Thing To Do in Toronto, Canada
The first inhabitants of what Toronto is today, were Native Americans called Iroquois. They settled on Lake Ontario between 1450 and 1660. North American Indian tribes were divided into several tribal groups that spoke the common language of the Native American Iroquois family. The Mohawk, Oneida, Senega, Onondaga, Cajuga and Tuscarora Native American tribes were united after 1722 from the Five Nations with the Tuscarora tribe to form the Iroquois Confederacy of the Six Nations of North America.
The first inhabitants of what Toronto is today, were Native Americans called Iroquois. They settled on Lake Ontario between 1450 and 1660. North American Indian tribes were divided into several tribal groups that spoke the common language of the Native American Iroquois family. The Mohawk, Oneida, Senega, Onondaga, Cajuga and Tuscarora Native American tribes were united after 1722 from the Five Nations with the Tuscarora tribe to form the Iroquois Confederacy of the Six Nations of North America.
The arrival of Europeans and the colonization of Ontario by the French as well as the British influenced the environment and the development of the civilization of the Canadian people there. In 1793, the Municipality of York was established, and in 1834 the city was renamed Toronto.
The Canadian city Toronto is the fourth largest city in North America, and the fifth largest city, combining suburban communities with the centre of the capital Toronto to form a spatial and functional whole. This leading touristic destination in Canada is visited by more than 27,500,000 visitors per year.
The Canadian city Toronto is the fourth largest city in North America, and the fifth largest city, combining suburban communities with the centre of the capital Toronto to form a spatial and functional whole. This leading touristic destination in Canada is visited by more than 27,500,000 visitors per year.
Most of the city's tourist attractions can be found along the route from Jarvis Street in the east, to Dupont Street in the north, to Front Street in the south of the port city. The Southside, with its Harbourfront-CityPlace neighbourhood in the Greater Old Toronto Area, is a distinctive business district with landmarks such as the CN Tower, Rogers Centre Stadium and the Fort York Museum.