Online Encyclopedia

JENNE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 319 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JENNE  , a

city oe West Africa, formerly the capital of the Songhoi
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empire, now included in the French colony of Upper
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Senegal and Niger . Jenne is situated on a marigot or natural canal connecting the Niger and its affluent the Bani or Mahel Balevel, and is within a few miles of the latter stream . It lies 250 M . S.W. of Timbuktu in a straight
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line . The city is surrounded by channels connected with the Bani but in the dry season it ceases to be an island . On the north is the Moorish quarter; on the north-west, the
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oldest
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part of the city, stood the citadel, converted by the French since 1893 into a
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modern fort . The market-place is midway between the fort and the commercial harbour . The old mosque, partially destroyed in 1830, covered a large
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area in the south-west portion of the city . It was built on the site of the ancient palace of the Songhoi kings . The architecture of many of the buildings bears a resemblance to
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Egyptian, the facades of the houses being adorned with
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great buttresses of pylonic form . There is little trace of the influence of Moorish or Arabian
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art . The buildings are mostly constructed of clay made into flat long bricks .

Massive clay walls surround the city . The inhabitants are great traders and the

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principal merchants have representatives at Timbuktu and all the chief places on the Niger . The boats built at Jenne are famous throughout the western Sudan . Jenne is believed to have been founded by the Songhoi in the 8th century, and though it has passed under the dominion of many races it has never been destroyed . Jenne seems to have been at the height of its power from the 12th to the 16th century, when its merchandise was found at every
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port along the west coast of Africa . From this circumstance it is conjectured that Jenne (
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Guinea) gave its name to the whole coast (see GUINEA) . Subsequently, under the control of Moorish, Tuareg and Fula invaders, the importance of the city greatly declined . With the advent of the French, commerce again began to flourish . See F . Dubois, Tombouctou la mysterieuse (Paris, 1897), in which several chapters are devoted to Jenne; also S0NGH01; TIMBUKTU; and SENEGAL .

End of Article: JENNE
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JEREMIAH WHIPPLE JENKS (1856– )
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EDWARD JENNER (1749-1823)

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