Azalai

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A camel train traveling from Agadez to Bilma (Niger), 1985.
A camel train traveling from Agadez to Bilma (Niger), 1985.
Salt at the market in Mopti. After the Azalai reaches Timbuktu, it is taken by boat down to Mopti and from there into Bamako and the rest of Mali. The Salt is for medicinal purposes, home remedies, industrial usage, and for farm animals (depending on the type). It is sold here in slabs (right), broken and weighed (top right), and packaged into smaller amounts for other uses (left).
Salt at the market in Mopti. After the Azalai reaches Timbuktu, it is taken by boat down to Mopti and from there into Bamako and the rest of Mali. The Salt is for medicinal purposes, home remedies, industrial usage, and for farm animals (depending on the type). It is sold here in slabs (right), broken and weighed (top right), and packaged into smaller amounts for other uses (left).

The Azalai (var. Azalay) is a semi annual salt caravan route practiced by Tuareg traders in the Sahara desert, or the act of traveling with a caravan along that route.

Contents

History

In the early 20th century two West African routes were referred to as the Azalai: one from Timbuktu and the Taoudenni salt mines in Mali, the other from Agadez, Niger to Bilma on the Kaouar Oasis, with its salt condensation pits. Both are some of the last caravan routes in the Sahara that are still in use.[1] Both caravans have largely been replaced by unpaved truck routes.

Agadez-Bilma

The Agadez-Bilma route, passing through the Ténéré desert and the oasis town of Fachi, takes around three weeks to complete (both ways). It is traditionally a twice yearly caravan from the capital of the Aïr region to the natron salt pans along the string of oases formed by the Kaouar cliffs. Food and supplies were carried from Agadez each November and March and traded for bricks of salt, condensed in the natron pits of oasis towns, and to a lesser extent, dates and vegetables. The salt was then generally traded for animal use in the Hausaland regions to the south.[2]

The Agadez-Bilma Azalai was historically a monopoly of the Tuareg, and successively the Kel Gress, Kel Owey and Kel Ayr confederations in particular. Many Tuareg traders owned the salt pits and date plantations in Kaouar, as well as holding bonded laborers there, and traveled the azalai to administer their property. The Tuareg Azalai, numbering 10,000 camels and streching 25 km at the beginning of the colonial period, is led by the representative of the Amenokal (confederation leader), followed by each sub group. [3]

Pre-colonial history

The Camel was introduced into the Sahara in the late first millennium, and Tuareg tribes moved south into the region in the 13th century. In the 18th century, Tuareg confederations captured the Kaouar oases from the Kanem-Bornu Empire and began transporting goods from Agadez.[4]

Colonial and post-colonial history

The disruptions of the French colonial expansion in the first years of the 20th century led to inter clan rivalries, and later, the rise of mechanised traffic. In 1904, Ouled Sliman raiders from what is now Chad destroyed the Azalai at Bilma, and again in 1906 at Fachi. The French reported that the 1906 caravan numbered 20,000 camels. Following the Kaocen Revolt, no Azalai traveled the route until 1925, and then it was accompanied by French colonial forces. By 1948, the caravans had shrunk to 8000 camels, and continued to shrink thereafter. The northern road route, marked by the Tree of Ténéré, has supplanted most camel trains, but small Azalai trains continue to head out each November. In the post colonial era, some Hausa merchants travel the Azalai, calling it by the Hausa language name Taglem or Tagalem.

Timbuktu-Taoudenni

At one time the caravan route from Timbuktu extended through Taoudenni to Taghaza, another salt-mining site, and on to the lands north of the Sahara on the Mediterranean Sea. Caravans with up to 10,000 camels carried gold and slaves north, returning with manufactured goods and salt from Taghaza and Taoudenni.[5] Until the 1940s, the Taoudenni caravans were made up of thousands of camels, departing Timbuktu at the beginning of the cool season in November, with a smaller caravan departing Timbuktu in March.

See also

References

  • Pascal James Imperato. Historical Dictionary of Mali. Scarecrow Press/ Metuchen. NJ - London (1986) p.91 ISBN 0810813696
  • James Decalo. Historical Dictionary of Niger. Scarecrow Press/ Metuchen. NJ - London (1979) pp.40-41 ISBN 0810812290
  • Finn Fuglestad. A History of Niger: 1850-1960. Cambridge University Press (1983) ISBN 0521252687
  1. ^ Mali - Azalai - URL retrieved July 6, 2008
  2. ^ Decalo, p.41, 133, 134
  3. ^ Decalo, p.41.
  4. ^ Decalo, p.133.
  5. ^ de Villiers, Marq, and Seila Hirtle. (2007) "Space, Time, and Timbuktu". Natural History. 116:6. July/August 2007. ISSN 0028-0712

Additional reading

  • Benanav, Michael. 2006. Men of Salt: Crossing the Sahara on the Caravan of White Gold. The Lyons Press. ISBN 1592287727 ISBN-13 9781592287727

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 7 October 2008, at 17:50.

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