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Longueuil, Quebec

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Ville de Longueuil, Québec, Canada
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Flag logo
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Armorial banner
Motto: Labor et Concordia (work and harmony)
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Area: 283.73 km².
Population

 - City (2001)
 - Canadian CD Rank
 - Canadian Municipal Rank
 - Density


348,091
Ranked 19th
Ranked 12th
1226.8/km²
Time zone Eastern: UTC-5
Latitude
Longitude
45°32' N
73°30' W
MPs
Stéphane Bergeron, Maka Kotto, Carole Lavallée, Jacques Saada, Caroline St-Hilaire
MNAs
Michel Audet, Camil Bouchard, Fatima Houda-Pepin, Diane Legault, Pauline Marois, Pierre Moreau, Cécile Vermette
Mayor Claude Gladu
Governing body Longueuil City Council
[Ville de Longueuil]

Longueuil (approximately pronounced ləʊnˈgel) is a city in extreme southwestern Quebec, Canada, on the south shore of the Saint Lawrence River across from Montreal, of which it is a suburb.

The city merged on January 1, 2002 with the communities of Boucherville, Brossard, Greenfield Park, LeMoyne, Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville, Saint-Hubert, and Saint-Lambert. These cities have become boroughs of the new city. Saint-Lambert and Le Moyne became one borough, and the former city of Longueuil became the borough of Vieux-Longueuil. On June 20, 2004, the boroughs of Boucherville, Saint-Lambert, Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville and Brossard voted to demerge from Longueuil and reconstitute themselves as municipalities, having obtained 10% of signatures at a registry requesting a referendum and 35% or more majority yes votes at the referendum out of the total voting population on electoral lists. Locals refer to the borough of Vieux-Longueuil as "Longueuil proper" to distinguish it from the part of the borough known as "Old Longueuil".

In 2001, the population of the components of the current city of Longueuil totalled 348,091, making it the third largest city in Quebec and 11th largest in Canada. The current city has an area of 273.52 km². Residents of Longueuil are called Longueuillois.

Most of the community's residents commute to Montreal to work. This generates major traffic problems; owing to the width of the Saint Lawrence River between the Island of Montreal and the south shore, there are only five automobile crossings (the Honoré-Mercier, Champlain, Victoria, and Jacques-Cartier bridges and the Louis-Hippolyte-Lafontaine tunnel), and they are severely congested. (See the list of bridges in Montreal.)

The city is also served by the Longueuil–Université-de-Sherbrooke metro station, connected to downtown Montreal by the yellow line of the metro. The Réseau de transport de Longueuil (RTL) bus lines almost all terminate here, or cross over the Champlain Bridge to arrive at the Terminus Rive-Sud in downtown Montreal (under the 1000 de la Gauchetière office tower, at Bonaventure metro). The Mont-Saint-Hilaire commuter train line also serves the south shore.

There are several explanations for the origin of the city's name. According to Abbé Faillon, Charles Le Moyne (1626-1685), lord of the area starting in 1657, named it after a village which is today the seat of a canton in the district of Dieppe in his homeland of Normandy. In France, the name is spelled "Longueil" and it is rumored that it was a mistake to spell it "Longueuil".

Longueuil, Quebec is officially twinned with the Town of Whitby, Ontario.

Demographics

Racial make-up of Longueuil and its former cities:

Longueuil (old city) Boucherville Brossard Greenfield Park LeMoyne Saint-Bruno-
de-Montarville
Saint-Hubert Saint-Lambert Total
White 116,655 34,960 46,580 14,705 4,555 22,950 69,350 19,485 329,240
Black 3,520 340 2,615 520 120 130 2,405 275 9,925
Chinese 975 120 6,375 345 0 110 330 130 8,385
South Asian 480 0 2,590 340 10 70 515 60 4,065
Arab 1,185 60 1,660 160 25 135 450 310 3,885
Latin American 1,205 95 1,320 220 30 35 700 130 3,735
Southeast Asian 1,225 35 1,535 140 0 25 690 60 3,710
West Asian 680 20 680 115 45 0 85 95 1,720
Aboriginal 420 50 195 60 40 85 200 35 985
Filipino 55 0 450 175 0 0 220 0 900
Korean 85 10 160 15 0 0 50 15 335
Japanese 10 0 65 10 0 0 20 35 140
Multiple 100 0 270 10 0 10 80 10 470
Other 165 0 155 50 0 20 95 20 505

Education

Economy

Transportation

Stations: Saint Lambert,

Saint Hubert,

Saint Bruno.

Health

The Community

Media

Famous people

Coat of arms

Longueuil_Coat_of_Arms.jpg

http://www.gg.ca/heraldry/pub-reg/project-pic.asp?lang=e&ProjectID=378&ProjectElementID=1308

Symbolism

The full achievement of arms, with a crest and supporters, are those of Charles Le Moyne (1626-1685), the founder of Longueuil who was ennobled in 1668 and whose son and namesake was created a baron in 1700 by Louis XIV. In 2002, Raymond Grant, a descendant of the Le Moyne family through the female line and Baron de Longueuil, expressed his concurrence with the proposal that the City of Longueuil wished to be officially granted the historical arms of Charles Le Moyne. In the depiction of the arms, the three symbols in chief (the crescent and the two stars) are coloured gold (yellow). Since the letters of nobility of 1668 have been lost, the city based its choice on a historical document of the XVIIIth century recording the blazon (written description) of the arms (Paris, B.n.F., Chérin 138, dossier 2844). Other versions of the arms show the three upper symbols as Argent (white).

See also

External links


Montérégie (16)

Longueuil City | Acton | Le Bas-Richelieu | Beauharnois-Salaberry | Brome-Missisquoi | La Haute-Yamaska | Le Haut-Richelieu | Le Haut-Saint-Laurent | Les Jardins-de-Napierville | Lajemmerais | Les Maskoutains | Roussillon | Rouville | La Vallée-du-Richelieu | Vaudreuil-Soulanges
Neighbouring regions: Estrie | Montreal | Outaouais | Laurentides | Centre-du-Québec

Quebec
Regions Abitibi-Témiscamingue - Bas-Saint-Laurent - Capitale-Nationale - Centre-du-Québec - Chaudière-Appalaches - Côte-Nord - Estrie - Gaspésie-Îles-de-la-Madeleine>Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine - Lanaudière - Laurentides - Laval - Mauricie - Montérégie - Montréal - Nord-du-Québec - Outaouais - Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean
List of Quebec Regional County Municipalities
Territories Basse-Côte-Nord - Jamésie - Kativik - Nunavik
Separated cities Gatineau - Lévis - Notre-Dame-des-Anges - Rouyn-Noranda - Saguenay - Saint-Augustin - Shawinigan - Sherbrooke - Trois-Rivières -
Agglomeration areas La Tuque - Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine - Longueuil - Montreal - Quebec City

 


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