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TUAT

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 353 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TUAT  , a

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Berber word 1 sometimes applied generally to all the oases in the western
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part of the Algerian
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Sahara, i.e. between 2° W. and 2 1° E . 26° and 300 N., sometimes restricted to a particular
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group which
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borders the east side of
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Wad Mzaud between 26*° and 271° N . According to the first usage Tuat includes the oases of Gurara in the north and Tidikelt in the south with the important centre of Insalah . The three groups are spoken of collectively by the French as the Tuat
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archipelago . The
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district is comparatively fertile, being formed of
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recent
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alluvium extending along the
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base of the Tademait plateau (Cretaceous), and produces
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dates and some cereals and vegetables . The
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wadi Saura (known in its
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lower course as the Messaud), formed by the junction of the wadis Zusfana and Ghir, marks the north-western boundary of the oases . Af ter the winter rains in the
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Atlas it carries a consider-able
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body of
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water in its upper course, but lower down its channel is choked by sand .
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Works were undertaken (1909) by the French to keep open the channel as it passes Tuat proper . At Gurara water is obtained from springs brought to the
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surface by the outcrop of impervious Devonian rocks . There is an extensive sebkha or salt lake at Gurara . The oases support a comparatively large population . The
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separate ksurs or hamlets, of which the district is said to contain over 300, are in Tuat proper placed close together .

The

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political centre of Tuat is the oasis of Timmi, which has some
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forty ksurs . All the ksurs are strongly fortified, the walls of the citadels being of immense thickness . The whole region has been formed into an administrative unit known as territoire
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des oasis sahariennes, and comprising a native commune subdivided into the annexes of Tuat, Gurara and Tidikelt . In 1906 the commune had a population of 134 Europeans and 49,8732 natives, of whom 112 enjoyed municipal rights . There were four places with over 2000 inhabitants: Adrar (Timmi), 2686, and Zaniet-Kunta, 3090 , in Tuat; Insalah, 2837, in Tidikelt; and Timimun, 2330, in Gurara . Nine other places had between l000 and 2000 inhabitants . By
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race (excluding the troops) there were 19,654
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Arabs, 5470
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Berbers, 4374 negroes, 191 Jews (professing
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Islam) and 19,412 persons of mixed
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blood . The district is of importance as commanding the routes southwards to Timbuktu from both
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Morocco and Algeria, and it is thus a
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great centre of trade . The oases appear to have been inhabited from a very early period . According to tradition numbers of Jews migrated thither in the and century A.D . They 'were the predominant element in the oases when the conquests of Sidi Okba drove the Zenata south (7th century) . These Berbers occupied Tuat and, to a large extent, absorbed the Jewish population .

The Arabs took

possession of the oases in the loth century and imposed Islam upon the
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people . Thereafter the region was governed by Zenata Berbers or by Arab chieftains . In the 14th 1 The etymology of the word is doubtful; it is used in the sense of an inhabited district—hence an oasis . 2 By a clerical error the native population in the census returns is given as 60,497 . century the sultan of Morocco occupied the oases, which remained in political dependence upon Morocco . In the 17th century, how-ever, the
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sovereignty of the sultan had become almost nominal and this state of quasi-independence continued . The treaty of 1845 between Morocco and France
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left the question of the possession of Tuat, Gurara and Tidikelt unsettled . After the
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murder in 1881 of the members of the Flatters mission—a French expedition sent into the Sahara—a measure concerted at Insalah, several of the Tuat headmen sought Moroccan
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protection, fearing the vengeance of France . A chief calling himself the Moroccan
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pasha established himself at Timmi, but Morocco took no active step to assert her sovereignty . In 1899 a French scientific
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mission, under Colonel Flamand, was despatched to the oasis of Tidikelt . The French were attacked by the natives (Dec . 28, 1899), whom they defeated, and the next day Insalah was occupied .

This was the beginning of a serious

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campaign in which the French suffered severe losses, but by March 1901 the whole of the fortified places in the three oases had been captured . To cut off the oases from Morocco the
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town of Igli, 140 M. north-west of Gurara, was also annexed by the French (
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April 5, 1900) . Igli (pop . 1057 in 1go6) occupies an important position, being placed at the junction of the wadi Zusfana and the wadi Ghir . The French were not, however, left in peaceable possession of their newly acquired territory . Attacks by the nomad tribes, Moroccan and others, were made on the
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line of communications, and during 1903 the French troops suffered serious losses . To punish the tribes the town of Figig was bombarded by the French (
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June 8, 1903) . On the 2nd of September following a
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band of nomads attacked, at a place called El Mungar, the escort of a
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convoy going to Taghit . After maintaining the fight 71 hours the French were reinforced and their enemies drew off . Out of 115 combatants the French lost 38 killed and 47 wounded . To consolidate their position the French authorities deter-
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mined to connect the oases with the Algerian Sahara proper by
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carriage roads and
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railways . One road goes north-east to El Golea, 150 M. distant from Insalah; another north from Igli to a
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post called Beni Ounif, 21 M. south of Figig, to which point the railway from
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Ain Sefra,' in the Oranese Sahara, was carried ins 1903 .

The continuation of this railway to Igli was begun in the following

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year . Major A . G . Laing visited the Tuat territory in 1825 on his way to Timbuktu, but his papers were lost . The next
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European to visit Tuat was Gerhard Rohlfs, who described his explorations and investigations in Tagebuch seiner Reise durch Marokko nach Tuat, 1864 (
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Gotha, 1865) and Reise durch Marokko . . Exploration der Oasen von Tafilet, Tuat and Tidikelt . . . (
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Bremen, 1868) . A . G . P . Martin's
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Les Oasis sahariennes (Algiers, 1908) gives an account of the
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history and economic condition of the oases .

Consult also Commandant E . Laquibre, Les Reconnaissances du

General Scrviere clans les oasis sahariennes (Paris, 1902), a valuable mono-graph by an officer who took part in the operations in 19oo–19oi ; E . F . Gautier, Sahara algerien (Paris, 1908), and various contributions by G . B . M . Flamand in La Geographie and Annales geographiques for 1900 . Comptes rendus (1902), Bull. geog. hist. et descriptive (1903), &c . (F . R .

End of Article: TUAT
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