Kousséri
Kousséri (from Arabic: قصور Qussur meaning "palaces"), founded and known as Mser in the indigenous Mser language[1] is a city in Far North Province, Cameroon, lying on the border with Chad, across the Chari River from N'Djamena. It is the capital of the Logone-et-Chari department. It is a market town, and its population has recently been swollen by refugees from Chad. It had a population of 89,123 at the 2005 Census. The majority of the population are Arabs, many of whom come from neighboring Chad; see: Baggara.
Kousséri قصور Mser, Fort Fureau | |
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Kousséri Location in Cameroon | |
Coordinates: 12°04′42″N 15°01′51″E | |
Country | |
Province | Far North Province |
Division | Logone-et-Chari |
Elevation | 271 m (889 ft) |
Population (2005) | |
• Total | 89,123 (Census) |
Climate | BSh |
History
Kousséri was part of the Bornu Empire. In March 1846 Omar (son of Sheik Mohammed), nominal general of the Bornu sultan Ibrahim suffered a defeat at Kousséri.[2]
In 1900 the village was occupied by soldiers of Rabij az-Zubayr (Rabih), a Sudanese warlord. On 3 March it was taken by the combined forces of two French expeditions, one under Major Lamy from Algeria and the other under Lt. Paul Joalland from Senegal and local forces opposed to Rabih. Rabih was not in Kousseri at the time but established himself in a fort on the right bank of the Chari. Lamy did not think he had sufficient forces to attack Rabih immediately, but waited until the beginning of April when he was joined by a third expedition that was coming up the Chari under Émile Gentil. When he arrived the combined forces crossed the Chari and attacked Rabih. The battle of Kousséri was a decisive battle which secured French rule over Chad.
Notes
- "KOUSSERI". Communes et Villes Unies de Cameroun. Retrieved 23 March 2020.
- Helmolt, Hans F. (ed.) (1903) The history of the world; a survey of a man's record, Volume III: West Asia and Africa Dodd, Meade and Co., New York, p. 536, OCLC 1193060
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kousséri. |
- Porch, Douglas (1984) The Conquest of the Sahara Knopf, New York, ISBN 0-394-53086-1