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To understand the spirit of Johannesburg, it is necessary to realise that,
scarcely a hundred years ago, the largest, richest city in South Africa was
a huddle of tents pitched on a mining ridge. Hard-nosed, unkempt settlers discovered
gold on this ridge in 1886, prompting a mad surge as prospectors sought their
fortune.
The ruthless spirit of that gold rush remains fixed in the mindset of the
city known today as Egoli, "City of Gold", or just Jozi. It is a
tough city, an uncompromising city, characterised by often bewildering extremes
of wealth and poverty; yet, it is also a city of opportunity and lively characters.
Today, Johannesburg is the capital of the Gauteng province, a thriving city
of business, generating 40% of the country's GDP. It is also a place of cultural
diversity where mine dumps stand beside Indian bazaars, where skyscrapers neighbour
African "muti" (traditional medicine) shops, where the landscape
is punctuated by shopping malls, divided by highways and striped with golf
courses.
South-west of Jo'burg, Soweto was developed for black people by the former
National Party government. Inhabited by more than two million people, with
homes ranging from grand mansions to fragile shacks, a place of enterprise
and energy, this city became a focal point in the struggle against apartheid.
Soweto boasts many famous places, notably Vilakazi Street, unique in the world
for the fact that it was once home to not one but two Nobel Peace Prize winners,
the former Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela, the revered former President.
Sporting Heritage
The city of Johannesburg has played host to the four largest single sporting
events staged in South Africa.
The Rugby World Cup final was played at Ellis Park in 1995, the final of the
1996 African Cup of Nations took place at Soccer City, the athletics events
during the 1999 All Africa Games were contested at Johannesburg stadium and
the 2003 Cricket World Cup final was held at the Wanderers.
This city with big, raucous and demanding crowds sustains the three largest
professional soccer clubs in the country, namely Orlando Pirates, Kaizer Chiefs
and Moroko Swallows. Wits University makes up a quartet of leading Premier
League clubs.
Rugby's Golden Lions and cricket's Highveld Strikers carry the city's flag
in their respective sports, and the city offers world-class facilities for
horse racing, swimming, motor racing, tennis, boxing and more than 25 golf
clubs. Furthermore, the National Olympic Committee of South Africa has its
offices in the great sporting city of Johannesburg.
Quick Links to Accommodation and Car Hire in this region:
» Johannesburg City Guide
» Johannesburg Accommodation
» Johannesburg Hotels
» Johannesburg Guest Houses
» Johannesburg Bed & Breakfast
» Johannesburg
Accommodation Search Map
» Johannesburg Car Rental
» Johannesburg Luxury Cars
» Johannesburg
Day Tours & Scheduled
Tours
» Ellis
Park Stadium in Johannesburg - Soccer
City Stadium in Johannesburg
The Final 10 Stadiums for the World Cup 2010 in South Africa:
- Green
Point Stadium in Cape Town - Nelson
Mandela Stadium in Port Elizabeth
- King
Senzangakhona Stadium in Durban - Free
State Stadium in Bloemfontein
- Ellis
Park Stadium in Johannesburg - Soccer
City in Johannesburg
- Royal
Bafokeng Stadium in Rustenburg - Loftus
Versfeld Stadium in Pretoria
- Mbombela
Stadium in Nelspruit - Peter
Mokaba Stadium in Polokwane
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