Victoria Travel
Victoria is the southernmost of the eastern
mainland states of Australia. The state is roughly
triangular in shape. New South Wales lies to the north /
north-east, with the Murray River forming most of the
boundary between the two states.
South Australia lies to the west and the
southern coast forms the other side of the triangle. Melbourne,
the state capital and largest city, is nestled on Port Phillip
Bay in the center of the southern coast. Melbourne is within
three hours drive of the nearest point of the New South Wales
border but further from the South Australia border.
Victoria is the smallest mainland
state in area, but the most densely populated and
urbanised. White settlement in Victoria began in the 1830s
as a farming community.
The discovery of gold in 1851
transformed it into a leading industrial and commercial centre.
Victoria is the second most populous Australian state, after
New South Wales, with an estimated population of 5,205,200 as
of June 2007. Melbourne is Victoria's capital and largest city,
with more than 70% of all Victorians living there.
After the founding of the colony of New
South Wales in 1788, the continent was divided into an eastern
half - named New South Wales, and a western half, named New
Holland, but under the administration of the colonial
government in Sydney. Victoria's first settlement was at
Portland, on the west coast of what is now Victoria. Melbourne
was founded in 1835 by John Batman.
From settlement the region around Melbourne was known as the
Port Phillip District, and this gained some administrative
status prior to separation from New South Wales and declaration
as the Colony of Victoria in 1851.
Victoria Regions of Most Interest to Tourists
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