No. Canterbury had been the capital of England in the middle ages and still hosts the head of the Anglican Church.
Winchester was the capital of England between the 10th and 11th centuries. London is the de facto capital of England and UK since the 12th century.
The first city to be founded in Australia was Sydney, which was founded with the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788. At this stage, of course, it was not a city, but a small colonial settlement which grew into a town and, after many decades, gained city status.
No. We had a 'Black Prince' but that didn't refer to his skin colour.
No. At one point, Lancaster made No. 4, but that was the gighest it ever came. Liverpool, Whitehaven and Bristol were far more involved.
About 1500 years ago, Dunwich was a large and prosperous seaport, but coastal erosion has reduced it to a small village today.
They thought that North America had lots of gold, silver, and exotic foods, and that who ever ruled North America was even more powerful.
No
New York City was the capital of NY State from 1784 to 1797. It was also the U.S. capital in 1789 and 1790; the Federal Building on Wall St at Broad Street commemorates this with a fine statue of George Washington.
No. The only other capital England has ever had is Winchester.
London and Birmingham are both cities in England. London is the capital and Birmingham never has been.
Yes, but only for a short time about 1000 years ago.
No
No
No
No
Norwich has never been the capital of England. It was a regional capital during Roman times.
no. the only cities that were considered to become capital of the U.S. were New York City, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C. of course new york and washington were both capitals.
No.