 

Sophisticated,
 cultured, neat-casual − this is the  self-image Adelaide projects, a 
nod to the days of free colonisation without the  'penal colony' taint. 
Adelaidians may remind you of their convict-free status,  but the 
stuffy, affluent origins of the 'City of Churches' did more to inhibit  
development than promote it. Bogged down in the old-school doldrums and 
 painfully short on charisma, this was a pious, introspective place.
 
But
 these days things are different. Multicultural  flavours infuse 
Adelaide's restaurants; there's a pumping arts and live-music  scene; 
and the city's festival calendar has vanquished dull Saturday nights.  
There are still plenty of church spires here, but they're hopelessly 
outnumbered  by pubs and a growing number of hip bars tucked away in 
lanes. 
Colonel William Light, 
Adelaide’s controversial founder wrote: ‘The reasons that led me to fix 
Adelaide where it is I do not expect to be  generally understood or 
calmly judged of at present. My enemies, however, by  disputing their 
validity in every particular, have done me the good service of  fixing 
the whole of the responsibility upon me. I am perfectly willing to bear 
 it; and I leave it to posterity, and not to them, to decide whether I 
am  entitled to praise or to blame.’ 
Colonel Light should 
be commended for his brilliant choice. The wide sweeping  streets, city 
squares and lush green boundaries make Adelaide an enchanting city  to 
explore. And if you think that’s all there is to it, think again. You 
only  need scratch the surface of the quiet achiever of Australian 
cities to tap into  its hedonistic vein. This epicurean playground 
boasts world-renown major events,  spanning the cultured and cerebral, 
artistic and gastronomic, petrol-burning and  sports crazed. The 
pleasure-seeking spirit flows from varied cuisines and  magnificent 
wines through to the healthy live music and bar scene and numerous  
galas that celebrate a thriving arts community. During the innovative 
Adelaide  Fringe Festival, the artistic flair of this historically 
progressive, yet still  conservative, city truly emerges. 
The 
traditional owners of the Adelaide area are the Kaurna people, whose  
territory extends south towards Cape Jervis and north towards Port 
Wakefield.  Early European colonists (free settlers) began to arrive in 
1836, creating a  lush, European-style capital, while successive waves 
of settlers have added to  the cosmopolitan mix. 
Adelaide is just
 a cycle away from native bushland hiking in the Mt Lofty  Ranges. The 
city makes an excellent base for trips into the nearby wine regions,  
surf lessons on the 
Fleurieu  Peninsula and hikes through the wildlife lair of 
Kangaroo  Island.
 Show in Lonely Planet
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