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词条 Richards Bay
释义

  1. History

  2. Economy

  3. Government and politics

  4. Demographics

  5. Geography and climate

  6. Catholic history of Richards Bay

  7. Sports Events

     2010 FIFA World Cup  2011 South African Surfski Championships  2015 South African Surf Championships 

  8. Sport

  9. Famous people

  10. Local Media

  11. See also

  12. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2012}}{{Use South African English|date=August 2012}}{{Infobox settlement
| name = Richards Bay
| other_name = Richardsbaai
| native_name = Cwebeni
| image_skyline = Richards Bay, South Africa.jpg
| image_caption = Richards Bay
| pushpin_map = South Africa KwaZulu-Natal#South Africa
| coordinates = {{coord|28|48|00|S|32|06|00|E|region:ZA|display=inline,title}}
| subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name = South Africa
| subdivision_type1 = Province
| subdivision_name1 = KwaZulu-Natal
| subdivision_type2 = District
| subdivision_name2 = King Cetshwayo
| subdivision_type3 = Municipality
| subdivision_name3 = uMhlathuze
| subdivision_type4 = Main Place
| established_title = Established
| established_date = 1969
| leader_title = Councillor
| area_footnotes = [1]
| area_total_km2 = 142.78
| population_footnotes = [1]
| population_total = 57387
| population_as_of = 2011
| population_density_km2 = auto
| demographics_type1 = Racial makeup (2011)
| demographics1_footnotes = [1]
| demographics1_title1 = Black African
| demographics1_info1 = 48.0%
| demographics1_title2 = Coloured
| demographics1_info2 = 3.2%
| demographics1_title3 = Indian/Asian
| demographics1_info3 = 18.2%
| demographics1_title4 = White
| demographics1_info4 = 30.1%
| demographics1_title5 = Other
| demographics1_info5 = 0.4%
| demographics_type2 = First languages (2011)
| demographics2_footnotes = [1]
| demographics2_title1 = Zulu
| demographics2_info1 = 40.6%
| demographics2_title2 = English
| demographics2_info2 = 33.8%
| demographics2_title3 = Afrikaans
| demographics2_info3 = 21.5%
| demographics2_title4 =
| demographics2_info4 =
| demographics2_title5 = Other
| demographics2_info5 = 4.1%
| timezone1 = SAST
| utc_offset1 = +2
| postal_code_type = Postal code (street)
| postal_code = 3900
| postal2_code_type = PO box
| postal2_code = 3900
| area_code_type = Area code
| area_code = 035
}}

Richards Bay ({{lang-af|Richardsbaai}}) is a town in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. It is situated on a 30 square kilometre lagoon of the Mhlatuze River, which gives it one of the country's largest harbours. Richards Bay also has the deepest natural harbour in the continent.

History

The town began as a makeshift harbour that was set up by Commodore of the Cape, Sir Frederick Richards during the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879. In 1935 the Richards Bay Game Sanctuary was created to protect the ecology around the lagoon and later by 1943 it expanded into the Richards Bay Park. The town was laid out on the shores of the lagoon in 1954 and proclaimed a town in 1969. In 1976 Richards Bay harbour was converted into a deep water harbour with railway and an oil/gas pipeline linking the port to Johannesburg.

The South African Government decided in 1965 to build a deepsea harbour at Richards Bay, about 180 kilometres north of Durban. Construction work began in 1972 and four years later, on 1 April 1976, the new harbour was opened. The residential area of Richards Bay developed north of the harbour. Meerensee, started in 1970, was the first suburb. It was followed by Arboretum in 1975 and VeldenVlei in 1980. All three suburbs catered exclusively for whites in accordance with the existing laws of apartheid. A township for blacks was developed at Esikhaweni, fifteen kilometres south of Richards Bay. Residential areas for Indians and coloureds were opened after 1985 west of VeldenVlei. All the suburbs of Richards Bay together (excluding the black township of Esikhaweni) had a population of about 20 000 in 1990.

Economy

The Port of Richards Bay contains what was once the largest coal export facility in the world, with a planned capacity of 91 million tons per year by the first half of 2009. In 2007 annual throughput was 66.12 million tons. The Australian port of Newcastle, New South Wales, is the largest coal exporting harbour in the world, exporting just over 161 million tonnes of coal in 2016.[2]

Two aluminium smelters, Hillside Aluminum and Bayside Aluminium are operated by BHP Billiton. BHP has recently sold their interest in Hillside to South32. A fertiliser plant operated by Foskor has been erected at the harbour. Iron ore, rutile (titanium oxide) and zircon are mined from the sand dunes close to the lagoon by Richards Bay Minerals, a part of the Rio Tinto group. Local exports include coal, aluminium, titanium and other heavy minerals, granite, ferrochrome, paper pulp, woodchips and phosphoric acid. Richards Bay is, alongside Rustenburg, South Africa's fastest-developing city. It is a fast-growing industrial centre that has been able to maintain its ecological diversity.

However, like most of South Africa, the Richards Bay area is plagued by unemployment and poverty. Unemployment has been estimated at forty percent and an undefined number of people live below the poverty line. The local government have made efforts to implement projects aimed at poverty reduction.

The "John Ross Parkway" (P496) which links Richards Bay to Empangeni and the N2 highway is named after "John Ross" (real name, Charles Rawden Maclean), who at the age of 15 walked from Port Natal to Maputo and back to procure medicine and supplies for the early settlers.[3]

Apart from the mining industry, tourism is a major part of the economy, with Richards Bay seen as a gateway to Zululand, and area popular with foreign tourists because of its large game parks and the diverse wildlife on offer.

The Richards Bay Industrial Development Zone is one of two Industrial Development Zones within the province of KwaZulu-Natal. It is a fully serviced industrial land comprising heavy, medium and light industries linked to the adjacent Port of Richards Bay.

Government and politics

Since municipal boundaries were newly demarcated in 2000, the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), in a coalition with the Democratic Alliance (DA) and other smaller parties, were in power in the uMhlatuze Municipality. However, due to the final floor crossing period, the IFP lost control of the Municipality to the ruling African National Congress (ANC). The mayor of uMhlathuze is now Mr Elphas Mbatha, whose term will run until at least 2016.

Demographics

White people account for 39.98 percent of the population, followed by black Africans at 37.05 percent, Asians or Indians at 19.16 percent and coloureds at 3.8 percent. 74.19 percent of the population is under the age of 34 years, with 2.73 percent over the age of 65. For every 100 females, there are 93 males. The population density has been estimated to be 526-1,192 persons/km squared. There are 12,433 households in Richards Bay, with 66.4 percent of such households being house or brick structure. According to household income, the wealthiest suburb is Meerensee, with an average household income of more than R153,601 per annum. The unemployment rate in Richards Bay alone is 19 percent, compared with 55 percent in surrounding rural areas.

The various racial makeups of the seven different suburbs are still along the Apartheid-era segregation lines, with Meerensee a mostly white area, while suburbs such as Brackenham and Aquadene predominantly Indian/Asian and Ngwelezane home to the black community. However, in recent years there has been a movement towards more integration, with predominantly black people moving into other, traditionally higher-income areas, due to the growing black middle-class in the area.

22 percent of the population have completed school only. A further 8.45 percent have a tertiary education. 16.7 percent have received no schooling at all. However, this data reflects the uMhlathuze municipality as a whole.

Geography and climate

Richards Bay is characterised by a subtropical climate that very closely resembles a tropical climate as only two months have an average temperature of below 18 °C There are warm wet summers and mild moist to dry winters, which are frost-free. The town has an average annual rainfall of 1228 millimeters (48.3 in). The average annual temperature is 21.5 °C (71 °F), with daytime maxima peaking from January to March at 29 °C (84 °F), and the minimum is 21 °C (70 °F), dropping to daytime highs from June to August of 23 °C (73 °F) and a minimum of 12 °C (53 °F). Sunrise is at 04h45 and sunset at 19h00 in summer. In winter sunrise is at 06h20 and sunset at 17h00. Richards Bay is a popular kitesurfing destination thanks to consistent winds blowing from the North East.

The Richards Bay area is generally very flat and is situated on a coastal plain. The terrain rises slightly towards the west. The suburbs are all no more than a few metres (Reneging around 140m) (feet 459.3 ft) above sea level. The area is abundant in coastal dune forest, most notably along the coastal dune belt and in the suburb of Meerensee.

{{Weather box
|location = Richards Bay
|metric first = Y
|single line = Y
|Jan record high C = 41
|Feb record high C = 39
|Mar record high C = 39
|Apr record high C = 37
|May record high C = 35
|Jun record high C = 35
|Jul record high C = 31
|Aug record high C = 37
|Sep record high C = 40
|Oct record high C = 42
|Nov record high C = 43
|Dec record high C = 42
|year record high C =
|Jan high C = 29
|Feb high C = 29
|Mar high C = 29
|Apr high C = 27
|May high C = 25
|Jun high C = 23
|Jul high C = 23
|Aug high C = 24
|Sep high C = 25
|Oct high C = 25
|Nov high C = 27
|Dec high C = 29
|year high C =
|Jan mean C = 25
|Feb mean C = 25
|Mar mean C = 24.5
|Apr mean C = 22.5
|May mean C = 21
|Jun mean C = 17.5
|Jul mean C = 17.5
|Aug mean C = 19
|Sep mean C = 20.5
|Oct mean C = 21
|Nov mean C = 23
|Dec mean C = 24.5
|year mean C =
|Jan low C = 21
|Feb low C = 21
|Mar low C = 20
|Apr low C = 18
|May low C = 15
|Jun low C = 12
|Jul low C = 12
|Aug low C = 14
|Sep low C = 16
|Oct low C = 17
|Nov low C = 19
|Dec low C = 20
|year low C =
|Jan record low C = 11
|Feb record low C = 13
|Mar record low C = 14
|Apr record low C = 8
|May record low C = 7
|Jun record low C = 6
|Jul record low C = 4
|Aug record low C = 5
|Sep record low C = 6
|Oct record low C = 10
|Nov record low C = 11
|Dec record low C = 13
|year record low C =
|Jan precipitation mm = 172
|Feb precipitation mm = 167
|Mar precipitation mm = 107
|Apr precipitation mm = 109
|May precipitation mm = 109
|Jun precipitation mm = 57
|Jul precipitation mm = 60
|Aug precipitation mm = 65
|Sep precipitation mm = 77
|Oct precipitation mm = 105
|Nov precipitation mm = 114
|Dec precipitation mm = 86
|Jan precipitation days = 12
|Feb precipitation days = 12
|Mar precipitation days = 10
|Apr precipitation days = 8
|May precipitation days = 7
|Jun precipitation days = 6
|Jul precipitation days = 6
|Aug precipitation days = 7
|Sep precipitation days = 9
|Oct precipitation days = 12
|Nov precipitation days = 13
|Dec precipitation days = 11
|Jan sun =
|Feb sun =
|Mar sun =
|Apr sun =
|May sun =
|Jun sun =
|Jul sun =
|Aug sun =
|Sep sun =
|Oct sun =
|Nov sun =
|Dec sun =
|source 1 = Weather SA[4]|date=August 2010}}

Catholic history of Richards Bay

The parish priest of Kwambonambi celebrated Mass twice a month in a private home and, starting in 1973, in the Meerensee Primary School. There were few Catholics in Richards Bay in the beginning, but their number increased steadily with the development of the town. The parish priest of Empangeni took over the pastoral care of these Catholics after a new road link between Empangeni and Richards Bay had been completed at the end of 1974. He introduced a weekly Mass, which was held in the Methodist Church in Meerensee and later in the Primary School in Arboretum. The Diocese of Eshowe had in the meanwhile bought a church site in Meerensee. The site was offered to the Nardini Sisters who built a convent and a primary school there in 1977/78. Reg Sommerville, an architect from Empangeni, drew up the plans. O'Connell Brothers, an Empangeni company, began the building operations in June 1977. They finished the first phase within one year so that Archabbot Notker Wolf of St. Ottilien (Germany), who was at that time in South Africa on a visit, could bless the chapel and kindergarten on 12 August 1978. The second phase which involved the construction of a convent, was completed in January 1979. Two Nardini Sisters took up residence in the new convent in February 1979. The convent chapel was used by the Catholic community of Richards Bay for Sunday Mass from June 1978 until August 1986 when the new church in Veld-en-Vlei was opened.

The influx of people to Richards Bay in the early eighties brought about a marked increase in the number of Catholics. This in turn made it necessary to think of building a proper church. Duvenhage and Fischer, architects from Richards Bay, were approached to submit designs. During this planning period, all parishioners were invited to make suggestions for the new Catholic centre. For months the sketches and plans were displayed after Sunday Mass so that everyone could contribute ideas. The Diocese of Eshowe eventually accepted the proposal to build a church together with a hall and a caretaker's flat in Veld en Vlei because of the central position of this suburb. The turning of the sod service took place on 12 September 1985. LTA Construction, one of the largest building companies in South Africa was awarded the contract. Work was completed in June 1986. Bishop Mansuet Biyase consecrated the new church on 31 August 1986. The patron saint of the church and the parish is St. Francis of Assisi. Attached to the church is a sacristy, a small kitchen and a caretaker's flat. In 1992, another building was added. It contains a meeting room and several classrooms for catechism children. The St. Francis Parish in Richards Bay had about 600 Catholics in 1992.

All the additional buildings were constructed and paid for by Father Pious Paul from a legacy left to him. He gave to the Richards Bay Parish a memorial for the benefit of all Catholics in Zululand. After Father Pious there were several priests who ran the parish namely Fathers Alousios, Eugene, Hemmie, Peter Blue, Max and the present incumbent Bheki.

Sports Events

2010 FIFA World Cup

Due to its regional airport, its close proximity to Durban (3 hour drive) and its status as the gateway to Zululand, Richards Bay was identified as a possible training base for the World Cup. A small stadium aimed at achieving FIFA accreditation was developed. In late 2009, a Ghana delegation visited the town, raising speculation that the Ghana football team could base themselves in the town. In May 2010, it was announced that the Nigeria football team would move their base to Richards Bay for the duration of the World Cup.

2011 South African Surfski Championships

Zululand Kayak Club, Richards Bay, was nominated by Kwazulu Natal Canoe Union (KNCU) to host the yearly surf ski championship for single and double surf ski formats. This was achieved on the 17th and 18th of September 2011. This race brought in professional and amateur surf ski racers alike from Durban, East London, Port Elizabeth, Cape Town and Johannesburg. The race was sponsored by Rio Tinto-Richards Bay Minerals and Midbay Motors.

2015 South African Surf Championships

In 2015 Richards Bay was selected by the governing body of South African surfing, Surfing South Africa (SSA), to host the South African Surf Championships. South Africa's top provincial surfers gathered to compete at Alkantstrand during the week long event in August. The contest was handled and coordinated by local surf club, uThungulu Surfriders (formerly Zululand Surfriders Association), and was extremely successful. The event was covered on the uThungulu Surfriders website www.zulusurfriders.co.za with heat by heat updates and daily articles, by uThungulu Surfriders correspondent John Cawood (of Alliance Graphics).

Sport

Wrestling: Richards Bay Wrestling Club is one of the top wrestling clubs in the province of Kwa-Zulu Natal.

Karate: North Coast Karate Academy practices Kimura Shukokai Karate under Sensei Marius Botha that competes on an international level and has received Springbok colors at a young age and has a high world ranking. Student from North Coast Academy have top rankings in South Africa and some internationally as well.

Cycling: The Zululand Cycling Club is active and can be contacted through the Zululand Cycles Facebook page. (ZCC)

Sailing: "Mr. March" Richard d'Esterre Roberts of Currabinny, County Cork is said to have utilised the exceptional depth in Richards Bay (renamed after him) as his winter training ground in preparation for his sensational performance in Clifden, County Galway later in 2017.

Surfing: King Cetswayo District Surf Club (formerly uThungulu Surf Riders)

Canoe / Surfski: Zululand Kayak Club is a water sport organisation, focused on canoe and surfski paddling, and competing in many races on the KNCU calendar. This is a local club that caters to the Zululand community. the club offers a surfski school to the community for anyone interested in trying a new sport. The club promotes a healthy outdoors lifestyle.

Famous people

{{unreferenced section|date=February 2019}}
  • Kyle Abbott - Fast bowler, South African national cricket team, The Proteas
  • Vernon Eksteen - Musician of black metal band Sinister Superstar
  • Bridgitte Hartley - Olympic bronze medalist in the Women's K-1 500m Canoeing 2012 Olympic games hosted in London
  • Freddie "Rafferty" Horn - Former South African cruiser weight boxing Champion, with a professional debut from 1983 to 1997 and won his first South African junior-heavyweight title in October 1988
  • Marius Jonker - South African Rugby union match official
  • Fred Le Roux - South African Surfing Masters Champion 2014
  • Manqoba Mkhize - Former, Bafana Bafana, Amaglug Glug soccer player
  • Lindokuhle "Linda" Mkhwanazi - Soccer player
  • Casimiro Monteiro - Portuguese intelligence officer and assassin for the Portuguese Colonial Police and PIDE (International and State Defense Police). Monteiro was responsible for the assassinations of Portuguese opposition leader and revolutionary Humberto Delgado and Mozambican revolutionary and activist Eduardo Mondlane. After the 1974 Carnation Revolution, Monteiro took refuge in the South African embassy. He eventually took the alias "Jose Fernandez" and moved to Richards Bay, where he died in 1993
  • Sakho Ngema - Generations actor

Local Media

  • The Bay Magazine - a glossy community magazine detailing life in and around Richards Bay
  • Zululand Observer- Locally operated newspaper founded by Mrs Regina Anthony in 1969 - www.zululandobserver.co.za

See also

  • Port of Richards Bay

References

1. ^{{cite web |url=http://census2011.adrianfrith.com/place/538011 |title = Main Place Richards Bay |work=Census 2011}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.portofnewcastle.com.au/Resources/Documents/The-Channel---For-web.pdf|title=The Channel Autumn 2017|page=3|publisher=Port of Newcastle Operations Pty Limited|date=April 2017|accessdate=27 April 2017}}
3. ^{{cite web|title=John Ross Highway Phase 3 (N2 - Empangeni, KZN)|url=http://www.acerafrica.co.za/index.php?option=com_docman&task=cat_view&gid=6&Itemid=1|work=Acer Africa|accessdate=20 June 2010|date=1 July 2009}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.weathersa.co.za/Climat/Climstats/RichardsBayStats.jsp South African Weather Service |title=Richardsbay Stats, |publisher= Weather SA|date=August 2011}}
{{Uthungulu District Municipality}}

5 : Richards Bay|Populated places in the uMhlathuze Local Municipality|Ports and harbours of the Indian Ocean|Lagoons of South Africa|Populated coastal places in South Africa

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