Indianapolis is the capital of the state of Indiana. Slightly less discreet is Oklahoma's capital of Oklahoma City. Both have the full name of the state spelled within the name of the capital.
Whatever state you're in. Each US State has its own capitol building, located in that same state.
There is nothing like that, each country has it own capitol.
No they are not.
A city-state is an independent state made up of cities and villages. It functions as its own sovereign entity, with its own government, laws, and economy, despite being geographically small. Examples of historical city-states include Athens, Sparta, and Venice.
Vienna is a capitol itself. It's the capitol city of Austria, Europe. Because the Republic of Austria is a federation and Vienna on of its states, too, Vienna is also its own capitol.
New Hampshire has 13 cities. Each city operates under a charter and has its own local government, differentiating them from towns in the state. Some of the largest cities include Manchester, Nashua, and Concord, which is also the state capital.
Well, isn't that a happy little question! Oklahoma City is actually the capital of the state of Oklahoma, so you'll find it there. There are no other states with cities named Oklahoma City, but each state has its own unique and beautiful cities waiting to be discovered and painted with your own special touch.
No, a city cannot become a state on its own. States are considered sovereign entities within a country, with their own government and laws. Cities exist within states and are governed by state and local governments.
Knowing that, yes, I am answering my own question because I found out about fifteen minutes later that Kodiak was never really was Alaska's capitol. The only time when Kodiak could have been considered Alaska's capitol is when the state still belonged to the Russians until 1995, making Juneau the real capitol from then on. Sorry for any confusion this question might have caused in the short amount of time it was up here.
The United States Congress meets and debates in the building known as the Capitol Building. It is home to the House of Representatives and the Senate. However, most of the work that Congressmen do is in their private offices down the street from the Capitol Building.
The US Capitol building is not in a state. It is in the District of Columbia, which is specifically and by design not part of any state. The District of Columbia was formed by Virginia and Maryland voluntarily giving up part of their territory to the Federal government; the government later returned the Virginia portion, so while the Capitol is not actually in any state, is is on land that was at one time part of Maryland.
The two major forms of city government in California are general law cities and charter cities.