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Christchurch (Māori: Ōtautahi) is the regional capital of Canterbury, New
Zealand. The largest city in the South Island, it is also the second largest
city and third largest urban area of New Zealand. A coastal city, the urban
area is situated just north of Banks Peninsula, midway down the South
Island's east coast, but (since 2006) the city limits encompass the
peninsula.
The city was named by the Canterbury Association, which settled the
surrounding province of Canterbury. The name of Christchurch was agreed on
at the first meeting of the association on 27 March 1848. It was suggested
by J.R. Godley, who had attended Christ Church, Oxford. Some early writers
called the town "Christ Church", but it was recorded as "Christchurch" in
the minutes of the management committee of the association.
The river which flows through the centre of the city (its banks now largely
forming an urban park) was named Avon at the request of the pioneering Deans
brothers to commemorate the Scottish Avon, which rises in the Ayrshire hills
near what was their grandfathers' farm and flows into the Clyde.
The usual Māori name Ōtautahi is a shortened form of Te Whenua o Te
Potiki-Tautahi - named for the seasonal dwelling of Ngai Tahu chief Tautahi
of Port Levy on a bank of the Avon River near to where the Barbadoes Street
bridge now stands.
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