NEW BRITAIN


Meaning of NEW BRITAIN in English

largest island of the Bismarck Archipelago, southwestern Pacific, in Papua New Guinea. It is situated 55 miles (88 km) east of the Huon Peninsula of mainland eastern New Guinea. Measuring 370 miles (600 km) long by 50 miles (80 km) at its widest, the crescent-shaped island has an area of approximately 14,100 square miles (36,500 square km) and a 1,000-mile (1,600-kilometre) coastline bordered by reefs. From narrow coastal plains, it rises to a rugged central mountain spine composed of the Whiteman, Nakanai, and Baining ranges, with several peaks exceeding 7,000 feet (2,100 m). There are three areas of active volcanism: in the extreme west, on the north coast bordering Open and Kimbe bays, and in the northeast on the Gazelle Peninsula near Rabaul, where the Matupi and Vulcan cones present a constant threat to that town, the largest settlement on the island. An eruption in 1937 killed 263 people. The island has an equatorial climate. New Britain was sighted in 1616 by the Dutch navigator Jakob Le Maire, who believed it was part of a landmass including New Guinea and New Ireland. His theory was disproved (16991700) by William Dampier, an Englishman who named the island, and Philip Carteret, who found St. George's Channel (east) in 1767. As Neu-Pommern (New Pomerania), the island became part of a German protectorate in 1884. It was mandated to Australia following World War I, taken by the Japanese in 1942, and reoccupied in 1945. It subsequently formed part of the UN Trust Territory of New Guinea and was administered by Australia. It became part of Papua New Guinea in 1975 when that nation attained independence. The most developed and populous area of the island is the Gazelle Peninsula in the northeast, where, on the rich coastal plains, copra and cocoa are produced on commercial plantations and small plots and marketed through Rabaul, Kokopo, and Keravat. These same crops (as well as oil palms) are raised at other points along the coast and shipped from smaller harbours such as Talasea in the northwest. A feature of this development was the success of local cooperative societies. A variety of other crops is grown in village gardens for local consumption. In the interior, a system of shifting cultivation is practiced involving a rotation of plots used only at long intervals. Other island resources are timber, copper, gold, iron, and coal. Pop. (1989 est.) including minor adjoining islands, 263,500. city, coextensive with the town (township) of New Britain, Hartford county, central Connecticut, U.S. Settled as the Stanley Quarter to the north in 1686 and followed later by the Great Swamp settlement to the south, the area became the New Britain parish of Farmington in 1754. In 1785 Berlin town, including New Britain parish, was separately incorporated from Farmington. Metalworking began in New Britain in the 18th century, and Berlin, now a suburb, was where the first tinware in North America was made. In 1850 New Britain was incorporated as a town and borough; by that time it was a manufacturing centre producing tools, locks, and other hardware. Such products and machinery are also the city's principal modern industries. New Britain is the seat of Central Connecticut State University (established as a state normal school, 1849) and the New Britain Museum of American Art (founded 1903), noted for its collection of American paintings. Inc. city, 1871; town and city consolidated, 1905. Pop. (1990) 75,491; (1996 est.) 71,512.

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