- Tombouctou Region
Demographic info|name=Tombouctou Region
capital=Tombouctou
population=
census=2001
area=
density=Tombouctou is the largest northern-most region of
Mali , comprised mostly of the Southwestern section of theSahara desert .Tombouctou region is famous outside Mali for its capital, the ancient city
Timbuktu (or as known in French, Tombouctou), synonymous to 19th century Europeans as an elusive, hard-to-reach destination. The city gained world fame in1390 when its ruler,Mansa Musa , went on apilgrimage toMecca , stopping with his entourage inEgypt and dispensing enoughgold to devalue the Egyptian currency. This started the legend of a city in the interior ofAfrica , where roads were said to be paved with gold and buildings topped with roofs of gold.The city is located at the southern edge of the Sahara, near the
Niger River , which has headwaters in the highlands very near the Atlantic coast before its long 1500 mile journey to the northeast, before finally turning south to reach the Atlantic. The riches of the kingdom were due to Tombouctou's position as the southern terminus of the trans-Sahara salt and goldtrade route . At its peak, the city was home to 100,000 with 25,000 associated with theUniversity of Sankore , an important Islamic university, known as the "Oxford ofWest Africa ."Tombouctou's decline began with the capture of the city by
Morocco in1590 . Many Islamic scholars were dispersed, some to Morocco. Morocco had difficulty holding onto the city, as the supply lines were long compared to the closer kingdoms vying for dominance of the region. Ultimately, however, it was the rise of sea trade along the West Africa coast that doomed the overland routes that connected North Africa to sub-Saharan Africa. The city lost its economic base and its fine university was not enough to save Timbuktu from decline.Cut off from major trade routes, the city retained an aura of spectacular treasure. When French explorers rediscovered the city in 1815 they were disappointed to find a sand-blown city of low mud buildings.
The region was marginalized under French colonial control, which ended in
1960 . The French opened up shorter trade routes to the Atlantic, cutting into the trans-Sahara trading economy.Tombouctou is divided into 5 cercles:
*Dire
*Goundam
*Gourma-Rharous
*Niafunke
*Tombouctouee also
*
Regions of Mali
*Cercles of Mali
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.