Trois-Rivières (2001 population 46,264; metropolitan population 137,507) is a city on the St. Lawrence River at the mouth of the Saint-Maurice River in central Quebec, Canada, located in the densely populated Quebec City-Windsor Corridor.
It is a world capital of the pulp and paper industry. Notable historic landmarks include the Ursulines convent and the Saint-Maurice forge. Trois-Rivières hosts the Grand-Prix de Trois-Rivières, the Trans-Am Series, prestigious American Le Mans series and the Formula Atlantic *. It is officially the "National Poetry Capital of Quebec". Numerous plaques displaying poetic verses are installed across the centre of the city and its International Festival of Poetry honours this title.
Trois-Rivières Metro Area - 2001
Ethnic Origin
| Ethnic Origin | Population | Percent |
|---|---|---|
| Canadian | 112,300 | 83.40% |
| French | 44,075 | 32.73% |
| Irish | 3,030 | 2.25% |
| North American Indian | 1,645 | 1.22% |
| Québécois | 1,620 | 1.20% |
| English | 1,380 | 1.02% |
The information regarding ethnicities at the left is from the 2001 Canadian Census. The percentages add to more than 100% because of dual responses (e.g. "French-Canadian" generates an entry in both the category "French" and the category "Canadian".) Groups with greater than 1,250 responses are included.
Religious Groups
Cities in Quebec | 1634 establishments
Trois-Rivières | Trois-Rivières | Trois-Rivières, Canadá | Trois-Rivières | Trois-Rivières | Trois-Rivières
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Trois-Rivières, Quebec".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world