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DJIBOUTI

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Djibouti
Djibouti


Gulf of Tadjoura, Djibouti

Tadjoura is the oldest town in Djibouti, and the capital of the Tadjoura Region with the same name. Lying on the Gulf of Tadjoura, it is home to a population of around 25,000 people. Its Afar name Tagórri derives from their word for a goatskin flask, used for drawing water, meaning there is plenty water here.

Tadjoura originally was the seat of the Afar Ad-Ali Abli Sultanate. It was a thriving port by the mid-19th century: it was a major slave market, with roughly 6,000 people a year leaving Ethiopia through Tadjoura and nearby Zeila. Also ivory, gold, ostrich feathers and wheat were exported, among others. The French abolished the slave trade once it came under their control, although it continued on a smaller scale for many years after that. The importance of Tadjoura as a port declined once the railway between Djibouti and Ethiopia was inaugurated in 1901.

Tadjoura is now a quiet town, linked by ferry with Djibouti City, and is known for its whitewashed buildings and nearby beaches.


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View to Tadjoura
View to Tadjoura
Young Afar girls
Young Afar girls
Arriving in Tadjoura
Arriving in Tadjoura
Palms in Tadjoura
Palms in Tadjoura
Coastal street, Tadjoura
Coastal street, Tadjoura
View over Tadjoura
View over Tadjoura
Mosque in Tadjoura
Mosque in Tadjoura
View towards Tadjoura
View towards Tadjoura
Behind Tadjoura
Behind Tadjoura
Beach of Tadjoura
Beach of Tadjoura
Islamic school, Tadjoura
Islamic school, Tadjoura
Offloading a camel
Offloading a camel
 
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