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KORDOFAN , a country ofSee also: north-See also: east See also: Africa, forming a mudiria (province) of the Anglo-See also: Egyptian Sudan
.
It lies mainly between 12° and 16° W. and 29° and 322° E., and has an See also: area of about 130,000 sq. m., being bounded W. by See also: Darfur, N. by the Bayuda See also: steppes, E. by the See also: White
See also: Nile mudiria and S. by the country of the Shilluks and other See also: negro tribes, forming See also: part of the Upper Nile mudiria
.
The greater part of Kordofan consists of undulating plains, riverless, barren, monotonous, with an See also: average altitude of 1500 ft
.
Thickets and small acacias dot the steppes, which, See also: green during the kharif or See also: rainy season, at other times See also: present a dull See also: brown burnt-up aspect
.
In the west, isolated peaks, such as
See also: Jebel See also: Abu Senum and Jebel Kordofan, rise from 150 to 600 ft. above the plain
.
North-west are the See also: mountain See also: groups of Kaja and Katul (2000 to 3000 ft.), in the east are the Jebel Daier and Jebel Tagale (Togale), ragged granitic ranges with precipitous sides
.
In the See also: south are flat, fertile and thickly wooded plains, which give place to See also: jungle at the See also: foot of the hills of See also: Dar Nuba, the See also: district forming the south-east part of Kordofan
.
Dar Nuba is well-watered, the scenery is diversified and See also: pretty, affording a welcome contrast to that of the rest of the country
.
Some of the Nuba hills exceed 3000 ft. in height
.
The south-western part of the country, a vast and almost level plain, is known as Dar Ilomr
.
A granitic See also: sand with abundance of See also: mica and feldspar forms the upper stratum throughout the greater part of Kordofan; but an admixture of See also: clay, which is observable in the north, becomes strongly marked in the south, where there are also stretches of black See also: vegetable See also: mould
.
Beneath there appears to be an unbroken See also: surface of mica schist
.
Though there are no perennial See also: rivers, there are watercourses (khors or wadis) in the rainy season; the chief being the Khor Abu Habl, which traverses the south-central region
.
In Dar Homr the See also: Wadi el Ghalla and the Khor Shalango drain towards the Homr affluent of the See also: Bahr el Ghazal
.
During the rainy season there is a considerable See also: body of See also: water in these channels, but owing partly to rapid evaporation and partly to the porous character of the See also: soil the surface of the country dries rapidly
.
The water which has found its way through the granitic sand flows over the surface of the mica schist and settles in the hollows, and by sinking See also: wells to the solid See also: rock a supply of water can generally be obtained
.
It is estimated that (apart from those in a few areas where the sand stratum is thin and water is reached at the See also: depth of a few feet) there are about goo of these wells
.
They are narrow shafts going down usually 30 to 5o ft., but some are over 200 ft. deep
.
The water is raised by rope and bucket at the cost of enormous labcur, and in few cases is any available for irrigation
.
The very cattle are trained to go a long See also: time without drinking
.
Entire villages migrate after the harvest to the neighbourhood of some plentiful well
.
In a few localities the surface depressions hold water for the greater part of the See also: year but there is only one permanent lake—Keilat, which is some four See also: miles by two
.
As there is no highland area draining into Kordofan, the underground reservoirs are dependent on the See also: local rainfall, and a large number of the wells are dry during many months
.
The rainy season lasts from See also: mid-See also: June to the end of See also: September, rain usually falling every three or four days in brief but violent showers
.
In general theSee also: climate is healthy except in the rainy season, when large tracts are converted into swamps and fever is very prevalent
.
In the shita or cold weather (See also: October to See also: February inclusive) there is a cold See also: wind from the north
.
The self or hot weather lasts from See also: March to mid-June; the temperature rarely exceeds 1o5° F
.
The chief constituent of the low scrub which covers the
See also: northern part of the country is the See also: grey gum See also: acacia (hashob)
.
In the south the red gum acacias (lath) are abundant
.
In Dar Hamid, in the
N.W. of Kordofan, date, dom and other palms grow
.
The basbab or calabash See also: tree, known in the eastern Sudan as the tebeldi and locally Homr, is fairly See also: common and being naturally hollow the trees collect water, which the natives regularly tap
.
Another common source of water supply is a small kind of water melon which grows See also: wild and is also cultivated
.
In the dense jungles of the south are immense creepers, some of them See also: rubber-vines
.
The See also: cotton plant is also found
.
The See also: fauna includes the See also: elephant, See also: rhinoceros, See also: buffalo, See also: giraffe, See also: lion, See also: leopard, See also: cheetah, roan-See also: antelope, hartebeeste, See also: kudu and many other kinds of antelope, See also: wart-hog, See also: hares, quail, See also: partridge, jungle-See also: fowl, bustard and See also: guinea-fowl
.
Nearly all the kinds of See also: game mentioned are found chiefly in the western and See also: southern districts
.
The ril or addra gazelle found in N. and N.W . Kordofan are not known elsewhere in the eastern Sudan . Reptiles, sand-flies and mosquitoes are common . Ostriches are found in the northern steppes . The chiefSee also: wealth of the See also: people consists in the gum obtained from the grey acacias, in oxen, camels and See also: ostrich feathers
.
The finest cattle are of the humped variety, the bulls of the See also: Baggara being trained to the saddle and to carry burdens
.
There are large herds of camel, the camel-owning See also: Arabs usually owning also large numbers of See also: sheep and goats
.
Dukhn, a See also: species of See also: millet which can grow in the arid northern districts is there the chief grain crop, its place in the south being taken by durra
.
Dukhn is, however, the only crop cultivated in Dar Homr
.
From this grain a See also: beer called merissa is brewed
.
See also: Barley and cotton are cultivated in some districts
.
A little gold dust is obtained, but the old gold and other mines in the Tagale country have been, apparently, worked out
.
Iron is found in many districts and is smelted in a few places . In the See also: absence of fuel the industry is necessarily a small one
.
There are large beds of hematite some 6o m
.
N.W. and the same distance N.E. of El Obeid
.
Inhabitgnts.—The population of Kordofan was officially estimated in 1903 to be 550,000
.
The inhabitants are roughly divisible into two types—Arabs in the plains and Nubas in the hills
.
Many of the villagers of the plains are however of very mixed blood—Arab, Egyptian, See also: Turkish, Levantine and Negro
.
It is said that some See also: village communities are descended from the See also: original negro inhabitants
.
They all speak Arabic
.
The most important village tribe is the Gowama, who own most of the gum-producing country
.
Other large tribes are the Dar Hamid and the Bederia—the last-named living round El Obeid
.
The nomad Arabs are of two classes, camel owners (Siat El Ilbil) and cattle owners (Baggara), the first-named dwelling in the dry northern regions, the Baggara in southern Kordofan
.
Of the camel-owning tribes the chief are the See also: Hamar and the Kabbabish
.
Many of the Hamar have settled down in villages
.
The Baggara are See also: great hunters, and formerly were noted slave raiders
.
They possess many horses, but when journeying place their baggage on their oxen
.
They use a stabbing spear, small throwing spears, and a broad-bladed See also: short sword
.
Some of the richer men possess suits of chain See also: armour
.
The See also: principal Baggara tribes are the Hawazma, Meseria, Kenana, Habbania, and Homr
.
The Homr are said to have entered Kordofan from See also: Wadai about the end of the 18th century and to have come from North Africa
.
They speak a purer Arabic than the riverain tribes
.
The Nubas are split into many tribes, each under a mek or See also: king, who is not uncommonly of Arab descent
.
The Nubas have their own language, though the inhabitants of each
See also: hill have usually a different dialect
.
They are a
See also: primitive See also: race, very black, of small build but distinctive negro features
.
They have feuds with one another and with the Baggara . During the malzdia they maintained their independence . The Nubas appear to have been the aboriginal inhabitants of the country and are believed to be the original stock of the Nubians of the Nile Valley (seeSee also: NuBIA)
.
In the northern hills are communities of black people with woolly hair but of non-negro features
.
They speak Arabic and are called Nuba Arabs
.
Some of the southern hills are occupied by Arab-speaking negroes, escaped slaves and their descendants, who called themselves after the tribe they formerly served and who have little intercourse with the Nubas
.
The capital, El Obeid (q.v.), is centrally situated
.
On it converge various See also: trade routes, notably from Darfur and from Dueim, a See also: town on the White Nile 125 M. above See also: Khartum, which served as See also: port for the province
.
Thence was despatched the gum for the See also: Omdurman market
.
But the railway from Khartum to El Obeid, via See also: Sennar, built in 1909-1911, crosses the Nile some 6o m. farther south above Abba See also: Island
.
Nahud
(pop. about Io,000), 165 m
.
W.S.W. of El Obeid, is a commercial centre which has sprung into importance since the fall of the dervishes
.
All the trade with Darfur passes through the town, the chief commerce being in cattle, feathers, ivory and cotton goods . Trade is largely in the hands of Greeks, Syrians, Danagla and Jaalin . Taiara, on the route between El Obeid and the Nile, was destroyed by the dervishes but has been rebuilt and is a thriving mart for the gum trade . El Odoaiya or Eddaiya is the headquarters of the Homr country . It and Baraka in the Muglad district are on the trade road between Nahud and Shakka in Darfur . Bara is a small town some 50 M . N.N.E. of Obeid . Talodi and Tendek areSee also: government stations in the Nuba country
.
The Nubas have no large towns
.
They live in villages on the hillsides or summits
.
The usual habitation built both by Arabs and Nubas is the tukl, a conical-shaped hut made of See also: stone, mud, wattle and
See also: daub or See also: straw
.
The Nuba tukls are the better built
.
In the chief towns houses are built of mud bricks with flat See also: roofs
.
See also: History.—Of the early history of Kordofan there is little record
.
It never formed an See also: independent See also: state
.
About the beginning of the 16th century See also: Funj from Sennar settled in the country; towards the end of that century Kordofan was conquered by See also: Suleiman See also: Solon, sultan of Darfur
.
About 1775 it was conquered by the Funj, and there followed a considerable immigration of Arab tribes into the country
.
The Sennari however suffered a decisive defeat in 1784 and thereafter under Darfur viceroys the country enjoyed prosperity
.
In 1821 Kordofan was conquered by Mahommed Bey the defterdar, son-in-See also: law of Mehemet See also: Ali, See also: pasha of See also: Egypt
.
It remained under Egyptian See also: rule till 1882 when Mahommed Ahmed, the See also: mandi, raised the country to revolt
.
It was in Kordofan that Hicks Pasha and his army, sent to crush the revolt, were annihilated (Nov
.
1883)
.
The Baggara of Kordofan from that time onward were the chief supporters of the mandi, and his successor, the See also: khalifa Abdullah, was a Baggara
.
In Kordofan in 1899 the khalifa met his See also: death, the country having already passed into the hands of the new Sudan government
.
The chief difficulty experienced by the administration was to habituate the Arabs and Nubas, both naturally warlike, to a state ofSee also: peace
.
In consequence of the See also: anti-slave raiding See also: measures adopted, the Arabs of Talodi in May 1906 treacherously massacred the mamur of that place and 40 men of the Sudanese regiment
.
The promptness with which this disturbance was suppressed averted what otherwise might have been a serious rising
.
(See SUDAN: Anglo-Egyptian, § " History.")
See The Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, edited by Count See also: Gleichen (See also: London, 1905) ; H
.
A
.
MacMichael, Notes on the History of Kordofan before the Egyptian See also: Conquest (Cairo, 1907); See also: John
See also: Petherick, Egypt, the Sudan, and Central Africa (London, 1861); Ignaz Pallme, Beschreibung von Kordofan (See also: Stuttgart, 1843; trans
.
Travels in Kordofan, London, 1844) ; Major H
.
G
.
Prout, General Report on Province of Kordofan (Cairo, 1877) ; See also: Ernst Marno, Reise in der egypt
.
Equat
.
Provinz (Vienna, 1879) ; papers (with maps) by Capt
.
W
.
Lloyd in the Geog . Journ . (June 1907 and March 1910); and the bibliography given under SUDAN: Anglo-Egyptian . |
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