City of Victoria

English

Etymology

Named after Queen Victoria.

Proper noun

City of Victoria

  1. A city in Hong Kong.
    • 1999 April 18, Mark Landler, “WHAT'S DOING IN; Hong Kong”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 04 September 2009, Travel‎[2]:
      Hong Kong is an indifferent guardian of its past, with old buildings too frequently torn down in favor of nondescript high-rises. But a new exhibit of historical photographs, "City of Victoria," offers a fascinating record of Hong Kong's history.
    • 2015 July 9, Jennifer Eagleton, “A work in progress: An imaginary and re-imagined Hong Kong”, in Hong Kong Free Press[3], archived from the original on 05 July 2025, Opinion:
      In addition to non-stop demolition and construction, Hong Kong is constantly re-constructing and re-figuring its past. Another fictional work, Dung Kai-chung’s The Atlas: Archaeology of an Imaginary City (2011) echoes Calvino. In this novel, the “City of Victoria” (Hong Kong) no longer exists and narrators can only divine from old maps and atlases what it was like and how it changed during 156 years as a British colony because of rapid erection and demolition of the city’s physical structures. The Hong Kong its people know, according to the writer cannot be actually pinpointed on a map, the map being only a limited and artificial translation of the place.
    • 2021 December 17, Joyce Ng, Sammy Heung, “Where is the City of Victoria? Authenticity confirmed for 3 more boundary stones marking Hong Kong’s first colonial settlement”, in South China Morning Post[4], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 17 December 2021, Society‎[5]:
      Seven such stones were found earlier, marking out the City of Victoria, Hong Kong’s first urban settlement after it became a British colony. The boundary of the settlement was gazetted in 1903.

Translations