Africa’s southern-most city, home to Table Mountain and international award-winning wines, the biggest shopping centre in the Southern hemisphere (Canal Walk), a city with two oceans (Indian in the east and Atlantic in the west)…These are just some of the descriptions by which Cape Town is known.
Let us begin with a brief history: Cape Town’s written history can be traced back as far as 1487 when the explorer Bartolomeu Dias set sail from Portugal to find a sea route to the riches of the East and landed at Gouritz River Mouth after having unwittingly rounded Cape Point.
But it was not until Jan van Riebeek of the Netherlands, at the behest of the Dutch East India Company, landed in 1652 at what was to become known as Cape Town to establish a refreshment station for travelers on their way to the East that European settlement began at the Cape.
It was in the early 1800’s that a notable exodus to the Cape from the cooler climes of Europe began. Since then there have been significant periods of upheaval, peace, war and the dawning of a bright future in 1994. Cape Town’s population is made up of such a diverse mixture of people from a wide from range of cultural, religious, political, and ethnic backgrounds that it is a truly cosmopolitan place to live and visit.
Back to modern day Cape Town and this is a city that competes with the best cities in the world in terms of all it has to offer tourists and locals alike. It is often regarded as one of the world’s most spectacular cities because of its geography.
There is the ocean with all that it has to offer from sporting pursuits to magnificent sunsets; there are the Cape Winelands where some of the finest red and white wines in the world are produced and where visitors are welcome to spend an entire day – and longer – sampling the tastes, sounds and lifestyle of this majestic area. Visitors and locals are spoilt for choice when it comes to selecting a restaurant at which to eat. There is an international flavour in this city that is rivaled by few others. From German to Oriental, Italian to Cuban, Fusion to Cape Malay there are elegant fine-dining establishments and conversely casual eateries to suit all preferences and palates.
The night life in Cape Town is unrivalled by any other city in South Africa. One can dance the night away in a number of venues located in the city centre, one can enjoy an evening of jazz music in a cigar bar, enjoy sundowners at Clifton beach or enjoy late night shopping at the V & A Waterfront.
Cape Town really does cater for everyone – what ever your heart desires you will find it in Cape Town.
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