便利朗角 Bennelong Point | |
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坐标:33°51′24″S 151°12′54″E / 33.8567°S 151.2150°E | |
位置 | 悉尼,新南威尔士州,澳大利亚 |
属于 | 悉尼 |
近海水体 | 南太平洋 |
便利朗角[1][2](英語:Bennelong Point,或譯班納隆角、本尼朗角[3]、贝尼朗角[4])是澳大利亚新南威尔士州悉尼港的一个岬角[5]。自从1970年代以来,便利朗角就因作为悉尼歌剧院的所在地而闻名于世。[6][7]
在欧洲人前来定居之前,当地原住民尕迪盖尔人[註 1][9]将该地区称为Dubbagullee 。 [10]
十九世纪以前的便利朗角其实是一个小潮汐岛[11]。满潮的时候,其北端与悉尼湾南部的海岸彻底被潮水隔开,而在其他的大部分时候则与海湾连成一体,形成一个半岛海岬。便利朗角,或者说“便利朗岛”主要由岩石组成,在其西侧有一个天然的小海滩。在1788年殖民舰队刚刚在悉尼湾登陆的最初一段时间内,由于总督亚瑟·菲利普与他率领的的殖民舰队从开普敦带来澳洲的第一批牛和马都被圈养在此处,这个海角被殖民者称为牛角(Cattle Point)[12]
由于潮汐岛的潮间带很适合贝壳的生长繁殖,便利朗角周围的浅海内牡蛎众多,原住民也因此以此为食。登陆后,殖民者发现在该地区散落很多当地原住民长年采集牡蛎肉后随手丢弃的牡蛎壳[13]。成年累月,几乎堆积成山。见此情景,抱着资源利用的想法,殖民官员命令随舰队到达的流放女囚将这些牡蛎壳重新收集起来,烧成石灰,拌为水泥砂浆以建设这个一穷二白的新殖民地。由于这段往事,这个海角被赋予了殖民者登陆以来的第二个名字:石灰烧工角(Limeburners'Point)[14]。不过在烧完了海角上堆积的所有牡蛎壳之后,生产出来的所有石灰也仅仅勉强够建起一座建筑物——一栋堪堪两层的政府大楼。 [15]
1790年代初期,被英国殖民者聘为翻译官的当地原住民“便利朗”(Bennelong)要求时任总督亚瑟·菲利普在此地为他建造一座砖砌小屋作为报酬并以他的名字为此地命名[16]。总督恩准了他的请求,这片海岬从此便定下了“便利朗角”这个沿用至今的名字[17]。
1798年12月,威廉·肯特(时任海军中校)带领殖民者用卸下的第一殖民舰队中“补给号”军舰(HMS Supply)[18]的舰炮,在便利朗角的最北端建造了一个半月形的炮台[19],即麦格理堡,以保卫这个新生的脆弱殖民地[20]。麦格理堡经过多次扩建及改造,最终在20世纪伊始退出现役,交由地方当局改建为电车停车场。[21]
在1818年至1821年期间,当地的一个主要功能就是作为殖民地区的采石场[22]。为了开辟出一块平整的场地并为麦格理堡的建造提供合适的石材,整个海岬上的崎岖丘陵全部被挖平,潮间带也全部被采下的岩石所填满。自此,便利朗角彻底脱离了潮汐岛的身份,成为了一个永久的海岬。除了建造堡垒以外,采自便利朗角的一部分石材也被用以修筑从悉尼湾到农场湾的一条道路。这条当年的石头小径,就是现如今悉尼海湾的塔沛安大道(Tarpeian Way)的前身[23]。
在此之后,直到1950年代后期因为开工建设悉尼歌剧院而进行了大规模挖掘之前,好几代人都几乎遗忘了这个看似天成的海岬其实曾经是一个潮汐岛。这个事实终究在为了建设歌剧院而进行的地质调查中被“重新发现”,并通过查阅古籍纪录被证实。在世界闻名的歌剧院被建造起来之前,便利朗角曾是一个电车站的所在地[24]。
Bennelong Point是雪梨歌劇院所在地,網上——估計大約雪梨的華人百姓也是這麼叫的——把它翻譯成「便利朗角」。
Once a small island little more than a strong of rocks, the extreme tip of what is now known as Bennelong Point is today the site of one of the world's most well known 20th century buildings - The Sydney Opera House.
There are about 29 clan groups of the Sydney metropolitan area referred to collectively as the Eora Nation. The ‘Eora people’ was the name given to the coastal Aboriginal peoples around Sydney. ‘Eora’ means ‘here’ or ‘from this place’. The Gadigal are a clan of the Eora Nation.
Bennelong Point is known to the local indigenous Gadigal people of the Eora nation as Tubowgule. It was originally a small tidal island which was made up of rocks and a small beach. It is located on the tip of the eastern arm of Sydney Cove, and protrudes into Port Jackson (Sydney’s natural harbour).
The first midden to be used was the one on Cattle Point, which led to it becoming known as Limeburner's Point.
Within a year of the colony's founding, the middens or piles of discarded oysters left by generations of aborigines feasting on the shellfish of the harbour began to be burnt and ground down by groups of convicts to make the lime needed for mortar in brick construction.
At Bennelong's request, Phillip built him a brick hut 'on a point of land fixed upon by himself' on the headland at Tubowgulle, now Bennelong Point and the site of the Sydney Opera House. It was 12 feet (3.5 metres) square and had a tiled roof and an external fireplace. Phillip had a tin shield made for Bennelong, to ward off the spears of his enemies'.
Sydney Opera House sits on Bennelong Point. Bennelong Point was named after Woollarawarre Bennelong, a senior Eora man at the time of the arrival of British colonisers in Australia in 1788.
In a statement of public works for 1798 it is men tioned that a half-moon battery on the extreme end of the point was completed in December, and a few guns from the Supply were mounted by the ship's company. This is the battery M. Peron refers to when he describes Sydney as he saw it 1802.
Square castellated fort built on Bennelong Point, incorporating some of the guns taken from HMS Supply.
Fort Macquarie was demolished in 1901 to make way for the new electric tramway sheds. The new building was constructed of red brick and sandstone with a facade adorned with crenellated towers, parapets and convex bay walls. It was named the Fort Macquarie Depot and opened on 10 August 1902. It was demolished in 1959 to allow for the construction of the Sydney Opera House.
hus, while animals grazed on the rocky outcrop, the tip of which was first known as 'Cattle' and later 'Bennelong Point', the initial decisions about the spatial arrangements for the new settlement were to have long-term meaning for the development of the area around Sydney Cove and its immediate environs. Convict, military and some civil establishments were centred on the western side of the cove, and land to the east was reserved for the governor's benefit and for administrative and legal establishments.
A stairway constructed in the 1880s connects the Sydney Opera House to the top of the rock and Domain and is known as the Tarpeian Way.
Castellated brick building constructed in 1902 on the site of Fort Macquarie on Bennelong Point as a terminus and depot for the city's tram network.