State governments.
Not all canals were built in Victorian times. Most canals were built between 1750 and 1850 but some were outside this period. There are still around 2000 miles of navigable canals and rivers in the UK.
No. Most, but not all, other canals have canal locks. Most canals are not built on flat land. Another without locks is the Corinth Canal.
Canals were built to move water to areas for agriculture from ancient times. These days, some irrigation canals are still used although sprinklers and other sorts of piping have replaced them in most places.
Most canals were built after the Roman Empire split, for example the Suez Canal, the Panama Canal, and the Erie Canal.
Venice Italy definitely has the most famous, but there are other places with them too. England has shallow canals that were built for the industrial revolution to carry goods to the ports from the factories. St.Petersburg Russia is 41 islands and also has canals, but it doesn’t seem that they are in use as much as the Italian or English ones.
Canals were built for transport and for boats to go on them. Canals exist in many parts of the world; some of the most important are the Suez Canal, at the eastern tip of the Mediterranean (cutting through the Sinai desert) and the Panama Canal, in Central America. Canals are built to enable ships and boats to travel from one body of water to another. In the case of the Suez Canal, the Mediterranean is connected to the Red Sea leading to the Arabian Sea, and in the case of the Panama Canal, the Atlantic Ocean is connected to the Pacific Ocean. Canals make it possible for ships to get to their destinations faster and more efficiently.
Birmingham has the most canals out of any European city.
Venice I think
the Botseenerik and fertiy canals are the most famouse
The city is Venice, Italy. The city was built on as many as 117 small islands in a shallow lagoon, and nearby rivers were diverted to sweep sediment out to sea.
Longboats are most usually associated with canals