Maradi, Niger
Maradi | |
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A street in Maradi | |
Maradi Location in Niger | |
Coordinates: 13°29′30″N 7°5′47″E / 13.49167°N 7.09639°E | |
Country | Niger |
Region | Maradi Region |
Department | Maradi Department |
Urban Commune | Maradi |
Government | |
• Type | Seat of Departmental and Regional councils, Urban Commune |
Elevation | 385 m (1,259 ft) |
Population (2012) | |
• Total | 206,414 |
Maradi is the third largest city in Niger and the administrative centre of Maradi Region. It is seat of the Maradi Department and an Urban Commune.
History
Originally part of Katsina, a Hausa state, it became independent in the 19th century. From the early 19th century, Maradi was home to one of several Hausa traditional rump states, formed by rulers and nobility who fled the rise of the Sokoto Caliphate. Elements of the Katsina ruling class continued to claim the area as the seat of a Katsina exile state ruled by the Sarkin Katsina Maradi. Maradi was constrained by the more powerful Gobir exile state to the west, the Sultanate of Damagaram based at Zinder to the east, and Sokoto to the south. The arrival of the French in 1899 saw first the bloody destruction of the town by the Voulet-Chanoine Mission, but later saw the town recover as an important regional centre of commerce by the 1950s. The expansion of the city up in the first half of 20th century was dynamic, albeit modest, with the population nearly doubling between 1911 and 1950.[1] Up until 1945, the ancient city of Maradi was located in the valley bordering the Goulbin Maradi, a seasonal waterway with source in Nigeria. The agglomeration, roughly circular in shape, was protected by a mud wall with four doors. The ancient city was flooded by Goulbin at the end of the rainy season of 1945. To avoid future inundation, the colonial administration decided then to adjust the urban layout. In the process, the city lost its traditional, irregular layout in favour of a grid-iron street layout system.[1] The colonial administration sought to create an exploitative cash-crop agriculture, mostly groundnuts, which will increasingly make the city an important regional commercial centre. Aided by the economic growth after the 1950s, the city of Maradi will experience a demographic boom with population increasing from 8,661 in 1950 to 80,000 by 1983.[1] By the independence of Niger, Maradi has become a centre of Hausa culture, vying with the larger traditional Hausa centre of Zinder to the east.
Geography
The city is divided into 3 urban municipalities: Maradi I, Maradi II and Maradi III.
Demographics
Maradi was originally built on a lush flood plain, but after several severe floods, it was moved up to a plateau just above the flood plain by the French colonial administrators in 1946. At the 2001 census, the official population of Maradi was 148,017. The predominant ethnic group in the city is Hausa, with a few urbanised Fulani and Tuaregs living there as well. Various ethnic groups from Nigeria, particularly Ibo and Yoruba, can also be found in skilled trades or in small shops.
Economy
Maradi is the major transport trade and agricultural hub of Niger's south central Hausa region. It lies on the major east—west paved highway which crosses from Niamey in the west to Diffa in the far east. Maradi has long been a merchant city, on the route north from Kano, Nigeria. This explains why one can use either the West African CFA franc (Niger's official currency) or the Nigerian Naira for currency in Maradi. The city lies in a region known for groundnut farming.
Attractions
Attractions in Maradi include the Dan Kasswa Mosque, the Centre Artisanal (traditional handcrafts) in the Sonitan quartier and the Katsinawa Provincial Chief's Palace, but much of the rest of the city dates from the 1950s and later and is becoming industrialised. The central Market, the Maradi grand-marché, is a large daily market of wholesale, retail, and agricultural goods from across south central Niger and the major pont of cross border trade with Nigeria.[2]
Entering the city from the west or east means taking a southerly exit off the two-lane highway that crosses Niger. That road takes you up to the plateau-top, past Coca-Cola, Nescafe and "Stop SIDA" signs (French for AIDS), below a large painted cement arch, and onto the main drag through town.
Notable people
- Siradji Sani, Nigerin footballer
References
- 1 2 3 Les alhazai de Maradi – l’histoire d’une groupe de riche marchands saheliens. Emmanuel Gregoire. Éditions de I'ORSTOM. 1990.
- ↑ information on market: Maradi grand-marché. RESIMAO West-African Market Information Network. Price Statistics from the official West African Market Price Agencies -online
- Finn Fuglestad. A History of Niger: 1850–1960. Cambridge University Press (1983) ISBN 0-521-25268-7
- Jolijn Geels. Niger. Bradt UK/ Globe Pequot Press USA (2006) ISBN 978-1-84162-152-4
- Samuel Decalo. Historical Dictionary of Niger (3rd ed.). Scarecrow Press, Boston & Folkestone, (1997) ISBN 0-8108-3136-8
- Derrick J. Thorn. The City of Maradi: French Influence Upon a Hausa Urban Center. Journal of Geography, Volume 70, Issue 8 November 1971, pages 472 – 482
External links
Coordinates: 13°29′00″N 07°06′00″E / 13.48333°N 7.10000°E