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Kurdufan



 
 
Kurdufan (sometimes Kordofan) is a former province of central Sudan
Sudan

Sudan is a country in northeastern Africa. It is the largest in the African continent and the Arab World, and List of countries and outlying territories by total area by area....
. In 1994 it was divided into three new federal states
States of Sudan

Below is a list of the 25 states of Sudan organized by their original provinces under British rule. Arabic language versions are, as appropriate, in parentheses....
: North Kurdufan
North Kurdufan

North Kurdufan is one of the 26 States of Sudan or states of Sudan. It has an area of 185,302 km? and an estimated population of approximately 1,400,000 ....
, South Kurdufan
South Kurdufan

South Kurdufan is one of the 26 States of Sudan or states of Sudan. It has an area of 158,355 km? and an estimated population of approximately 1,100,000 people ....
, and West Kurdufan
West Kurdufan

West Kurdufan was formerly one of the 26 States of Sudan or states of Sudan. It had an area of 111,373 km? and an estimated population of approximately 1,100,000 ....
. In August 2005, West Kurdufan State was abolished and its territory divided between North and South Kordofan States, as part of the implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement
Comprehensive Peace Agreement

Comprehensive Peace Agreement may refer to two recent African peace agreements:*the 2005 Naivasha Agreement, which was meant to end the South Sudan conflict...
 between the Government of Sudan and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement.

ufan covers an area of some 376,145 km² (146,932 miles²), with an estimated population in 2000 of 3.6 million (3 million in 1983).






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Map Sudan Kurdufan
Kurdufan (sometimes Kordofan) is a former province of central Sudan
Sudan

Sudan is a country in northeastern Africa. It is the largest in the African continent and the Arab World, and List of countries and outlying territories by total area by area....
. In 1994 it was divided into three new federal states
States of Sudan

Below is a list of the 25 states of Sudan organized by their original provinces under British rule. Arabic language versions are, as appropriate, in parentheses....
: North Kurdufan
North Kurdufan

North Kurdufan is one of the 26 States of Sudan or states of Sudan. It has an area of 185,302 km? and an estimated population of approximately 1,400,000 ....
, South Kurdufan
South Kurdufan

South Kurdufan is one of the 26 States of Sudan or states of Sudan. It has an area of 158,355 km? and an estimated population of approximately 1,100,000 people ....
, and West Kurdufan
West Kurdufan

West Kurdufan was formerly one of the 26 States of Sudan or states of Sudan. It had an area of 111,373 km? and an estimated population of approximately 1,100,000 ....
. In August 2005, West Kurdufan State was abolished and its territory divided between North and South Kordofan States, as part of the implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement
Comprehensive Peace Agreement

Comprehensive Peace Agreement may refer to two recent African peace agreements:*the 2005 Naivasha Agreement, which was meant to end the South Sudan conflict...
 between the Government of Sudan and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement.

Geography

Kurdufan covers an area of some 376,145 km² (146,932 miles²), with an estimated population in 2000 of 3.6 million (3 million in 1983). It is largely an undulating plain, with the Nuba Mountains
Nuba Mountains

The Nuba Mountains are a mountain range in South Kordofan. The South Kordofan region is part of Kordofan province in central Sudan, Africa. The mountains cover an area roughly wide by long, and are 1500 to higher in elevation than the surrounding plain....
 in the southeast quarter. During the rainy season from June to September, the area is fertile, but in the dry season, it is virtually desert. The region’s chief town is El Obeid (Al-Ubayyid).

Economy and demography

Traditionally the area is known for production of gum Arabic
Gum arabic

Gum arabic, also known as gum acacia, chaar gund or char goond, is a natural gum made of hardened sap taken from two species of the acacia tree; Acacia senegal and Acacia seyal....
. Other crops include groundnut
Groundnut

Groundnut can mean:* Seeds that ripen underground, of the following plants, all in the Faboideae subfamily of the legumes:** Arachis villosulicarpa...
s, cotton
Cotton

Cotton is a soft, staple fiber that grows in a form known as a boll around the seeds of the cotton plant a shrub native to tropical and subtropical regions around the world, including the Americas, India and Africa....
, and millet
Millet

The millets are a group of small-seeded species of cereal Crop or grains, widely grown around the world for food and fodder. They do not form a scientific classification group, but rather a functional or agronomic one....
. The main tribal groups are the Arab tribes, such as Dar Hamid, Kawahla, Hamar, Bedairiah, Joamaah, Rekabeiah, beside the Nuba
Nuba

Nuba is a collective term used here for the peoples who inhabit the Nuba Mountains, in Kordofan province, Sudan, Africa. Although the term is used to describe them as if they composed a single group, the Nuba are multiple distinct strains and use different forms of speech....
, meanhile Shilluk
Shilluk

The Shilluk prefer to be known as Chollo, rather than the more widely known term, Shilluk, and their language as dhok-Chollo, dhok being the Chollo word for mouth....
, and Dinka
Dinka

The Dinka are a group of tribes of south Sudan, inhabiting the Bahr el Ghazal region of the Nile basin, Jonglei and parts of southern Kordufan and Upper Nile, Sudan regions....
 are ethnic minorities. Large grazing areas used and inhabited since hundred of years by Arabic-speaking, semi-nomadic Baggara
Baggara

The Baggara Arabs or Baqqarah are a nomadic Bedouin people inhabiting Africa from between Lake Chad and the Nile, in the states of Sudan , Niger, Chad, Cameroon, Nigeria, and the Central African Republic....
 and camel-raising Kababish
Kababish

The Kababish are a Sunni Muslim nomadic camel-raising tribe of the northern Kordofan region of Sudan.The Kababish are a loose tribal confederation of Arabic people of mixed origins, numbering about 70,000, who live in a region of desert scrubland....
 in Northern Kordofan.

The Kordofanian languages
Kordofanian languages

The Kordofanian languages are a geographic grouping of three to five language families spoken in the Nuba hills of Kordofan Province, Sudan....
 are spoken by a small minority in southern Kordofan and are unique to the region, as are the Kadu languages
Kadu languages

The Kadu, Kadugli?Krongo, or Tumtum languages are a small language family, once included in Kordofanian languages but since Thilo Schadeberg widely seen as Nilo-Saharan languages....
 but Arabic is the main and widely spoken language in Greater Kordofan Region.

History

Su Map
Before 1840

According to what Ignaz Pallme writes in his book Kordofan (#), published in 1843, in 1779 the King of Sennaar (see Kingdom of Sennar) sent the Sheikh Nacib, with two thousand cavalry, to take possession of the country which remained for about five years, under the government of Sennaar. In this period several Arab people, and native people from Sennaar and Dongola (see old Dongola
Old Dongola

Old Dongola is a town in Sudan, on the east bank of the Nile opposite the Wadi Al-Malik. It is 50 miles upstream from Dongola. Old Dongola was the departure point for Caravan s west to Darfur and Kordofan....
), immigrated into the country; moreover, agriculture and commerce began to flourish.

Now the Sultan of Darfour directed its attention towards Kordofan, and entered on a campaign, in which the region was driven out of Sennaar for ever. Kordofan was now governed in the name of the Sultan of Darfour, up to the year 1821. During these years the country was also prosperous: the inhabitants lived in peace, and were not troubled with taxes; the merchants were exempt from all duties, and the tribute paid was a voluntary present to the Sultan of Darfour. Bara, the second commercial town of importance in the country, was built by the Dongolavi. The Commerce extended in all directions: caravans brought products from Abyssinia and from Egypt into the two towns of Lobeid and Bara, whence the greater part was again transported into other countries of Africa.

This state of prosperity ended in 1821 when Mehemet Ali, Ottoman Viceroy of Egypt sent his son-in-law, Defturdar, with about 4,500 soldiers and eight pieces of artillery, to subject Kordofan to his power. The monopoly enjoyed by the Egyptian governors in Kordofan totally impeded trade in general and any free entrepreneurial activity.

After 1840

The Mahdi
Muhammad Ahmad

Muhammad Ahmad ibn as Sayyid Abd Allah was a religious leader, in Sudan, who proclaimed himself the Mahdi in 1881, and declared a jihad against Egyptian authority in Sudan....
 captured El Obeid in 1883. The Egypt
Egypt

Egypt is a country mainly in North Africa, with the Sinai Peninsula forming a land bridge in Western Asia. Covering an area of about , Egypt borders the Mediterranean Sea to the north, the Gaza Strip and Israel to the northeast, the Red Sea to the east, Sudan to the south and Libya to the west....
ian government dispatched a force from Cairo
Cairo

Cairo , which means "the triumphant", is the Cairo and largest city of Egypt.It is the most populous metropolitan area in Egypt and is also one of the most populous in the world....
 under the British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 General William Hicks
William Hicks

Colonel William Hicks , United Kingdom soldier, entered the Bombay army in 1849, and served through the Indian mutiny, being mentioned in despatches for good conduct at the action of Sitka Ghaut in 1859....
, which was ambushed and annihilated at Sheikan to the south of El Obeid. Following British reoccupation in 1898, Kurdufan was added to the number of provinces of the Sudan.

Explorations

Ignaz Pallme (Steinschönau 1 February 1807 - Hainburg near Vienna 11 June 1877), a Bohemian by birth, undertook the journey to Kordofan in 1837, on commission, for a mercantile establishment at Cairo, in the hope of discovering new channels of traffic with Central Africa.

In the pursuit of his object, he sojourned (1837-1839) longer in the country than any European before him; the information he furnished respecting the state of this province of Egypt in particular, and of the Belled Soudan in general, may, therefore, be considered the most authentic in existence at that time. That few travellers have visited these countries before Pallme, and subjected the information they were enabled to collect to print, may be deduced from the facts, that scarcely one-half of the places mentioned in Pallme's book(#) are to be found on the maps of that time.

The book Kordofan (#), written by Ignaz Pallme, is at the Austrian National Library (Signat 393870 B, Band 24) in Vienna
Vienna

Vienna is the Capital of Republic of Austria and also one of the nine states of Austria. Vienna is Austria's primary city, with a population of about 1.7 million...
. Based on notes collected during Pallme's residence in Kordofan (Kurdufan), the book is embracing a description of that province of Egypt and of some of the bordering countries, with a review of the state of the commerce in those countries, of the habits and customs of the inhabitants, as also an account of the slave-hunts taking place under the government of Mehemet Ali.