet) above sea level.

Climatically, Port Fitzhubert has an equatorial climate, with a yearly average high of 29.5 °C (85.1 °F), and a yearly average low temperature of 21.2 °C (70.16 °F). On average, Port Fitzhubert receives around 2,700 mm of rain per year, with most of the rain falling between April and October, and it has a high average humidity.

Government

Like any city in Rwizikuru, it has an elected Mayor (weRwizi: meya) and an elected city council (kanzuru yeguta).

The city council comprises of twelve members, each representing one of the city's twelve wards, and are elected every four years by all inhabitants of Port Fitzhubert over the age of 21, as stipulated in the Civic Decree of 1965 issued by Izibongo Ngonidzashe. The mayor is also elected in the same elections that elect the rest of the city council.

The current mayor, Munaki Nhiwatiw was first elected in 2002, and was re-elected in 2006, 2010, 2014, and 2018.

Population

Culture