- Source: San, Mali
San (Bambara: ߛߊߣ tr. San) is an urban commune, town and capital of the Cercle of San in the Ségou Region of Mali. The town lies 10 kilometres or 6 miles south of the Bani River. In the 2009 census the commune had a population of 68,078.
History
The area of San was for centuries a fishing camp for Bozo people. Around 1400 CE it began to develop as a trade city at a crucial ford over the Bani linking the Inner Niger Delta to the goldfields to the south, although oral traditions conflict on whether Marka from Dia or Dyula from Djenne were responsible. The town was attacked by Askia Ishaq I of the Songhai Empire in 1542. At the time it may have been known under the name 'Sama'.
In 1690 San, a prosperous market town, was conquered by Biton Coulibaly and integrated into the growing Bamana Empire. In 1739, Famaghan Ouattara of the Kong Empire intervened in a Bamana civil war and destroyed the town. It was later rebuilt somewhat further north. San was incorporated into the Massina Empire by Cheikhou Amadou in the 1830s, and became a theocratic state. For this reason, when El-Hajj Omar Tall destroyed Massina in the 1860s he spared the city.
The Almamy of San was forced to sign a protectorate treaty with France in 1891. The city's independence was soon curtailed by the colonial administration, however. In 1915 the area witnessed a series of rebellions against forced recruitment into the French army and forced labor during World War I, and the town's population plummetted.
San was elevated to the status of commune under the French colonial regime in November 1955.
Economy and Culture
San is the center for production of bògòlanfini, a traditional Malian fabric. It also is a center of horse breeding. The main engine of the economy, however, is trade on the main highways that pass through town and the rice fields along the Bani river.
Attractions in the town include the San Museum and the Sudanic-style mosque. The yearly Sanke Mo fishing festival takes place every June, and has been officially classified as part of the national cultural patrimony of Mali.
Climate
San has a hot semi-arid climate (Köppen BSh) with a wet season from late May to early October. Almost no rain falls during the long dry season from early October to late May, while afternoon temperatures are sweltering except in December and January, when they are merely hot in the afternoon and pleasant to warm in the mornings.
Notable People
Former President of Mali Bah Ndaw, born in San on 23 August 1950
Historian and ethnologist Youssouf Tata Cisse
Twin towns
San is twinned with:
Chaumont, Haute-Marne, France, since 1995
References
External links
Massing, Andreas (1996), Democratisation et decentralisation: Relations entre structures socio-politiques traditionnelles et modernes dans la commune de San (in French), Bamako, Mali: République du Mali.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Katedral San
- Keuskupan San
- Bah Ndaw
- Daftar katedral di Mali
- Konferensi Waligereja Mali
- Hubungan Mali dengan Tiongkok
- Gereja Katolik di Mali
- Daftar kota di Mali
- Daftar keuskupan di Mali
- Katedral Sikasso
- San, Mali
- Telecommunications in Mali
- Mali
- SAN
- Cheick Oumar Sissoko
- Cercles of Mali
- Mali national football team
- Demographics of Mali
- Office de Radiodiffusion-Télévision du Mali
- Bamako
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.