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New York (ville)

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New York (ville)
New York (ville)
AI-generated (Stable Diffusion 3.5) · CC BY 4.0 · source
NameNew York (ville)
Official nameCity of New York (ville)
Settlement typeCity
NicknameThe City
Coordinates40.7128°N 74.0060°W
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
BoroughsManhattan; Brooklyn; Queens; The Bronx; Staten Island
Established1624
MayorBill de Blasio
Area total km2783.8
Population total8,336,817
Population as of2020
Density km210,933
TimezoneEastern Time Zone

New York (ville) is a major global city located on the eastern seaboard of the United States, famed for its financial centers, cultural institutions, and diverse population. The city comprises five boroughs—Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, The Bronx, and Staten Island—and serves as a hub for international finance, media, art, and higher education. New York (ville) has played central roles in events ranging from colonial settlement and the American Revolution to modern diplomacy and globalized commerce.

History

New York (ville)'s recorded history begins with early Dutch settlement at New Amsterdam and the actions of figures tied to the Dutch West India Company, later contested during the Anglo-Dutch wars and ceded under treaties that involved colonial governors and merchants. The city was a strategic locus during the American Revolutionary War with connections to battles and figures such as George Washington, British Army maneuvers, and postwar negotiations that influenced the drafting of the United States Constitution. Throughout the 19th century, waves of immigrants linked to transit routes and shipping industries transformed neighborhoods; notable arrivals from Ireland and Italy intersected with developments like the Erie Canal, industrial expansion, and labor movements that included unions and strikes. The 20th century saw New York (ville) emerge as a magnet for finance through Wall Street, culture through institutions like the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Carnegie Hall, and international diplomacy with the establishment of the United Nations headquarters. Major 20th-century events shaped the city, from the Great Depression to World War II-era production, the rise of United Nations diplomacy, postwar suburbanization influenced by the Interstate Highway System, fiscal crises in the 1970s, and recovery tied to redevelopment projects and the aftermath of the September 11 attacks.

Geography and Climate

New York (ville) occupies coastal landforms including islands and peninsulas at the mouth of the Hudson River and adjacent to the Long Island Sound, bordered by the states of New Jersey and Connecticut. Borough geography ranges from Manhattan's island grid and skyscraper concentrations near Hudson River frontage to Brooklyn's waterfront and Queens' residential expanses bordering Flushing Bay and Jamaica Bay, with The Bronx containing montane parkland and Staten Island separated by the New York Harbor. The climate is classified as humid subtropical transitioning to humid continental in higher latitudes, influenced by the Gulf Stream and Atlantic storm tracks; the city experiences four seasons with events like nor'easters, occasional Hurricane Sandy impacts, and urban heat island effects observed across densely built neighborhoods.

Demographics

New York (ville) has one of the most diverse populations globally, reflecting immigration patterns tied to ports, rail hubs, and federal immigration policy. Major ethnic communities include Puerto Rican, Dominican, Chinese, Indian, Jamaican, Irish, Italian, and Jewish populations, with neighborhoods associated with groups such as Chinatown, Little Italy, and Harlem. Languages spoken reflect ties to countries represented at consulates and cultural organizations, and prominent religious institutions range from synagogues associated with Ellis Island migrants to churches tied to liberation movements. Demographic trends interact with institutions like the New York City Housing Authority and educational systems connected to universities such as Columbia University and New York University.

Economy and Infrastructure

New York (ville) is a global financial center anchored by Wall Street and institutions such as the New York Stock Exchange and Federal Reserve Bank of New York, alongside major media companies headquartered in Midtown and Lower Manhattan that include broadcasters and publishers connected to markets and advertising. The city hosts headquarters for multinational corporations, law firms, and professional services, while major cultural employers include the Metropolitan Opera and theater organizations on Broadway (Manhattan). Infrastructure includes extensive utility networks, ports like the Port of New York and New Jersey, and large hospitals operated by systems such as NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital and Mount Sinai Health System, with economic sectors spanning finance, healthcare, tourism, and technology startups clustered near innovation hubs and academic research centers.

Government and Politics

Political life in New York (ville) features elections for the mayoral office, city council districts, and borough presidents; historic political machines and reform movements have involved organizations from Tammany Hall-era entities to modern advocacy groups and party committees. City governance interacts with state authorities in Albany and federal agencies in Washington, D.C., over matters like zoning, public safety, and housing programs administered in coordination with entities such as the MTA and courts including the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. Local politics have been shaped by figures involved in civil rights protests, labor campaigns, and urban policy debates that draw attention from national organizations and foundations.

Culture and Society

New York (ville) is renowned for cultural institutions including museums like the Museum of Modern Art and performing arts venues such as Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, with a theater district centered on Broadway (Manhattan) and Off-Broadway stages. The city has been a birthplace or home to influential movements in music—jazz in Harlem, hip hop in the Bronx—literary circles connected to publishers and newspapers, and visual arts nurtured in galleries of Chelsea and SoHo. Festivals, culinary scenes crossing precincts from Koreatown to Astoria, and sports franchises like the New York Yankees and New York Knicks contribute to civic identity alongside philanthropic trusts and cultural foundations.

Transportation and Landmarks

Transportation networks include the extensive New York City Subway system, commuter railroads such as Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North Railroad, and major airports including John F. Kennedy International Airport, LaGuardia Airport, and Newark Liberty International Airport. Bridges and tunnels like the Brooklyn Bridge, George Washington Bridge, and Holland Tunnel connect boroughs and neighboring states, while ferry services link Staten Island and waterfront communities. Iconic landmarks encompass Times Square, Statue of Liberty, Central Park, One World Trade Center, and historic districts such as Greenwich Village, with preservation overseen by agencies and neighborhood associations tied to landmark legislation and urban planning initiatives.

Category:Cities in New York (state)