| Séguédine Seguedine | |
|---|---|
| Commune | |
|  Séguédine, 1989. | |
|   Séguédine | |
| Coordinates: 20°11′31″N 12°58′3″E / 20.19194°N 12.96750°E | |
| Country | Niger | 
| Region | Agadez Region | 
| Department | Bilma Department | 
| Commune | Séguédine | 
| Elevation | 459 m (1,509 ft) | 
| Population | |
| • Total | 485 | 
| [1] | |
Séguédine is a town in central eastern Niger, lying at the far northern tip of the Kaouar escarpment, an inhabited oasis in the midst of the Sahara Desert. It is a Commune of Bilma Department, Agadez Region.
While isolated in modern Niger, it once lay on the important central soudan route of the Trans-Saharan trade which linked coastal Libya and the Fezzan to the Kanem-Bornu Empire near Lake Chad. Its population is made up primarily of traditionally sedentary Kanuri people, as well as semi-nomadic Tuareg and Tubu people.
References
- ↑ Seguedine, Niger Page. Falling Rain Genomics, Inc. 1996-2004
External links
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