West Darfur Field Atlas

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

West Darfur Field Atlas DRAFT West Darfur Field Atlas 26 November 2004 This is a working atlas for the purpose of collecting updated settlement, camp, and road information from the field. Please contact a HIC representative at an OCHA field office (El Geneina, El Fasher, and Nyala) or in Khartoum with coordinates, names, or manual map updates. HIC-Darfur Khartoum, Sudan [email protected] www.humanitarianinfo.org/darfur HIC-Darfur Main Office: Khartoum, Sudan [email protected] www.humanitarianinfo.org/darfur Administrative Units Egypt Libya Chad Eritrea Al Malha اﻟﻤﺎﻟﺤﻪ Ethiopia 14 .3. 2 Central African Republic Democratic Republic of Komei, Umbro, & Al Tina آﺮﻧﻮى اﻣﺒﺮو و اﻟﻄﻴﻨﺔ The Congo Uganda Kenya 14 .2. 2 Mellit North North Kordofan Darfur Kutum Kulbus Kutum Rural & Fato Barno ﻣﺪﻳﻨﺔ و رﻳﻔﻰ آﺘﻢ و ﻓﺘﺎﺑﺮن آﻠﺒﺲ 15 .7. 1 14 .2. 1 Mellit & Sayeh ﻣﻠﻴﻂ و اﻟﺼﻴﺎح Kulbus 14 .3. 1 Seleia ﺻﻠﻴﻌﻪ 15 .7. 2 14 .5. 2 اﻟﺴﺮﻳﻒ و ﺳﺮف ﻋﻤﺮﻩ Sirba Al Sheriff & Saraf Omra Kabkabiya Al Fasher & Al Kuma اﻟﻔﺎﺷﺮ و اﻟﻜﻮﻣﺔ ﺳﺮﺑﺎ 15 .7. 3 Kabkabiya & Jebel Si 14 .1. 1 Tawila & Korma آﺒﻜﺎﺑﻴﺔ و ﺟﺒﻞ ﺳﻰ Kerenek 14 .5. 1 Al Fasher Um Kadadah اﻟﻄﻮﻳﻠﺔ و آﻮرﻣﺔ 3 .1. 14 آﺮﻳﻨﻚ ام آﺪادة 2 .6. 15 14 .4. 1 Masteri Rokoro روآﺮو Al Geneina ﻣﺴﺘﺮى Jebel Marra 2 .2. 15اﺑﻄﺎ 15 .6. 3 15 .1. 4 Dar Al Salam Mornei Abata 15 .1. 2 Golo دار اﻟﺴﻼم ﻗﻮﻟﻮ ﺟﻠﺪو Zallingi Nertiti 2 .1. 14 ﻣﻮرﻧﻰ Galado 15 .1. 3 ﻧﻴﺮﺗﺘﻰ 1 .6. 15 15 .1. 1 Um Kadada 28 .95. 17 ازوم3 .2. 15 15 .5. 2 15 .5. 1 17 .97. 27 Habillah Azoum Zallingi Rural -Traige Sharq Gabal Mara Shearia هﺒﻴﻼ رﻳﻔﻰ زاﻟﻨﺠﻰ ﺑﻴﻀﺎ Beida Habilah 15 .2. 1 17 .94. 17 17 .97. 23 Natiqa Kass Al Tawisha 17 .97. 21 اﻟﻄﻮﻳﺸﺔ Garseila-Delaige Mahagriya Kass 17 .95. 22 14 .4. 2 Malam West ﻗﺎرﺳﻴﻼ Um Kher 15 .3. 1 West 29 .94. 17 ام ﺧﻴﺮ For Baranga Shataya Shearia Kordofan 3 .3. 15 ﺧﻮر ﺑﺮﻧﻘﺎ 15 .5. 3 17 .97. 35 Wadi Salih Yasin 17 .93. 33 Al Lait Mukjar Um Lubasa 17 .95. 1 Nyala اﻟﻠﻌﻴﺖ Abu Agura 3 .4. 14 8 .93. 17 ﻣﻜﺠﺮ Bundis 15 .4. 1 Edd Al Fursan 17 .95. 24 Nyalal ﺑﻨﺪس 15 .3. 2 Kubum 17 .91. 12 17 .93. 19 17 .95. 9 Al Deain 17 .90. 3 Balil Abu Karaynka Mukjar 17 .93. 18 West Edd al FursanKatayla Adayla Madkandi Adayla Chad Darfur 17 .93. 20 17 .90. 5 15 .4. 2 17 .92. 14 Um Dukhun Giraydaام دﺧﻦ 17 .93. 6 Tulus 17 .96. 36 Antikayna 17 .98. 31 Nyimeri 17Tulus .98. 11 17 .91. 13 Damsu Fardus 17 .91. 7 Asalaya 17 .96. 26 Rehed al Birdi Rehed al Birdi Buram 17 .92. 10 17 .96. 32 Um Dafug South Al Deain Darfur 17 .92. 30 Suntah -al 17 .92. 34 Wad al-Ugam 17 .91. 4 Abu Matariq Buram 17 .91. 2 Bahr al Ghazal Abu Gabra Central African 17 .92. 15 Republic Guhayna -al Code Explaination: 15 1 3 < 17 .92. 16 < < Guz -al Rural Council District - Mornei Locality - El Geneina 17 .92. 25 State - West Darfur Legend Radum -al Data Sources: Rural Council Boundary Boundaries - CBS DRAFT The Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) is currently working on the Administrative Unit boundaries and names for South Darfur. K Locality Boundary The boundaries and names for South Darfur show on this map are approximations. Updates will be distributed as soon as they are available. State Boundary Printing Date: 24 November 2004 Kilometers File: SU-18_Administrative_Units 010 20406080 The boundaries and names shown do not imply official endorsment or acceptance by the Government of Sudan or the United Nations HIC-Darfur Main Office: Khartoum, Sudan [email protected] www.humanitarianinfo.org/Darfur West Darfur: Jebel Marra 24°E !Kobbai !Abu Sikkin !Zonara ShakshakuJuktora n (! Kafod El Sireaf Lyo P ! Um 14°N P(!Al Sheriff !Abu!Farda Doc ! 14°N !Ustani !Tekir 1 G !Shabaki ! !KobeUm EsheraJalala ! !Um Koschero !Affia (Gelli Dalil ! !Market !Ashab!Kobe Jalala Um Baberi!Tagbar Genu!Um Kitera !Jabor !Takarir !Naboro Genub ! ! !Djafafil !Khudayra !Tila KankuleKundi a !Um Arda !Jaber Titab Kormaing ! ! Bas !Hillet Ibrahim! ! ! ! Nochti PKorma Al Gadi (part) Kalkal Taurei Elong (! !Dalajo!!!Hillet Uscher Kabkabiya !Mogabel ! HilletAbiat Fagera (part) !Tarafona!Kela alBandago Madressa !Schoba Adawia !Shoba! a !Amer GeditCimayat West Eim !Cimayat East ! !Koinga!Miro !Fetera !Kogot‚ !Tortura ! !KARZWA ! ! Gosa Nein !Abu Ta !Shrbns Sibdo Kona Gurra Farjawia ! ! !Ab Nyalma! ! Kurula eti Kabkabiya & Jebel Si KegiloAgido la K P !Giri !Konjar aag !Tangoro!Tabaldia!Dirma ! M !Tangora !Um al Ot !Um Dibeb ! Umpdai (!Edd Al Nagab Jawahir ! Kebkbaiya Town !Awin Jero Kawra Area Dadinga !KMUNGA ! (!PKabkabiya Um Bulli !Om P !Tamaru U ! P Girgo !Kaoura ! ! Turinga Nugadia Auro Tawila & Korma Birkat Seira !Kurgul !Senjo (! (Mistariha P !Berdy Birkat Seira Town !Abalga !Durgei Tawila !na !Sandingo !Gurab !Kimang Kergil (! Tawilla Town !na !Wimalowgila !Al Junaynah P ! mra Bulleh !Tabarat ! ! ! !Tina Shamaali Seyeh Kjadid !Daly Duko Barakau ! ( !Baldan !Kaigu !Mu`allaqa Maral Skakshaku Gharbi!NimaDali ! !Edermi !Numu !Kaguro !Salablab !Korru PDallyP!Susuwa Kosormungia (Fiabuggu ! ! !Kullu Tina Gharbi !Om aya Ouy ! !na Les ! Taradona P!Les !Hassan !ja (Madi ! Ku Milo !Masaal !Morgeh !Maya !Martandawi Khazan Tungur P!Ku ! Sending Tarny North! PKhazan Tungur P!Sendigo Burunga ! ! Rokoro Gebaien Abata !Kurra li ( Ma !Turra Rokerro AU gi P !Tungarsa !Daya ! allas (Gudai Jebel Marra Tibon (Kourro Golo (Sabun ! (! Um Haraz Kammbuna Golo ! ! Langya (Guldo P Abaata Abata (! P P !Dar Zubi P ! PDaya Gulu Gorne Gorno Shefuga Guldo ! !Khalil Bilgyoumeil Dabinga ! ! !Kunjara !Kelling ! (Deribat yangadulo Galado !Kalm Nertiti (Suni (!Nertiti !Muni! Miri 13°N (Korare (Dali !Dungo (Asandalou (Abd Allah Bashir 13°N P !Meiram Nertiti !Durri !Boldon orei Hamidiya Malam ! ! !Koudouli Mortajell !Malam ZalingeiP Kongye ! P (! !Kurungdillo (Gulobei Zalingei !Keila !Layli ( ThurP !Feina !Kedilnye Oubbe Fena P (Djiri (Bajouggi Sharq Gabal Mara (Ludung PKidingir (Nyama !Douggou !Gubbo !Kidingir Arga !Amla Saki Koronli ( ! ! Nyama Konjar P!Nyama Korole Mershing Zallingi Rural (Traige) PKarkole !Kalokitting (Zulumingtong !!Korol PFalda P!Mershing ! ( ! !Koringo !Nabgay Habuba Gallabat Dalia Karakulla P M Dugo ! (Kaang Kulli !Dahaba P Gem(Mee ( Gemeiza Korma ! Godoba ! PGemiza PGemiza Kuroma Hashaba ba Kirwa (Silo shLimoa ou P! HaP P!Kirwa Kas (Limo !Selenyi Dogi (Kulme Dibis P!Dogi ! P Dibbis (K Adwah ( !Touro Kass (Seingo P!Adwa Burbur (! Kass P ! Kas ! Sambat (Kalu (Dilu Sarah Yara raa !Tebol P! Ya arseila (Delaige) ! !Wastani Taua Duldul (DuDmu !Sarambanga P (Garoula !Oda (TangyaMalam -al (Kagko !Daura (Seilo !Madina (Ballah Singita P!Singita ! !Kedari !Moray Jengy Barum Barum (Kaskeidi !Tangi Mogara !Bulbul ( !Kaileck Guba P!Guba !Keredy !Rumalia !Uyer (Tumbo Mukjar Gemeiza Lagarou Shataya P!Gemiza Lagarou ! !PSh tt i !Mi i Amaki Sara !Ed 24°E Legend Overview Map /" Capital River/Streams Please contact the HIC as soon as possible with any Legend (Chad Side) corrections to the names, locations, or classifications of IDP Camps, Settlements or Roads. (! Admin Center/Principal Towns Rural Council (! Settlements Data Sources: ( Secondary Town Locality P Refugee Camp Political Boundaries - CBS l Roads - WFP, HIC, UNJLC, Field ! Village State Hydrology - VMAP0 All Aircrafts Runway Settlements - HIC, Field DRAFT P IDP Gathering International Bdry IDP Camps - WFP, OCHA, HIC, Field p Caravan Runway Chad Side Information - UNHCR, Al Geneina Paved Road Main Road Chad Primary Road Printing Date: 25 November, 2004 Frequently Used Road File: SU-24_A1_Nov_Westdarfur_planning_map K Secondary Road Other Route 010205 Track Road Refugee Area Kilometers * Locality boundaries are not complete for South Darfur. The boundaries and names shown do not imply official endorsment or acceptance by the Government of Sudan or the United Nations HIC-Darfur Main Office: Khartoum, Sudan [email protected] www.humanitarianinfo.org/Darfur West Darfur: Zallingi 23°E 24°E P(! Selah II Haruba !Shabaki Silea P ! ni (! sda Ushara We ! ! !Affia Gelli ! Hajar Jenadi ( !Habilah ( Djedid Fazarykerkery Debaikat ! Rahad!! Kritiria ! Bardani ! Um Daraba P Buri ! Abu Grain Turgo ! ! ! !Arafar Um Kitoro Khudayra Um Sharina bu Surug Kabkabiya Sirba P !Goronei P Kouta !Tandalti !Bodurnungorei Sirba (Habila !Ghubayshat ! !KARZWA Kadarang POrtega !Shrbns Dadei (Hashaba Gurra Farjawia P! P Bir Dagig Bir Degeeg Sanidadi ! !Tombasi P Mararit Kafani ! ! P !Um Lambo Bir Qirhab Kondobe ! ! Kerenek !Umpdai P Wastani be NomadsP ( ( !Tamaru Kondobei ! Kuka !Girgo Tanjikei Guweighina ! ! (Kurgo Idd al Khala Turinga Nugadia !Agoura ! !Kurgul ! Bougouss Birkat Seira Sen ! ! Mistariha (P ( Birkat Tayr Maku Oum Jakhakhin aba ( ! ! ash Birkat Seira Town !Abalga Azerni H ! !na !Durti ( Liria P Kawm ! Dorti Abd Allah !Wimalowgila P Um Dukhn ( neina Fort! ! ! Saraf Omra Riyad Ardamata Camp Tinniyat Saraf Omra Town (!P !Kjadid P !TirtoP P (Seyeh !Baldan !Kaigu !Mu`allaqa na El Geneina Saraf Omra ! ! jneiaPr Medinat Huzaz Kosormungia Edermi P!/" Krinding I ! (Fiabuggu !PPJamaP Al Geneina Amar Djedid Pyad PKringing! II ! !Moulkajj ! P !Krindig ! Tabarik !Kumudi Girleli Kaira Um Tagouk Randi ( (Derjeil Fogi Al Kereinik ! ! (Madi PKerenek ! !Kudumi !Duroti Gami Filli andi ( Burunga ! Kondola Jeisa ! Abata gussa li ( Ma Gukor ! Abu Luk Zallingi !!Adalata !Tungarsa (Dogoum Sisi !Ballas (Gudai Jebel M ! !Hashaba ! P (Kourro Aramta Mastegazza Golo Nurei (! Um Haraz !Jaboun ! ! ( Rumaylah (Dei ! Lang Qawz Fil Abaata Abata (! ! P !Dar Zubi P Gorne Gorno ! Tella Bilgyoumeil Dabinga ! ! ! !Kunjara (Gulli ! Mornei Nyangadulo (Burbu Basi Nertiti (! eri !Muni! Miri 13°N ( (Korare (Dali !Dungo (Asandalou 13°N Hagar Jembuh !Moumou Morni ( P Mournei (!P! Deirirro !Meiram Nertiti buri Fongfong !Durri ( Korei Hamidiya ! ! ! !Koudouli
Recommended publications
  • Humanitarian Situation Report No. 19 Q3 2020 Highlights
    Sudan Humanitarian Situation Report No. 19 Q3 2020 UNICEF and partners assess damage to communities in southern Khartoum. Sudan was significantly affected by heavy flooding this summer, destroying many homes and displacing families. @RESPECTMEDIA PlPl Reporting Period: July-September 2020 Highlights Situation in Numbers • Flash floods in several states and heavy rains in upriver countries caused the White and Blue Nile rivers to overflow, damaging households and in- 5.39 million frastructure. Almost 850,000 people have been directly affected and children in need of could be multiplied ten-fold as water and mosquito borne diseases devel- humanitarian assistance op as flood waters recede. 9.3 million • All educational institutions have remained closed since March due to people in need COVID-19 and term realignments and are now due to open again on the 22 November. 1 million • Peace talks between the Government of Sudan and the Sudan Revolu- internally displaced children tionary Front concluded following an agreement in Juba signed on 3 Oc- tober. This has consolidated humanitarian access to the majority of the 1.8 million Jebel Mara region at the heart of Darfur. internally displaced people 379,355 South Sudanese child refugees 729,530 South Sudanese refugees (Sudan HNO 2020) UNICEF Appeal 2020 US $147.1 million Funding Status (in US$) Funds Fundi received, ng $60M gap, $70M Carry- forward, $17M *This table shows % progress towards key targets as well as % funding available for each sector. Funding available includes funds received in the current year and carry-over from the previous year. 1 Funding Overview and Partnerships UNICEF’s 2020 Humanitarian Action for Children (HAC) appeal for Sudan requires US$147.11 million to address the new and protracted needs of the afflicted population.
    [Show full text]
  • The Carian Language HANDBOOK of ORIENTAL STUDIES SECTION ONE the NEAR and MIDDLE EAST
    The Carian Language HANDBOOK OF ORIENTAL STUDIES SECTION ONE THE NEAR AND MIDDLE EAST Ancient Near East Editor-in-Chief W. H. van Soldt Editors G. Beckman • C. Leitz • B. A. Levine P. Michalowski • P. Miglus Middle East R. S. O’Fahey • C. H. M. Versteegh VOLUME EIGHTY-SIX The Carian Language by Ignacio J. Adiego with an appendix by Koray Konuk BRILL LEIDEN • BOSTON 2007 This book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Adiego Lajara, Ignacio-Javier. The Carian language / by Ignacio J. Adiego ; with an appendix by Koray Konuk. p. cm. — (Handbook of Oriental studies. Section 1, The Near and Middle East ; v. 86). Includes bibliographical references. ISBN-13 : 978-90-04-15281-6 (hardback) ISBN-10 : 90-04-15281-4 (hardback) 1. Carian language. 2. Carian language—Writing. 3. Inscriptions, Carian—Egypt. 4. Inscriptions, Carian—Turkey—Caria. I. Title. II. P946.A35 2006 491’.998—dc22 2006051655 ISSN 0169-9423 ISBN-10 90 04 15281 4 ISBN-13 978 90 04 15281 6 © Copyright 2007 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. Koninklijke Brill NV incorporates the imprints Brill Hotei Publishers, IDC Publishers, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, and VSP. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Brill provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Suite 910, Danvers, MA 01923, USA.
    [Show full text]
  • Ritualdynamics
    Originalveröffentlichung in: H.F.J. Horstmanshoff- H.W. Singor- F.T. van Straten - J.H.M. Strubbe (eds.), Kykeon. Studies in Honour of H.S. Versnel, Leiden-Boston-Cologne: Brill 2002, S. 23-48 RITUAL DYNAMICS: THE BOIOTIAN FESTIVAL OF THE DAIDALA ANGELOS CHANIOTIS 1. Sources and puzzles In Turkish folkore Nasreddin Hoca is a representative of populär wisdom; his stories are well-known in Greece as well. One of them goes as follows: Nasreddin Hoca had been appointed as a judge in a dispute between two men. After the plaintiff had presented his case, Nasreddin Hoca looked at him and said: 'You are right'. Then it was the defendant's turn to present his argument and, again, Hoca's response was the same: 'You are right'. Thereupon one of the on- lookers at the trial turned to Hoca and said: 'You are the judge; you have to pass a judgment now'. Hoca looked at him calmly and an- swered: 'You are right, too'. Whenever I heard this story as a child, I laughed, but at the same time I was puzzled about its meaning. I still am, but I can not help thinking of this story whenever I read different interpretations of the same Greek festival. Of course, not everyone is right, but there is hardly any study which does not offer a new interesting insight. I also could not help thinking of Hoca's story again, when I read the jacket of the second volume of the Inconsistencies in Greek and Roman Religion. There, Henk Versnel expresses his conviction 'that the three approaches to religion known as "sub- stantivistic", functionalist and cultural-symbolic respectively, need not be mutually exclusive.' If I have chosen such a puzzling festival as the Daidala for this paper in honor of Henk Versnel, it is because I think that it pre- sents an interesting case of a ritual, in the study of which different interpretative approaches are not mutually exclusive or contradic- tory, but complementary.
    [Show full text]
  • The Economics of Ethnic Cleansing in Darfur
    The Economics of Ethnic Cleansing in Darfur John Prendergast, Omer Ismail, and Akshaya Kumar August 2013 WWW.ENOUGHPROJECT.ORG WWW.SATSENTINEL.ORG The Economics of Ethnic Cleansing in Darfur John Prendergast, Omer Ismail, and Akshaya Kumar August 2013 COVER PHOTO Displaced Beni Hussein cattle shepherds take shelter on the outskirts of El Sereif village, North Darfur. Fighting over gold mines in North Darfur’s Jebel Amer area between the Janjaweed Abbala forces and Beni Hussein tribe started early this January and resulted in mass displacement of thousands. AP PHOTO/UNAMID, ALBERT GONZALEZ FARRAN Overview Darfur is burning again, with devastating results for its people. A kaleidoscope of Janjaweed forces are once again torching villages, terrorizing civilians, and systematically clearing prime land and resource-rich areas of their inhabitants. The latest ethnic-cleans- ing campaign has already displaced more than 300,000 Darfuris this year and forced more than 75,000 to seek refuge in neighboring Chad, the largest population displace- ment in recent years.1 An economic agenda is emerging as a major driver for the escalating violence. At the height of the mass atrocities committed from 2003 to 2005, the Sudanese regime’s strategy appeared to be driven primarily by the counterinsurgency objectives and secondarily by the acquisition of salaries and war booty. Undeniably, even at that time, the government could have only secured the loyalty of its proxy Janjaweed militias by allowing them to keep the fertile lands from which they evicted the original inhabitants. Today’s violence is even more visibly fueled by monetary motivations, which include land grabbing; consolidating control of recently discovered gold mines; manipulating reconciliation conferences for increased “blood money”; expanding protection rackets and smuggling networks; demanding ransoms; undertaking bank robberies; and resum- ing the large-scale looting that marked earlier periods of the conflict.
    [Show full text]
  • North Darfur II
    Darfur Humanitarian Profile Annexes: I. North Darfur II. South Darfur III. West Darfur Darfur Humanitarian Profile Annex I: North Darfur North Darfur Main Humanitarian Agencies Table 1.1: UN Agencies Table 1.2: International NGOs Table 1.3: National NGOs Intl. Natl. Vehicl Intl. Natl. Vehic Intl. Natl. Vehic Agency Sector staff staff* es** Agency Sector staff staff* les** Agency Sector staff staff les FAO 10 1 2 2 ACF 9 4 12 3 Al-Massar 0 1 0 Operations, Logistics, Camp IOM*** Management x x x GAA 1, 10 1 3 2 KSCS x x x OCHA 14 1 2 3 GOAL 2, 5, 8, 9 6 117 10 SECS x x x 2, 3, 7, UNDP*** 15 x x x ICRC 12, 13 6 20 4 SRC 1, 2 0 10 3 2, 4, 5, 6, UNFPA*** 5, 7 x x x IRC 9, 10, 11 1 5 4 SUDO 5, 7 0 2 0 Protection, Technical expertise for UNHCR*** site planning x x x MSF - B 5 5 10 0 Wadi Hawa 1 1 x 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, Oxfam - UNICEF 9 11, 12 4 5 4 GB 2, 3, 4 5 30 10 Total 1 14 3 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, UNJLC*** 17 x x x SC-UK 11, 12 5 27 8 Technical Spanish UNMAS*** advice x x x Red Cross 3, 4 1 0 1 UNSECOORD 16 1 1 1 DED*** x x x WFP 1, 9, 11 1 12 5 NRC*** x x x WHO 4, 5, 6 2 7 2 Total 34 224 42 Total 10 29 17 x = information unavailable at this time Sectors: 1) Food 2) Shelter/NFIs 3) Clean water 4) Sanitation 5) Primary Health Facilities *Programme and project staff only.
    [Show full text]
  • Separating Fact from Fiction in the Aiolian Migration
    hesperia yy (2008) SEPARATING FACT Pages399-430 FROM FICTION IN THE AIOLIAN MIGRATION ABSTRACT Iron Age settlementsin the northeastAegean are usuallyattributed to Aioliancolonists who journeyed across the Aegean from mainland Greece. This articlereviews the literary accounts of the migration and presentsthe relevantarchaeological evidence, with a focuson newmaterial from Troy. No onearea played a dominantrole in colonizing Aiolis, nor is sucha widespread colonizationsupported by the archaeologicalrecord. But the aggressive promotionof migrationaccounts after the PersianWars provedmutually beneficialto bothsides of theAegean and justified the composition of the Delian League. Scholarlyassessments of habitation in thenortheast Aegean during the EarlyIron Age are remarkably consistent: most settlements are attributed toAiolian colonists who had journeyed across the Aegean from Thessaly, Boiotia,Akhaia, or a combinationof all three.1There is no uniformityin theancient sources that deal with the migration, although Orestes and his descendantsare named as theleaders in mostaccounts, and are credited withfounding colonies over a broadgeographic area, including Lesbos, Tenedos,the western and southerncoasts of theTroad, and theregion betweenthe bays of Adramyttion and Smyrna(Fig. 1). In otherwords, mainlandGreece has repeatedly been viewed as theagent responsible for 1. TroyIV, pp. 147-148,248-249; appendixgradually developed into a Mountjoy,Holt Parker,Gabe Pizzorno, Berard1959; Cook 1962,pp. 25-29; magisterialstudy that is includedhere Allison Sterrett,John Wallrodt, Mal- 1973,pp. 360-363;Vanschoonwinkel as a companionarticle (Parker 2008). colm Wiener, and the anonymous 1991,pp. 405-421; Tenger 1999, It is our hope that readersinterested in reviewersfor Hesperia. Most of trie pp. 121-126;Boardman 1999, pp. 23- the Aiolian migrationwill read both articlewas writtenin the Burnham 33; Fisher2000, pp.
    [Show full text]
  • "On the Relations of Canaanite Exploration to Pre-Historic Classic
    176 ON THE RELATIONS OF CANAANITE EXPLORATION These inecriptions, and the bas-reliefs on the monument called Kamna Hurmill, in Crelo-Syria, near the source of the Orontes, and possibly of the same pe1·iod, are an enigma, as yet, to the most learned Orientaliots. It is to be hoped, however, now that attention is again called to the subject, that the clue may be found that shall unlock their meaning, and that Northern 8yI"ia will be no longer overlooked by tho explorer. DISCOVERY AT THE l\IOSQUE EL AKS.A, JERUSALEM.-llo A DISCOVERY of considerable interest has been made in this :Mosque by the Rev. J. Neil, who has only recently gone to Jerusalem for the Society for the Conversion of the Jews. "In the Mosque of El Aksa," he writes, "you will remember that there is a long plain room opening out at the south-east angle, called the Mosque of Omar, in which the only object of interest whatever is a recess supported by two twisted pillars, and called the Mihrab, or Praying-place of Omar. You may, perhaps, remember that the pillars on each side of this recess, of Solomonic twisted pattern and polished marble, appear to have been turned upside down, and to have their capitals of greyish stone in broken leaf-like patterns below. On vi~iting this the day before yesterday, July 5th, I discovered that a great part of the yellowish plaster had been removed from the top of these pillars, and that rich grotesquely carved capitals were exposed to view in an admirable state of preserva­ tion.
    [Show full text]
  • SUDAN: West Darfur State UNHCR Presence and Refugee & IDP Locations
    A A A SUDAN: West Darfur State UNHCR presence and refugee & IDP locations As of 18 Sep 2019 Ardamata #B A #BEl Riad Tandubayah BAbu Zar Sigiba El Geneina#C# #BAl Hujaj Girgira #BJammaa #BKrinding 1 & 2 Mastura\Sania WEST DARFUR #BKrinding 2 Dankud #B Kaidaba KULBUS Falankei Wadi Bardi village #B Kul#bus Abu Rumayl #B Bardani NORTH DARFUR Selea #B Istereina Aro Shorou Taziriba Hijeilija#B Gosmino #B Manjura A #B JEBEL MOON Ginfili Ngerma Djedid Abu Surug SIRBA #B Sirba Melmelli Armankul Abu Shajeira #B B # Bir Dagig Hamroh #B Kondobe #B Kuka WEST DARFUR A Kurgo CHAD Sultan house Birkat Tayr Kawm Dorti #B Abd Allah El RiadAro daBmata Abu #Zar A Jammaa B #B #Krinding 1 & 2 Al Hujaj #BC# #BBB Kaira Krinding 2## Derjeil El Geneina Kreinik EL GENEINA #B KREINIK A Geneina Goker #B DogoumSisi Nurei #B Misterei A #B A Kajilkajili Hagar Jembuh Murnei Kango Haraza Awita #B o #B A Ulang ZalingeiC# EGYPT SAUDI BEIDA Chero Kasi ARABIA LIBYA Zalingei Tabbi Nyebbei HABILA R Kortei e d S Red Sea e Arara a Beida town Northern Beida #B #B Arara AlwadiHabila Madares Nur Al Huda village River Nile #BBC# CHAD Al Salam# North A UNHCR office Darfur Khartoum Kassala Habila North ERITREA Kordofan Refugee Sites Futajiggi West El Gazira Darfur White Gedaref Sala + Lor CENTRAL DARFUR Nile POC IDP camp/sites Central West Sennar #B Darfur Kordofan Blue #B South Nile C# Refugee settlement South East Kordofan Darfur Darfur ETHIOPIA D Crossing point SOUTH SUDAN Main town Secondary town Seilo o Airfields FORO BARANGA SOUTH DARFUR Boundaries & Roads Mogara International boundary Foro Burunga State boundary #BC# Goldober Locality boundary Foro Baranga Primay road A Secondary road 5km The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations.
    [Show full text]
  • The Sudan Flood Impact Rapid Assessment
    The Sudan 2020 Flood impact rapid assessment September 2020 A joint assessment with the Government of the Sudan The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on the map(s) in this information product do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of FAO concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers and boundaries. Dashed lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement. Cover photo: ©FAO The Sudan 2020 Flood impact rapid assessment September 2020 A joint assessment with the Government of the Sudan Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Rome, 2020 Assessment highlights • Torrential rains and floods combined with the historical overflow of the River Nile and its tributaries caused devastating damages to agriculture and livestock across the Sudan. In the rainfed agriculture sector, around 2 216 322 ha of the planted area was flooded, representing 26.8 percent of cultivated areas in the 15 assessed states. • The production loss due to the crop damage by floods is estimated at 1 044 942 tonnes in the rainfed areas. Sorghum – which is the main staple food in the country – constitutes about 50 percent of the damaged crops, followed by sesame at about 25 percent, then groundnut, millet and vegetables. • The extent of the damage to planted areas in the irrigated sector is estimated at 103 320 ha, which constitutes about 19.4 percent of the total cultivated area. The production loss is under estimation.
    [Show full text]
  • The Chad–Sudan Proxy War and the 'Darfurization' of Chad: Myths and Reality
    12 The Chad–Sudan Proxy War and the ‘Darfurization’ of Chad: Myths and Reality By Jérôme Tubiana Copyright The Small Arms Survey Published in Switzerland by the Small Arms Survey The Small Arms Survey is an independent research project located at the Grad- uate Institute of International Studies in Geneva, Switzerland. It serves as the © Small Arms Survey, Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva 2008 principal source of public information on all aspects of small arms and as a First published in April 2008 resource centre for governments, policy-makers, researchers, and activists. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a Established in 1999, the project is supported by the Swiss Federal Department retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior of Foreign Affairs, and by contributions from the Governments of Belgium, permission in writing of the Small Arms Survey, or as expressly permitted by Canada, Finland, France, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, and the UK. The law, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organi- Survey is also grateful for past and current project-specific support received zation. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should from Australia, Denmark, and New Zealand. Further funding has been pro- be sent to the Publications Manager, Small Arms Survey, at the address below. vided by the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research, the Geneva International Academic Net- Small Arms Survey work, and the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining. The Graduate Institute of International Studies Small Arms Survey collaborates with research institutes and NGOs in many 47 Avenue Blanc, 1202 Geneva, Switzerland countries, including Brazil, Canada, Georgia, Germany, India, Israel, Jordan, Copyedited by Emily Walmsley Norway, the Russian Federation, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Sweden, Thailand, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • Information on the Internally Displaced Persons (Idps)
    COI QUERY Country of Origin Sudan Main subject IDPs in Darfur and the Two Areas Question(s) Information on the internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Darfur and the Two Areas in the period of August 2019 - May 2020: - overview of numbers of IDPs and returnees: Darfur, The Two Areas, - living conditions and personal safety: Darfur, The Two Areas, - treatment by the Sovereign Council government: Darfur, The Two Areas. Date of completion 1 July 2020 Query Code Q15-2020 Contributing EU+ COI -- units (if applicable) Disclaimer This response to a COI query has been elaborated according to the EASO COI Report Methodology and EASO Writing and Referencing Guide. The information provided in this response has been researched, evaluated and processed with utmost care within a limited time frame. All sources used are referenced. A quality review has been performed in line with the above mentioned methodology. This document does not claim to be exhaustive neither conclusive as to the merit of any particular claim to international protection. If a certain event, person or organisation is not mentioned in the report, this does not mean that the event has not taken place or that the person or organisation does not exist. Terminology used should not be regarded as indicative of a particular legal position. The information in the response does not necessarily reflect the opinion of EASO and makes no political statement whatsoever. The target audience is caseworkers, COI researchers, policy makers, and decision making authorities. The answer was finalised on 1 July 2020. Any event taking place after this date is not included in this answer.
    [Show full text]
  • Darfur Destroyed Ethnic Cleansing by Government and Militia Forces in Western Sudan Summary
    Human Rights Watch May 2004 Vol. 16, No. 6(A) DARFUR DESTROYED ETHNIC CLEANSING BY GOVERNMENT AND MILITIA FORCES IN WESTERN SUDAN SUMMARY.................................................................................................................................... 1 SUMMARY RECOMMENDATIONS.................................................................................... 3 BACKGROUND ......................................................................................................................... 5 ABUSES BY THE GOVERNMENT-JANJAWEED IN WEST DARFUR.................... 7 Mass Killings By the Government and Janjaweed............................................................... 8 Attacks and massacres in Dar Masalit ............................................................................... 8 Mass Executions of captured Fur men in Wadi Salih: 145 killed................................ 21 Other Mass Killings of Fur civilians in Wadi Salih........................................................ 23 Aerial bombardment of civilians ..........................................................................................24 Systematic Targeting of Marsali and Fur, Burnings of Marsalit Villages and Destruction of Food Stocks and Other Essential Items ..................................................26 Destruction of Mosques and Islamic Religious Articles............................................... 27 Killings and assault accompanying looting of property....................................................28 Rape and other forms
    [Show full text]