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Berbera

Berbera (burr-burr-AH; Somali: Barbara, Arabic: بربرة) is the capital of the Sahil region of Somaliland and is the main sea port of the country. Berbera is a coastal city and was the former capital of the British Somaliland protectorate before Hargeisa. It also served as a major port of the Ifat, Adal and Isaaq sultanates from the 13th to 19th centuries.[2][3]

Berbera
Barbara (Somali)
بربرة (Arabic)
City
Interactive map outlining Berbera
Coordinates: 10°26′08″N 045°00′59″E / 10.43556°N 45.01639°E / 10.43556; 45.01639Coordinates: 10°26′08″N 045°00′59″E / 10.43556°N 45.01639°E / 10.43556; 45.01639
Country Somaliland
RegionSahil
DistrictBerbera District
Government
 • MayorAbdishakur Iddin
Elevation
3 m (10 ft)
Population
 (2019)[1]
 • City242,344
 • Urban
478,000
Demonym(s)Barbaraawi
بربراوي
Time zoneUTC+3 (EAT)

In antiquity, Berbera was part of a chain of commercial port cities along the Somali seaboard. During the early modern period, Berbera was the most important place of trade in the Somali Peninsula.[4] It later served as the capital of the British Somaliland protectorate from 1884 to 1941, when it was replaced by Hargeisa. In 1960, the British Somaliland protectorate gained independence as the State of Somaliland and united five days later with the Trust Territory of Somalia (the former Italian Somalia) to form the Somali Republic.[5][6] Located strategically on the oil route, the city has a deep seaport, which serves as the region's main commercial harbour.

History

Antiquity

Berbera was part of the classical Somali city-states that engaged in a lucrative trade network connecting Somali merchants with Phoenicia, Ptolemic Egypt, Ancient Greece, Parthian Persia, Saba, Nabataea and the Roman Empire. Somali sailors used the ancient Somali maritime vessel known as the beden to transport their cargo.[7]

Berbera preserves the ancient name of the coast along the southern shore of the Gulf of Aden. It is believed to be the ancient port of Malao (Ancient Greek: Μαλαὼ) described as 800 stadia beyond the city of the Avalites, described in the eighth chapter of the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, which was written by a Greek merchant in the first century AD. In the Periplus it is described as:

"After Avalites there is another market-town, better than this, called Malao, distant a sail of about eight hundred stadia. The anchorage is an open roadstead, sheltered by a spit running out from the east. Here the natives are more peaceable. There are imported into this place the things already mentioned, and many tunics, cloaks from Arsinoe, dressed and dyed; drinking-cups, sheets of soft copper in small quantity, iron, and gold and silver coin, but not much. There are exported from these places myrrh, a little frankincense, (that known as far-side), the harder cinnamon, duaca, Indian copal and macir, which are imported into Arabia; and slaves, but rarely."

— Chap.8.[8]

Middle Ages

 
Al-Idrisi's world map from 'Alî ibn Hasan al-Hûfî al-Qâsimî's 1456 copy. Berbera 'بربرة' can be clearly seen in this later edition of the Tabula Rogeriana

Duan Chengshi, a Chinese Tang dynasty scholar, described in his written work of AD 863 the slave trade, ivory trade, and ambergris trade of Bobali, which is thought to be Berbera. The great city was also later mentioned by the Islamic traveller Ibn Sa'id as well as Ibn Battuta in the thirteenth century.[9]

In Abu'l-Fida's, A Sketch of the Countries (Arabic: تقويم البلدان), the present-day Gulf of Aden was called the Gulf of Berbera, which shows how important Berbera was in both regional and international trade during the medieval period.[10][11]

 
Ibn Majid's notes on Berbera, El-Sheikh and Siyara
 
Ibn Majid referring to the Gulf of Aden as the Gulf of Berbera

Legendary Arab explorer Ahmad ibn Mājid wrote of Berbera and a few other notable landmarks and ports of the northern Somali coast and referred to what is now the Gulf of Aden as the Gulf of Berbera. He also included Zeila and its archipelago, Siyara, Heis, Alula, Ruguda, Maydh, El-Sheikh and El-Darad.[12]

Berbera was an important and well built settlement that served as a major harbor port for several successive Somali Kingdoms in the Middle Ages like the early Adal Kingdom, Ifat Sultanate and Adal Sultanate.[13]

Berbera, along with Zeila, were the two most important ports situated inside the Adal Sultanate, and they provided vital political and commercial links with the wider Islamic World:

Along with other ports and settlements in East Africa, explorers Ludovico di Varthema, Duarte Barbosa and Leo Africanus wrote brief accounts of the port town of Berbera in the early sixteenth century, mainly detailing her historic trading links with Aden and Khambat (Cambay).[15][16]

Duarte Barbosa's brief account of Berbera:

Further on, on the same coast, is a town of the Moors [Muslims] called Barbara; it has a port, at which many ships of Adeni and Cambay touch with their merchandise, and from there those of Cambay carry away much gold, and ivory, and other things, and those of Aden take many provisions, meat, honey, and wax, because, as they say, it is a very abundant country.[17]

Not long after their departure from Zeila and Berbera, the Portuguese fleet under Lopo Soares de Albergaria and António de Saldanha sacked both port towns between 1516 and 1518.[18]

According to Selman Reis, an ambitious Ottoman Red Sea admiral, Berbera was rich with pearls, and the amount of merchandise and trade consisting of "gold, musk and ivory" present at Berbera, on the Somali coast, was described by Selman as "limitless".[19]

Early Modern to Pre-Colonial

 
Selection from a letter to the Governor of Bombay detailing Berbera's 5-6 towers and armed guards
 
Somalis kept the interior free of foreigners and restricted their access to only Berbera itself
 
Berbera's inhabitants proficiency with muskets, possession of a large cavalry and archery skills noted

One of the earliest pre colonial accounts comes from Ibrahim Punkar, who wrote a memoir in 1801 and letter in 1809 to the Governor of Bombay John Duncan. Noting that Berbera had 5-6 towers with armed guards, he would go to describe the trade and general outlook of the city. Further noting the Somali inhabitants adhering to the Shafi'i school of Sunni Islam significant trade came from Harar in the interior alongside Gondar and Shewa. Cloth, rice and tobacco came from Kutch in Gujarat and Muscat with Mocha, Jeddah and Al Mukalla being the source of dates and tin. Punkar stated that the Somalis of the area were skilled musketeers and possessed powerful cavalry and knowledge of archery, but were often internally divided except for when united against common enemies. All foreigners including Arabs and Indians who often frequented Berbera were prohibited from venturing further inland, lest they access the lucrative trade of Harar directly and bypass the Somalis.[20]

One certainty about Berbera over the following centuries was that it was the site of an annual fair, held between October and April, which Mordechai Abir describes as "among the most important commercial events of the east coast of Africa."[21] The major Somali sub-clans of the Isaaq in Somaliland, caravans from Harar and the interior, and Banyan merchants from Porbandar, Mangalore and Mumbai gathered to trade. All of this was kept secret from European merchants.[22] Lieutenant C. J. Cruttenden, who wrote a memoir describing this portion of the Somali coast dated 12 May 1848, provided an account of the Berbera fair and an account of the historic environs of the town: "an aqueduct of stone and chunam, some nine miles [15 km] in length", which had once emptied into a presently dry reservoir adjacent to the ruins of a mosque. He explored part of its course from the reservoir past a number of tombs built of stones taken from the aqueduct to reach a spring, above which lay "the remains of a small fort or tower of chunam and stone ... on the hill-side immediately over the spring." Cruttenden noted that in "style it was different to any houses now found on the Somali coast", and concluded with noting the presence in "the neighbourhood of the fort above mentioned [an] abundance of broken glass and pottery ... from which I infer that it was a place of considerable antiquity; but, though diligent search was made, no traces of inscriptions could be discovered."[23]

Berbera was the most important port in the Somali Peninsula between the 18th–19th centuries. For centuries, Berbera had extensive trade relations with several historic ports in Arabia and the Indian subcontinent. Additionally, the Somali and Ethiopian interiors were very dependent on Berbera for trade, where most of the goods for export arrived from.[24] During the 1833 trading season, the port town swelled up to 70,000 people, and upwards of 6,000 camels laden with goods arrived from the interior within a single day. Berbera was the main marketplace in the entire Somali seaboard for various goods procured from the interior, such as livestock, coffee, frankincense, myrrh, acacia gum, saffron, feathers, wax, ghee, hide (skin), gold and ivory.[25] In the trading season of 1840, French explorer Charles-Xavier Rochet d'Héricourt visited Berbera and estimated the total exports of the season to be around thirteen times greater than that of Massawa.[26]

According to a trade journal published in 1856, Berbera was described as “the freest port in the world, and the most important trading place on the whole Arabian Gulf.”:

“The only seaports of importance on this coast are Feyla [Zeila] and Berbera; the former is an Arabian colony, dependent of Mocha, but Berbera is independent of any foreign power. It is, without having the name, the freest port in the world, and the most important trading place on the whole Arabian Gulf. From the beginning of November to the end of April, a large fair assembles in Berbera, and caravans of 6,000 camels at a time come from the interior loaded with coffee, (considered superior to Mocha in Bombay), gum, ivory, hides, skins, grain, cattle, and sour milk, the substitute of fermented drinks in these regions; also much cattle is brought there for the Aden market.”[27]

 
Illustration of Berbera, 1884

Historically, the port of Berbera was controlled indigenously between the mercantile Reer Ahmed Nur (Ayyal Ahmed) and Reer Yunis Nuh (Ayyal Yunis) sub-clans of the Sa'ad Musa, Habr Awal. These two sub-clans effectively administered the trade of the town, especially in the dealings of all transactions and brokerage between various parties to issuing protection agreements towards the foreign Arab and Indian traders. In the year 1845, the two sub-clans had a dissension over the control of the trade of Berbera, which lead to a wider altercation where each side sought outside support.[28] With the backing of Haji Sharmarke Ali Saleh, the Reer Ahmed Nuh drove out their kinsmen and declared themselves the sole commercial masters of Berbera.[29] The defeated Reer Yunis Nuh moved westwards and established the port of Bulhar which later, for a brief period, became a trading rival to nearby Berbera.[30] However, Sharmarke's actions was ultimately a political ruse to control Berbera for himself, which he ultimately achieved for several years.[31]

 
Map showing Berbera and her trade routes, with the 'Ayal Achmet' (Reer Ahmed Nuh) located in Berbera and its environs

Berbera commanded most of the trade traffic with the Somali and Ethiopian interiors. The two main caravan trade routes from Berbera extended to Harar and Shewa in the west, and to the Shebelle basin in the south (although some caravans traveled to/from as far as the Jubba River).[32] Moreover, the inland caravan trade routes were also concurrently used as pilgrim routes during the trading season by Somali Hajj pilgrims who resided in the deep interior.[33]

 
An Admiralty Chart of Berbera drawn by Lieutenant John Septimus Roe

In addition, Mocha, Aden, Jeddah and several other ports in Arabia had constant contact with Berbera in regard to general trade and commerce.[34] In the early years of the nineteenth century, the local Somalis of Berbera (Habr Awal clan) had a navigation act where they excluded Arab vessels and brought the goods and produce of the interior in their own ships to the Arabian ports:

Berbera held an annual fair during the cool rain-free months between October and April. This long drawn out market handled immense quantities of coffee, gum Arabic, myrrh and other commodities. These goods in the early nineteenth century were almost exclusively handled by Somalis who, Salt says, had "a kind of navigation act by which they exclude the Arab vessels from their ports and bring the produce of their country either to Aden or Mocha in their own dows."[35]

In much of the 19th century, the trade between Berbera and Aden was so important to the later that when disturbances effected the Berbera trading season, Aden too suffered as a result. According to Captain Haines, who was then the colonial administrator of Aden (1839-1854), 80% of Aden's revenue in 1848 was derived from duties charged on imported goods from Berbera. Additionally, most of the coffee imported by Mocha (centre of the coffee trade in early modern times) arrived via Somali merchants from Berbera, who procured the coffee beans from the environs of Harar.[36] Although the coffee beans were grown in Harar (present-day Ethiopia), the coffee was named Berbera Coffee in the international market, and the beans were considered superior to the locally grown varieties in Yemen.[27]

 
Berbera harbour, 1896

The British explorer Richard Burton made two visits to this port, and his second visit was marred by an attack on his camp by a group of local Somali warriors, and although Burton was able to escape to Aden, one of his companions was killed.[37] Burton, recognizing the importance of the port city wrote:

In the first place, Berberah is the true key of the Red Sea, the centre of East African traffic, and the only safe place for shipping upon the western Erythraean shore, from Suez to Guardafui. Backed by lands capable of cultivation, and by hills covered with pine and other valuable trees, enjoying a comparatively temperate climate, with a regular although thin monsoon, this harbour has been coveted by many a foreign conqueror. Circumstances have thrown it as it were into our arms, and, if we refuse the chance, another and a rival nation will not be so blind.[38]

By 1869, a sub-clan of the Reer Ahmed Nur (Ayyal Ahmed, Habr Awal) were operating a fort in the port town and it was manned by several hired guards armed with muskets and fiercely loyal to them. A British officer visiting the city from Aden noted the guards would not betray the Reer Ahmed Nur save death.[39]

Battle of Berbera

When a British vessel named the Mary Anne attempted to dock in Berbera's port in 1825 it was attacked and multiple members of the crew were massacred by the Habr Awal. In response the Royal Navy enforced a blockade and some accounts narrate a bombardment of the city.[40] In 1827 two years later the British arrived and extended an offer to relieve the blockade which had halted Berbera's lucrative trade in exchange for indemnity. Following this offer the Battle of Berbera 1827 broke out. After the Habr Awal defeat, 15,000 Spanish dollars was to be paid by the Habr Awal leaders for the destruction of the ship and loss of life.[40]

In the 1830s, the Isaaq Sultan Farah Guled and Haji Ali penned a letter to Sultan bin Saqr Al Qasimi of Ras Al Khaimah requesting military assistance and joint religious war against the British.[41] This would not materialize as Sultan Saqr was incapacitated by prior Persian Gulf campaign of 1819 and was unable to send aid to Berbera. Alongside their stronghold in the Persian Gulf & Gulf of Oman the Qasimi were very active both militarily and economically in the Gulf of Aden and were given to plunder and attack ships as far west as the Mocha on the Red Sea.[42] They had numerous commercial ties with the Somalis, leading vessels from Ras Al Khaimah and the Persian Gulf to regularly attend trade fairs in the large ports of Berbera and Zeila and were very familiar with the Isaaq.[43][44]

British Somaliland

 
1911 map showing Italian Somaliland and British Somaliland, including Berbera

After signing successive treaties with the various clans of the northern Somali coast between 1884 and 1886, the British established a protectorate in the region referred to as British Somaliland.[45] The British garrisoned the protectorate from Aden and administered it from their British India colony until 1898. British Somaliland was then administered by the Foreign Office until 1905 and afterwards by the Colonial Office.

Despite Berbera's strategic location, being the only port with a sheltered harbor on the southern side of the Gulf of Aden (the gateway to the Suez Canal), the British later came to regret their nominal control of the region. In fact, Winston Churchill once visited Berbera in 1907 when he was Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies, and he noted the protectorate be abandoned, since it was "unproductive, inhospitable, and the people are very hostile to occupation."[46] The stated purposes of the establishment of the protectorate were to "secure a supply market and to exclude the interference of foreign powers."[47] The British principally viewed the protectorate as a source for supplies of meat for their British Indian outpost in Aden through the maintenance of order in the coastal areas and protection of the caravan routes from the interior.[48][49] Colonial administration during this period did not extend infrastructure beyond the coast (which left the Somali clans within the protectorate with greater autonomy),[50] and contrasted with the more interventionist colonial experience of Italian Somalia.[51] However, there were plans in the early days of the protectorate to invest in major infrastructure projects such as the abandoned Berbera-Harar Railway initiative, which was vetoed by parliament on the grounds that it would harm the cordial agreement (entente cordiale) between France and Britain.[52][53]

 
Part of Berbera town in 1912
 
Bebrera native town as seen from the customs pier

In August 1940, during the East African Campaign, British Somaliland was briefly occupied by Italy after a large invasion force defeated British colonial troops at the Battle of Tug Argan. During this period, the British rounded up soldiers and governmental officials to evacuate them from the territory through Berbera. In total, 7,000 people, including civilians, were evacuated.[54] The Somalis serving in the Somaliland Camel Corps were given the choice of evacuation or disbandment; the majority chose to remain and were allowed to retain their arms.[55] In March 1941, the British forces recaptured the protectorate during Operation Appearance after a six-month occupation. The first WW2 Australian POWs were taken hostage here in 1940.

The British Somaliland protectorate gained its independence on 26 June 1960 as the State of Somaliland,[56][57] before uniting as planned five days later with the Trust Territory of Somalia (the former Italian Somalia) to form the Somali Republic.[6][56]

Modern

 
U.S. Marine Corp in Berbera during the Exercise Eastern Wind joint naval drill in 1983

In the post-independence period, Berbera was administered as the part of the North-Western province of the Somali Republic. It served as the main livestock port of the republic and in the 1970s and 1980s, nearly all of the livestock exports went out through the port of Berbera via Isaaq livestock traders. The entire livestock exports accounted to upwards of 90% of the Somali Republic's entire export figures in a given year, and Berbera's exports alone provided over 75% of the nation's recorded foreign currency income at the time.[58][59] The main consumers were the wealthy gulf states and Saudi Arabia in particular.

As early as 1962, The Soviet Union agreed to assist the nascent Somali Republic towards the construction of modern port facilities and a military base, which was completed in 1969 and was called on by sixteen Soviet Ships in 1971.[60] Coinciding with the Ogaden War between The Somali Republic and Ethiopia in 1977, the Soviets left Berbera and the nation as a whole due to a disagreement, leaving the United States to arrive with a $40 million investment and new health facilities in 1980. By 1985, the city had an estimated population of 70,000, with the outbreak of the Somali National Movement (SNM) ousted government troops from the city following aerial bombardments and extrajudicial killings inflicted on the population by the government. With the downfall of General Siad Barre in 1991, the Northern region of the Somali Republic, declared the state of Somaliland, of Somalia. A slow process of infrastructural reconstruction subsequently began in Berbera and other towns in the region.[61]

 
New DP World Berbera Container Terminal Expansion as of June 2020.

The city remains a competitive regional port and in 2016 a US$442 million agreement was reached between DP World and the government of Somalia.[62] The deal involves enhancing and operating the regional trade and logistics hub at the Port of Berbera.[63] The project, which will be phased in, will also involve the setting up of a free zone.

On 1 March 2018, Ethiopia became a major shareholder following an agreement with DP World and the Somaliland Port Authority. DP World holds a 51% stake in the project, Somaliland 30% and Ethiopia the remaining 19%. As part of the agreement, the government of Ethiopia will invest in infrastructure to develop the Berbera Corridor as a trade gateway for the inland country, which is one of the fastest growing countries in the world. There are also plans to construct an additional berth at the Port of Berbera, in line with the Berbera master plan, which DP World has started implementing, while adding new equipment to further improve efficiencies and productivity of the port.[64]

On 24 June 2021, The CEO of DP World officially announced the second phase of the Berbera port upgrade during the inauguration ceremony for the completion of the first phase. The second phase includes extending the new quay from 400 to 1,000 metres, and adding seven more ship-to-shore gantry cranes, bringing the total to ten and enabling the expanded port to handle up to two million TEU containers a year.[65]

The agreement comes as part of a larger government-to-government Memorandum of understanding between Government of the United Arab Emirates and the Government of Somaliland to further strengthen their strategic ties.[66] Somalia's attempts to obstruct and block the deal were frustrated and failed to stop the project from commencing.[67]

A rail link to Addis Ababa the capital of Ethiopia has remained a point of discussion and may materialize [68]

Geography

Location and habitat

 
The Berbera landscape

Berbera is located in coastal region of northern Somalia. An old port city, it has the only sheltered harbour on the southern side of the Gulf of Aden. The landscape around town, along with Somaliland's coastal lowlands, is semi-arid land.

Popular local beaches, such as Bathela and Batalale, have earned the city the nickname Beach City.

Climate

Berbera features a hot arid climate (Köppen BWh). It has long, sweltering summers and short, hot winters, as well as very little rainfall. Average high temperatures consistently exceed 40 °C or 104 °F during nearly four months of summertime (June, July, August and September). Daytime heat on summer nights is high, with average low temperatures of around 30 °C or 86 °F. During the coolest months of the year, average high temperatures remain above 29 °C or 84.2 °F and average low temperatures also surpass 20 °C or 68 °F. Although rainfall is low, the relative humidity is very high throughout the year and the atmosphere is simultaneously moist. The combination of the desert heat and the excessive moisture make apparent temperatures reach extremely high levels. Annual average rainfall is minimal, with only 52 millimetres (2.0 inches) of precipitation. There are between 5 and 8 rainy days on average annually. Bright sunshine likely occur during about 84% of the total daytime hours and average annual cloudiness is very low.

Climate data for Berbera
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 35.3
(95.5)
35.0
(95.0)
35.0
(95.0)
42.2
(108.0)
47.3
(117.1)
49.1
(120.4)
47.7
(117.9)
46.7
(116.1)
46.0
(114.8)
41.7
(107.1)
36.7
(98.1)
36.1
(97.0)
49.1
(120.4)
Average high °C (°F) 27.9
(82.2)
29.2
(84.6)
30.7
(87.3)
31.0
(87.8)
35.7
(96.3)
42.8
(109.0)
42.9
(109.2)
41.9
(107.4)
39.7
(103.5)
33.1
(91.6)
30.0
(86.0)
28.6
(83.5)
34.5
(94.1)
Daily mean °C (°F) 25.0
(77.0)
25.0
(77.0)
26.1
(79.0)
28.3
(82.9)
31.1
(88.0)
33.5
(92.3)
36.1
(97.0)
35.6
(96.1)
33.3
(91.9)
28.8
(83.8)
26.7
(80.1)
26.7
(80.1)
30.0
(86.0)
Average low °C (°F) 21.3
(70.3)
21.6
(70.9)
23.3
(73.9)
25.2
(77.4)
27.7
(81.9)
31.0
(87.8)
31.8
(89.2)
31.1
(88.0)
29.3
(84.7)
24.0
(75.2)
22.2
(72.0)
21.6
(70.9)
25.8
(78.4)
Record low °C (°F) 14.4
(57.9)
15.6
(60.1)
16.7
(62.1)
18.9
(66.0)
20.6
(69.1)
22.2
(72.0)
20.6
(69.1)
20.0
(68.0)
17.8
(64.0)
16.7
(62.1)
16.1
(61.0)
15.0
(59.0)
14.4
(57.9)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 8
(0.3)
2
(0.1)
5
(0.2)
12
(0.5)
8
(0.3)
1
(0.0)
1
(0.0)
2
(0.1)
1
(0.0)
2
(0.1)
5
(0.2)
5
(0.2)
52
(2.0)
Average rainy days (≥ 1.0 mm) 0.6 0.6 0.5 0.7 0.8 0.1 0.3 0.5 0.4 0.2 0.3 0.4 5.2
Average relative humidity (%) 78 79 79 81 73 49 44 45 51 72 74 76 67
Percent possible sunshine 80 80 80 83 83 87 80 87 87 87 87 80 83
Source 1: Arab Meteorology Book (average temperatures, humidity and precipitation),[69] Deutscher Wetterdienst (precipitation days, 1908–1950 and extremes)[70]
Source 2: Food and Agriculture Organization: Somalia Water and Land Management (percent sunshine)[71]

Demographics

 
Habr Awal woman from Berbera, 19th century

Historically, Berbera was inhabited by the Reer Ahmed Nuh and Yunis Nuh lineages of the Sa'ad Musa, Habr Awal.[72]

In more recent times, however, the Issa Musa sub-clan of the Habr Awal have come to make up the majority of the town's inhabitants,[73] while the Habr Yunis, primarily belonging to the Musa Abdallah branch[74] and the Habr Je'lo are also present.[75]

Education

There are 30 primary schools operating in Berbera city totaling 63,641 students. The broader Berbera district has 49 schools serving 90,310 students.[76]

Economy

A number of products are exported through the Port of Berbera, including livestock, gum arabic, frankincense, and myrrh. Its seaborne trade is chiefly with Jeddah in Saudi Arabia, and Aden in Yemen, 240 kilometres (150 miles) to the north.[77] Additionally, goods from Ethiopia are also exported through the facility.[78] The seaside boasts watersport tourist activity such as scuba diving, snorkeling, surfing and coral reefs.[79]

Transportation

 
Berbera Airport Terminal

Berbera is the terminus of roads from Hargeisa and Burco. The city has one of Somaliland's major class seaports, the Port of Berbera.[80] It historically served as a naval and missile base for the Somali government. Following an agreement between the Somali Republic and the USSR in 1962, the port's facilities were patronized by the Soviets and was later significantly upgraded in 1969.[81] The Berbera seaport was later expanded for U.S. military use, after the Somali authorities strengthened ties with the American government.[82]

For air transportation, the city is served by the Berbera Airport. It has an extensive 4,140-metre (13,580-foot) runway.[83]

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External links

  • Berbera - Coordinates

berbera, burr, burr, somali, barbara, arabic, بربرة, capital, sahil, region, somaliland, main, port, country, coastal, city, former, capital, british, somaliland, protectorate, before, hargeisa, also, served, major, port, ifat, adal, isaaq, sultanates, from, 1. Berbera burr burr AH Somali Barbara Arabic بربرة is the capital of the Sahil region of Somaliland and is the main sea port of the country Berbera is a coastal city and was the former capital of the British Somaliland protectorate before Hargeisa It also served as a major port of the Ifat Adal and Isaaq sultanates from the 13th to 19th centuries 2 3 Berbera Barbara Somali بربرة Arabic CityFlagLocal council seal of BerberaInteractive map outlining BerberaCoordinates 10 26 08 N 045 00 59 E 10 43556 N 45 01639 E 10 43556 45 01639 Coordinates 10 26 08 N 045 00 59 E 10 43556 N 45 01639 E 10 43556 45 01639Country SomalilandRegionSahilDistrictBerbera DistrictGovernment MayorAbdishakur IddinElevation3 m 10 ft Population 2019 1 City242 344 Urban478 000Demonym s BarbaraawiبربراويTime zoneUTC 3 EAT In antiquity Berbera was part of a chain of commercial port cities along the Somali seaboard During the early modern period Berbera was the most important place of trade in the Somali Peninsula 4 It later served as the capital of the British Somaliland protectorate from 1884 to 1941 when it was replaced by Hargeisa In 1960 the British Somaliland protectorate gained independence as the State of Somaliland and united five days later with the Trust Territory of Somalia the former Italian Somalia to form the Somali Republic 5 6 Located strategically on the oil route the city has a deep seaport which serves as the region s main commercial harbour Contents 1 History 1 1 Antiquity 1 2 Middle Ages 1 3 Early Modern to Pre Colonial 1 3 1 Battle of Berbera 1 4 British Somaliland 1 5 Modern 2 Geography 2 1 Location and habitat 2 2 Climate 3 Demographics 4 Education 5 Economy 6 Transportation 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditAntiquity Edit Main articles Maritime history of Somalia and Malao Berbera was part of the classical Somali city states that engaged in a lucrative trade network connecting Somali merchants with Phoenicia Ptolemic Egypt Ancient Greece Parthian Persia Saba Nabataea and the Roman Empire Somali sailors used the ancient Somali maritime vessel known as the beden to transport their cargo 7 Berbera preserves the ancient name of the coast along the southern shore of the Gulf of Aden It is believed to be the ancient port of Malao Ancient Greek Malaὼ described as 800 stadia beyond the city of the Avalites described in the eighth chapter of the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea which was written by a Greek merchant in the first century AD In the Periplus it is described as After Avalites there is another market town better than this called Malao distant a sail of about eight hundred stadia The anchorage is an open roadstead sheltered by a spit running out from the east Here the natives are more peaceable There are imported into this place the things already mentioned and many tunics cloaks from Arsinoe dressed and dyed drinking cups sheets of soft copper in small quantity iron and gold and silver coin but not much There are exported from these places myrrh a little frankincense that known as far side the harder cinnamon duaca Indian copal and macir which are imported into Arabia and slaves but rarely Chap 8 8 Middle Ages Edit Al Idrisi s world map from Ali ibn Hasan al Hufi al Qasimi s 1456 copy Berbera بربرة can be clearly seen in this later edition of the Tabula Rogeriana Duan Chengshi a Chinese Tang dynasty scholar described in his written work of AD 863 the slave trade ivory trade and ambergris trade of Bobali which is thought to be Berbera The great city was also later mentioned by the Islamic traveller Ibn Sa id as well as Ibn Battuta in the thirteenth century 9 In Abu l Fida s A Sketch of the Countries Arabic تقويم البلدان the present day Gulf of Aden was called the Gulf of Berbera which shows how important Berbera was in both regional and international trade during the medieval period 10 11 Ibn Majid s notes on Berbera El Sheikh and Siyara Ibn Majid referring to the Gulf of Aden as the Gulf of Berbera Legendary Arab explorer Ahmad ibn Majid wrote of Berbera and a few other notable landmarks and ports of the northern Somali coast and referred to what is now the Gulf of Aden as the Gulf of Berbera He also included Zeila and its archipelago Siyara Heis Alula Ruguda Maydh El Sheikh and El Darad 12 Berbera was an important and well built settlement that served as a major harbor port for several successive Somali Kingdoms in the Middle Ages like the early Adal Kingdom Ifat Sultanate and Adal Sultanate 13 Berbera along with Zeila were the two most important ports situated inside the Adal Sultanate and they provided vital political and commercial links with the wider Islamic World To Adea belongs a very good Port call d Barraboa whoſe chief City is Arat obeys a King who is an enemy to the Abiſſines Barraboa and Zeila are places of great Trade by reaſon of the conveniency of their Ports towards the entry into the Red Sea 14 To Adel belongs a very good port called Barbara whose chief city is Harar obeys a King who is an enemy to the Abyssinians Barbara and Zeila are places of great trade by reason of the conveniency of their ports towards the entry into the Red Sea Along with other ports and settlements in East Africa explorers Ludovico di Varthema Duarte Barbosa and Leo Africanus wrote brief accounts of the port town of Berbera in the early sixteenth century mainly detailing her historic trading links with Aden and Khambat Cambay 15 16 Duarte Barbosa s brief account of Berbera Further on on the same coast is a town of the Moors Muslims called Barbara it has a port at which many ships of Adeni and Cambay touch with their merchandise and from there those of Cambay carry away much gold and ivory and other things and those of Aden take many provisions meat honey and wax because as they say it is a very abundant country 17 Not long after their departure from Zeila and Berbera the Portuguese fleet under Lopo Soares de Albergaria and Antonio de Saldanha sacked both port towns between 1516 and 1518 18 According to Selman Reis an ambitious Ottoman Red Sea admiral Berbera was rich with pearls and the amount of merchandise and trade consisting of gold musk and ivory present at Berbera on the Somali coast was described by Selman as limitless 19 Early Modern to Pre Colonial Edit Selection from a letter to the Governor of Bombay detailing Berbera s 5 6 towers and armed guards Somalis kept the interior free of foreigners and restricted their access to only Berbera itself Berbera s inhabitants proficiency with muskets possession of a large cavalry and archery skills noted One of the earliest pre colonial accounts comes from Ibrahim Punkar who wrote a memoir in 1801 and letter in 1809 to the Governor of Bombay John Duncan Noting that Berbera had 5 6 towers with armed guards he would go to describe the trade and general outlook of the city Further noting the Somali inhabitants adhering to the Shafi i school of Sunni Islam significant trade came from Harar in the interior alongside Gondar and Shewa Cloth rice and tobacco came from Kutch in Gujarat and Muscat with Mocha Jeddah and Al Mukalla being the source of dates and tin Punkar stated that the Somalis of the area were skilled musketeers and possessed powerful cavalry and knowledge of archery but were often internally divided except for when united against common enemies All foreigners including Arabs and Indians who often frequented Berbera were prohibited from venturing further inland lest they access the lucrative trade of Harar directly and bypass the Somalis 20 One certainty about Berbera over the following centuries was that it was the site of an annual fair held between October and April which Mordechai Abir describes as among the most important commercial events of the east coast of Africa 21 The major Somali sub clans of the Isaaq in Somaliland caravans from Harar and the interior and Banyan merchants from Porbandar Mangalore and Mumbai gathered to trade All of this was kept secret from European merchants 22 Lieutenant C J Cruttenden who wrote a memoir describing this portion of the Somali coast dated 12 May 1848 provided an account of the Berbera fair and an account of the historic environs of the town an aqueduct of stone and chunam some nine miles 15 km in length which had once emptied into a presently dry reservoir adjacent to the ruins of a mosque He explored part of its course from the reservoir past a number of tombs built of stones taken from the aqueduct to reach a spring above which lay the remains of a small fort or tower of chunam and stone on the hill side immediately over the spring Cruttenden noted that in style it was different to any houses now found on the Somali coast and concluded with noting the presence in the neighbourhood of the fort above mentioned an abundance of broken glass and pottery from which I infer that it was a place of considerable antiquity but though diligent search was made no traces of inscriptions could be discovered 23 Berbera was the most important port in the Somali Peninsula between the 18th 19th centuries For centuries Berbera had extensive trade relations with several historic ports in Arabia and the Indian subcontinent Additionally the Somali and Ethiopian interiors were very dependent on Berbera for trade where most of the goods for export arrived from 24 During the 1833 trading season the port town swelled up to 70 000 people and upwards of 6 000 camels laden with goods arrived from the interior within a single day Berbera was the main marketplace in the entire Somali seaboard for various goods procured from the interior such as livestock coffee frankincense myrrh acacia gum saffron feathers wax ghee hide skin gold and ivory 25 In the trading season of 1840 French explorer Charles Xavier Rochet d Hericourt visited Berbera and estimated the total exports of the season to be around thirteen times greater than that of Massawa 26 According to a trade journal published in 1856 Berbera was described as the freest port in the world and the most important trading place on the whole Arabian Gulf The only seaports of importance on this coast are Feyla Zeila and Berbera the former is an Arabian colony dependent of Mocha but Berbera is independent of any foreign power It is without having the name the freest port in the world and the most important trading place on the whole Arabian Gulf From the beginning of November to the end of April a large fair assembles in Berbera and caravans of 6 000 camels at a time come from the interior loaded with coffee considered superior to Mocha in Bombay gum ivory hides skins grain cattle and sour milk the substitute of fermented drinks in these regions also much cattle is brought there for the Aden market 27 Illustration of Berbera 1884 Historically the port of Berbera was controlled indigenously between the mercantile Reer Ahmed Nur Ayyal Ahmed and Reer Yunis Nuh Ayyal Yunis sub clans of the Sa ad Musa Habr Awal These two sub clans effectively administered the trade of the town especially in the dealings of all transactions and brokerage between various parties to issuing protection agreements towards the foreign Arab and Indian traders In the year 1845 the two sub clans had a dissension over the control of the trade of Berbera which lead to a wider altercation where each side sought outside support 28 With the backing of Haji Sharmarke Ali Saleh the Reer Ahmed Nuh drove out their kinsmen and declared themselves the sole commercial masters of Berbera 29 The defeated Reer Yunis Nuh moved westwards and established the port of Bulhar which later for a brief period became a trading rival to nearby Berbera 30 However Sharmarke s actions was ultimately a political ruse to control Berbera for himself which he ultimately achieved for several years 31 Map showing Berbera and her trade routes with the Ayal Achmet Reer Ahmed Nuh located in Berbera and its environs Berbera commanded most of the trade traffic with the Somali and Ethiopian interiors The two main caravan trade routes from Berbera extended to Harar and Shewa in the west and to the Shebelle basin in the south although some caravans traveled to from as far as the Jubba River 32 Moreover the inland caravan trade routes were also concurrently used as pilgrim routes during the trading season by Somali Hajj pilgrims who resided in the deep interior 33 An Admiralty Chart of Berbera drawn by Lieutenant John Septimus Roe In addition Mocha Aden Jeddah and several other ports in Arabia had constant contact with Berbera in regard to general trade and commerce 34 In the early years of the nineteenth century the local Somalis of Berbera Habr Awal clan had a navigation act where they excluded Arab vessels and brought the goods and produce of the interior in their own ships to the Arabian ports Berbera held an annual fair during the cool rain free months between October and April This long drawn out market handled immense quantities of coffee gum Arabic myrrh and other commodities These goods in the early nineteenth century were almost exclusively handled by Somalis who Salt says had a kind of navigation act by which they exclude the Arab vessels from their ports and bring the produce of their country either to Aden or Mocha in their own dows 35 In much of the 19th century the trade between Berbera and Aden was so important to the later that when disturbances effected the Berbera trading season Aden too suffered as a result According to Captain Haines who was then the colonial administrator of Aden 1839 1854 80 of Aden s revenue in 1848 was derived from duties charged on imported goods from Berbera Additionally most of the coffee imported by Mocha centre of the coffee trade in early modern times arrived via Somali merchants from Berbera who procured the coffee beans from the environs of Harar 36 Although the coffee beans were grown in Harar present day Ethiopia the coffee was named Berbera Coffee in the international market and the beans were considered superior to the locally grown varieties in Yemen 27 Berbera harbour 1896 The British explorer Richard Burton made two visits to this port and his second visit was marred by an attack on his camp by a group of local Somali warriors and although Burton was able to escape to Aden one of his companions was killed 37 Burton recognizing the importance of the port city wrote In the first place Berberah is the true key of the Red Sea the centre of East African traffic and the only safe place for shipping upon the western Erythraean shore from Suez to Guardafui Backed by lands capable of cultivation and by hills covered with pine and other valuable trees enjoying a comparatively temperate climate with a regular although thin monsoon this harbour has been coveted by many a foreign conqueror Circumstances have thrown it as it were into our arms and if we refuse the chance another and a rival nation will not be so blind 38 By 1869 a sub clan of the Reer Ahmed Nur Ayyal Ahmed Habr Awal were operating a fort in the port town and it was manned by several hired guards armed with muskets and fiercely loyal to them A British officer visiting the city from Aden noted the guards would not betray the Reer Ahmed Nur save death 39 Battle of Berbera Edit Main article Battle of Berbera 1827 When a British vessel named the Mary Anne attempted to dock in Berbera s port in 1825 it was attacked and multiple members of the crew were massacred by the Habr Awal In response the Royal Navy enforced a blockade and some accounts narrate a bombardment of the city 40 In 1827 two years later the British arrived and extended an offer to relieve the blockade which had halted Berbera s lucrative trade in exchange for indemnity Following this offer the Battle of Berbera 1827 broke out After the Habr Awal defeat 15 000 Spanish dollars was to be paid by the Habr Awal leaders for the destruction of the ship and loss of life 40 In the 1830s the Isaaq Sultan Farah Guled and Haji Ali penned a letter to Sultan bin Saqr Al Qasimi of Ras Al Khaimah requesting military assistance and joint religious war against the British 41 This would not materialize as Sultan Saqr was incapacitated by prior Persian Gulf campaign of 1819 and was unable to send aid to Berbera Alongside their stronghold in the Persian Gulf amp Gulf of Oman the Qasimi were very active both militarily and economically in the Gulf of Aden and were given to plunder and attack ships as far west as the Mocha on the Red Sea 42 They had numerous commercial ties with the Somalis leading vessels from Ras Al Khaimah and the Persian Gulf to regularly attend trade fairs in the large ports of Berbera and Zeila and were very familiar with the Isaaq 43 44 British Somaliland Edit Main article British Somaliland 1911 map showing Italian Somaliland and British Somaliland including Berbera After signing successive treaties with the various clans of the northern Somali coast between 1884 and 1886 the British established a protectorate in the region referred to as British Somaliland 45 The British garrisoned the protectorate from Aden and administered it from their British India colony until 1898 British Somaliland was then administered by the Foreign Office until 1905 and afterwards by the Colonial Office Despite Berbera s strategic location being the only port with a sheltered harbor on the southern side of the Gulf of Aden the gateway to the Suez Canal the British later came to regret their nominal control of the region In fact Winston Churchill once visited Berbera in 1907 when he was Under Secretary of State for the Colonies and he noted the protectorate be abandoned since it was unproductive inhospitable and the people are very hostile to occupation 46 The stated purposes of the establishment of the protectorate were to secure a supply market and to exclude the interference of foreign powers 47 The British principally viewed the protectorate as a source for supplies of meat for their British Indian outpost in Aden through the maintenance of order in the coastal areas and protection of the caravan routes from the interior 48 49 Colonial administration during this period did not extend infrastructure beyond the coast which left the Somali clans within the protectorate with greater autonomy 50 and contrasted with the more interventionist colonial experience of Italian Somalia 51 However there were plans in the early days of the protectorate to invest in major infrastructure projects such as the abandoned Berbera Harar Railway initiative which was vetoed by parliament on the grounds that it would harm the cordial agreement entente cordiale between France and Britain 52 53 Part of Berbera town in 1912 Bebrera native town as seen from the customs pier In August 1940 during the East African Campaign British Somaliland was briefly occupied by Italy after a large invasion force defeated British colonial troops at the Battle of Tug Argan During this period the British rounded up soldiers and governmental officials to evacuate them from the territory through Berbera In total 7 000 people including civilians were evacuated 54 The Somalis serving in the Somaliland Camel Corps were given the choice of evacuation or disbandment the majority chose to remain and were allowed to retain their arms 55 In March 1941 the British forces recaptured the protectorate during Operation Appearance after a six month occupation The first WW2 Australian POWs were taken hostage here in 1940 The British Somaliland protectorate gained its independence on 26 June 1960 as the State of Somaliland 56 57 before uniting as planned five days later with the Trust Territory of Somalia the former Italian Somalia to form the Somali Republic 6 56 Modern Edit U S Marine Corp in Berbera during the Exercise Eastern Wind joint naval drill in 1983 In the post independence period Berbera was administered as the part of the North Western province of the Somali Republic It served as the main livestock port of the republic and in the 1970s and 1980s nearly all of the livestock exports went out through the port of Berbera via Isaaq livestock traders The entire livestock exports accounted to upwards of 90 of the Somali Republic s entire export figures in a given year and Berbera s exports alone provided over 75 of the nation s recorded foreign currency income at the time 58 59 The main consumers were the wealthy gulf states and Saudi Arabia in particular As early as 1962 The Soviet Union agreed to assist the nascent Somali Republic towards the construction of modern port facilities and a military base which was completed in 1969 and was called on by sixteen Soviet Ships in 1971 60 Coinciding with the Ogaden War between The Somali Republic and Ethiopia in 1977 the Soviets left Berbera and the nation as a whole due to a disagreement leaving the United States to arrive with a 40 million investment and new health facilities in 1980 By 1985 the city had an estimated population of 70 000 with the outbreak of the Somali National Movement SNM ousted government troops from the city following aerial bombardments and extrajudicial killings inflicted on the population by the government With the downfall of General Siad Barre in 1991 the Northern region of the Somali Republic declared the state of Somaliland of Somalia A slow process of infrastructural reconstruction subsequently began in Berbera and other towns in the region 61 New DP World Berbera Container Terminal Expansion as of June 2020 The city remains a competitive regional port and in 2016 a US 442 million agreement was reached between DP World and the government of Somalia 62 The deal involves enhancing and operating the regional trade and logistics hub at the Port of Berbera 63 The project which will be phased in will also involve the setting up of a free zone On 1 March 2018 Ethiopia became a major shareholder following an agreement with DP World and the Somaliland Port Authority DP World holds a 51 stake in the project Somaliland 30 and Ethiopia the remaining 19 As part of the agreement the government of Ethiopia will invest in infrastructure to develop the Berbera Corridor as a trade gateway for the inland country which is one of the fastest growing countries in the world There are also plans to construct an additional berth at the Port of Berbera in line with the Berbera master plan which DP World has started implementing while adding new equipment to further improve efficiencies and productivity of the port 64 On 24 June 2021 The CEO of DP World officially announced the second phase of the Berbera port upgrade during the inauguration ceremony for the completion of the first phase The second phase includes extending the new quay from 400 to 1 000 metres and adding seven more ship to shore gantry cranes bringing the total to ten and enabling the expanded port to handle up to two million TEU containers a year 65 The agreement comes as part of a larger government to government Memorandum of understanding between Government of the United Arab Emirates and the Government of Somaliland to further strengthen their strategic ties 66 Somalia s attempts to obstruct and block the deal were frustrated and failed to stop the project from commencing 67 A rail link to Addis Ababa the capital of Ethiopia has remained a point of discussion and may materialize 68 Geography EditLocation and habitat Edit The Berbera landscape Berbera is located in coastal region of northern Somalia An old port city it has the only sheltered harbour on the southern side of the Gulf of Aden The landscape around town along with Somaliland s coastal lowlands is semi arid land Popular local beaches such as Bathela and Batalale have earned the city the nickname Beach City Climate Edit Berbera features a hot arid climate Koppen BWh It has long sweltering summers and short hot winters as well as very little rainfall Average high temperatures consistently exceed 40 C or 104 F during nearly four months of summertime June July August and September Daytime heat on summer nights is high with average low temperatures of around 30 C or 86 F During the coolest months of the year average high temperatures remain above 29 C or 84 2 F and average low temperatures also surpass 20 C or 68 F Although rainfall is low the relative humidity is very high throughout the year and the atmosphere is simultaneously moist The combination of the desert heat and the excessive moisture make apparent temperatures reach extremely high levels Annual average rainfall is minimal with only 52 millimetres 2 0 inches of precipitation There are between 5 and 8 rainy days on average annually Bright sunshine likely occur during about 84 of the total daytime hours and average annual cloudiness is very low Climate data for BerberaMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 35 3 95 5 35 0 95 0 35 0 95 0 42 2 108 0 47 3 117 1 49 1 120 4 47 7 117 9 46 7 116 1 46 0 114 8 41 7 107 1 36 7 98 1 36 1 97 0 49 1 120 4 Average high C F 27 9 82 2 29 2 84 6 30 7 87 3 31 0 87 8 35 7 96 3 42 8 109 0 42 9 109 2 41 9 107 4 39 7 103 5 33 1 91 6 30 0 86 0 28 6 83 5 34 5 94 1 Daily mean C F 25 0 77 0 25 0 77 0 26 1 79 0 28 3 82 9 31 1 88 0 33 5 92 3 36 1 97 0 35 6 96 1 33 3 91 9 28 8 83 8 26 7 80 1 26 7 80 1 30 0 86 0 Average low C F 21 3 70 3 21 6 70 9 23 3 73 9 25 2 77 4 27 7 81 9 31 0 87 8 31 8 89 2 31 1 88 0 29 3 84 7 24 0 75 2 22 2 72 0 21 6 70 9 25 8 78 4 Record low C F 14 4 57 9 15 6 60 1 16 7 62 1 18 9 66 0 20 6 69 1 22 2 72 0 20 6 69 1 20 0 68 0 17 8 64 0 16 7 62 1 16 1 61 0 15 0 59 0 14 4 57 9 Average rainfall mm inches 8 0 3 2 0 1 5 0 2 12 0 5 8 0 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 1 5 0 2 5 0 2 52 2 0 Average rainy days 1 0 mm 0 6 0 6 0 5 0 7 0 8 0 1 0 3 0 5 0 4 0 2 0 3 0 4 5 2Average relative humidity 78 79 79 81 73 49 44 45 51 72 74 76 67Percent possible sunshine 80 80 80 83 83 87 80 87 87 87 87 80 83Source 1 Arab Meteorology Book average temperatures humidity and precipitation 69 Deutscher Wetterdienst precipitation days 1908 1950 and extremes 70 Source 2 Food and Agriculture Organization Somalia Water and Land Management percent sunshine 71 Demographics Edit Habr Awal woman from Berbera 19th century Historically Berbera was inhabited by the Reer Ahmed Nuh and Yunis Nuh lineages of the Sa ad Musa Habr Awal 72 In more recent times however the Issa Musa sub clan of the Habr Awal have come to make up the majority of the town s inhabitants 73 while the Habr Yunis primarily belonging to the Musa Abdallah branch 74 and the Habr Je lo are also present 75 Education EditThere are 30 primary schools operating in Berbera city totaling 63 641 students The broader Berbera district has 49 schools serving 90 310 students 76 Economy EditA number of products are exported through the Port of Berbera including livestock gum arabic frankincense and myrrh Its seaborne trade is chiefly with Jeddah in Saudi Arabia and Aden in Yemen 240 kilometres 150 miles to the north 77 Additionally goods from Ethiopia are also exported through the facility 78 The seaside boasts watersport tourist activity such as scuba diving snorkeling surfing and coral reefs 79 Transportation Edit Berbera Airport Terminal Berbera is the terminus of roads from Hargeisa and Burco The city has one of Somaliland s major class seaports the Port of Berbera 80 It historically served as a naval and missile base for the Somali government Following an agreement between the Somali Republic and the USSR in 1962 the port s facilities were patronized by the Soviets and was later significantly upgraded in 1969 81 The Berbera seaport was later expanded for U S military use after the Somali authorities strengthened ties with the American government 82 For air transportation the city is served by the Berbera Airport It has an extensive 4 140 metre 13 580 foot runway 83 References Edit PopulationStat Population of Berbera city and urban area Issue 270 Archived from the original on 21 March 2016 Retrieved 28 March 2016 The Transitional Federal Charter of the Somali Republic PDF University of Pretoria 1 February 2004 Archived from the original PDF on 25 March 2009 Retrieved 2 February 2010 Prichard J C 1837 Researches Into the Physical History of Mankind Ethnography of the African races Sherwood Gilbert amp Piper pp 160 Cahoon Ben Somalia www worldstatesmen org a b Encyclopaedia Britannica The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica 2002 p 835 Journal of African History pg 50 by John Donnelly Fage and Roland Anthony Oliver Periplus of the Erythraean Sea Schoff s 1912 translation I M Lewis The Somali Conquest of the Horn of Africa Journal of African History 1 1960 p 217 Identifiants et Referentiels Sudoc Pour L Enseignement Superieur et la Recherche Abu al Fida 1273 1331 in French Lewicki Tadeusz 1974 Arabic External Sources for the History of Africa to the South of Sahara Curzon Press p 33 Ibn Majid Medieval Science Technology and Medicine An Encyclopedia Routledge 2005 ISBN 978 1 135 45932 1 I M Lewis A Modern History of the Somali fourth edition Oxford James Currey 2002 p 21 Geography Rectified or a Description of the World in all its Kingdoms Provinces Countries 1688 p 528 di Vartherma Ludicovo 1863 The Travels of Ludovico Di Varthema in Egypt Syria Arabia Deserta and Arabia Felix in Persia India and Ethiopia A D 1503 to 1508 translated Hakluyt Society pp 88 90 Leo Africanus 2010 The history and description of Africa and of the notable things therein contained translated Cambridge University Press Stanley Henry Edward John 1866 A Description of the Coasts of East Africa and Malabar in the Beginning of the Sixteenth Century by Duarte Barbosa The Hakluyt Society p 17 Note The use of Moor in this context bares no relevance to the Moors of North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula Rather this naming is used to describe the local Muslim inhabitants of the settlement Trimingham J Spencer 1976 Islam in Ethiopia London p 77 Ozbaran Salih 1994 The Ottoman response to European expansion studies on Ottoman Portuguese relations in the Indian Ocean and Ottoman administration in the Arab lands during the sixteenth century Istanbul Isis Press pp 108 109 British East India Company 1811 Survey of the East Coast of Africa British Library India Office Records and Private Papers National Archives pp 40 50 w Abir Mordechai 1968 Ethiopia The Era of the Princes The Challenge of Islam and the Re unification of the Christian Empire 1769 1855 London Longmans p 16 Abir Era of the Princes p 17 C J Cruttenden Memoir on the Western or Edoor Tribes Inhabiting the Somali Coast of N E Africa with the Southern Branches of the Family of Darrood Resident on the Banks of the Webbe Shebeyli Commonly Called the River Webbe Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London 19 1849 pp 54 56 Prichard J C 1837 Researches Into the Physical History of Mankind Ethnography of the African races Sherwood Gilbert amp Piper pp 160 The Colonial Magazine and Commercial maritime Journal Volume 2 1840 p 22 Pankhurst R 1965 Journal of Ethiopian Studies Vol 3 No 1 Institute of Ethiopian Studies p 51 a b Hunt Freeman 1856 The Merchants Magazine and Commercial Review Volume 34 p 694 Lewis I M 1965 The Modern History of Somaliland from Nation to State Praeger p 35 Transactions of the Bombay Geographical Society 1849 Volume 8 p 185 Z H Kour 1981 The History of Aden 1839 72 Cass p 72 Africa in the Nineteenth Century Until the 1880s Unesco 1989 pp 386 Christie M D James 1876 Cholera Epidemics in East Africa Macmillan Publishers pp 133 137 Christie M D Cholera Epidemics p 145 Pankhurst Journal of Ethiopian Studies p 44 Pankhurst Journal of Ethiopian Studies p 45 R J Gavin 1975 Aden Under British Rule 1839 1967 C Hurst amp Co Publishers p 53 Lewis A Modern History p 36 Richard Burton First Footsteps in East Africa Preface Precis of Papers Regarding Aden 1838 1872 India Foreign and Political Department pg 165 165 a b Laitin David D 1977 Politics Language and Thought The Somali Experience 9780226467917 p 70 ISBN 9780226467917 Al Qasimi Sultan bin Muhammad 1996 رسالة زعماء الصومال إلى الشيخ سلطان بن صقر القاسمي in Arabic p ١٧ Davies Charles E 1997 The Blood red Arab Flag An Investigation Into Qasimi Piracy 1797 1820 University of Exeter Press p 167 ISBN 9780859895095 Pankhurst Richard 1965 The Trade of the Gulf of Aden Ports of Africa in the Early Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries Journal of Ethiopian Studies 3 1 36 81 JSTOR 41965718 Al Qasimi Sultan bin Muhammad 1996 رسالة زعماء الصومال إلى الشيخ سلطان بن صقر القاسمي in Arabic p ١٢ Hugh Chisholm ed The encyclopaedia britannica a dictionary of arts sciences literature and general information Volume 25 At the University press 1911 p 383 Samatar Abdi Ismail The state and rural transformation in Northern Somalia 1884 1986 Madison 1989 University of Wisconsin Press p 31 Samatar p 31 Samatar p 32 Samatar Unhappy masses and the challenge of political Islam in the Horn of Africa Somalia Online 1 retrieved 10 03 27 Samatar The state and rural transformation in Northern Somalia p 42 McConnell Tristan 15 January 2009 The Invisible Country Virginia Quarterly Review Archived from the original on 13 June 2010 Retrieved 27 March 2010 Berbera Harrar Railway Survey Vol 1 The Navy Everywhere 1919 p 244 Playfair 1954 p 178 Wavell p 2724 a b Somaliland Marks Independence After 73 Years of British Rule fee required The New York Times 1960 06 26 p 6 Retrieved 2008 06 20 How Britain said farewell to its Empire BBC News 2010 07 23 de Waal Alex CLASS AND POWER IN A STATELESS SOMALIA ResearchGate Somalia A Government at War with Its Own People PDF Human Rights Watch 1990 p 213 Archived PDF from the original on 17 February 2017 Retrieved 25 November 2020 Yordanov Radoslav A 2016 The Soviet Union and the Horn of Africa during the Cold War Between Ideology and Pragmatism p 103 ISBN 978 1498529105 Cities of the Middle East and North Africa A Historical Encyclopedia edited by Michael Dumper Bruce E Stanley Page 93 Somaliland and DP World celebrate 30 year concession for 442 million Port of Berbera Somaliland Asoko Insight Asoko Insight Retrieved 2017 06 19 Somalia project opens up Africa for DP World thenational ae 30 May 2016 Retrieved 30 May 2016 Ethiopia acquires 19 stake in DP World Berbera Port PDF Archived from the original PDF on 22 May 2018 Retrieved 21 May 2018 DP World Somaliland open new terminal at Berbera Port Archived from the original on 2021 06 24 Dubai s DP World Agrees to Manage Port in Somaliland for 30 Years Wall Street Journal 30 May 2016 Retrieved 30 May 2016 Reuters 2018 04 20 DP World Should Rethink Port Deals in Somalia Foreign Minister The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2018 04 22 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a last has generic name help Can Ethiopia s railway bring peace to Somalia BBC Retrieved 23 November 2015 Appendix I Meteorological Data PDF Springer Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 22 October 2016 Klimatafel von Berbera Somalia PDF Baseline climate means 1961 1990 from stations all over the world in German Deutscher Wetterdienst Retrieved 22 October 2016 Long term mean monthly sunshine fraction in Somalia Food and Agriculture Organization Archived from the original on 2016 10 05 Retrieved 4 November 2011 Lewis I M 1965 The Modern History of Somaliland from Nation to State Praeger pp 35 Before this and prior to the British settlement at Aden in 1839 the Ayyal Yunis and Ayyal Ahmed lineages of the Habr Awal clan had held Berbera and jointly managed its trade sharing in the profits on all commercial transactions as protectors abans of foreign merchants from Arabia and India Center for Creative Solutions May 31 2004 Ruin and Renewal The Story of Somaliland Hargeisa Center for Creative Solutions archived from the original on April 8 2011 retrieved September 21 2010 The Iise Muuse clan for whom Berbera and its environs are their traditional area of settlement saw it differently Retrieved on 2011 12 15 Lewis I M 3 February 2017 I M Lewis peoples of the Horn of Africa ISBN 9781315308173 Kluijver Robert KYD3 Politics in Berbera Politics and Art from the Edge Archived from the original on 2022 01 02 Retrieved 2022 01 02 2011 2 Primary School Census Statistics Yearbook PDF United States Congress House Committee on Armed Services Special Subcommittee to Inspect Facilities at Berbera Somalia 1975 Report of the Special Subcommittee to Inspect Facilities at Berbera Somalia to the Committee on Armed Services House of Representatives Ninety fourth Congress first session July 15 1975 Washington D C US Government Printing Office Ethiopia Somaliland envisage exploiting Barbara port permanent dead link Ethiopian News Agency 29 July 2009 accessed 1 November 2009 Somalia attractions Berbera Seaside retrieved 29 November 2013 Istanbul conference on Somalia 21 23 May 2010 Draft discussion paper for Round Table Transport infrastructure PDF Government of Somalia Retrieved 31 August 2013 Hanhimaki Jussi M 2013 The Rise and Fall of Detente American Foreign Policy and the Transformation of the Cold War Potomac Books Inc ISBN 978 1612345864 Intercontinental Press Combined with Inprecor Volume 20 Issues 25 37 Intercontinental Press 1982 p 674 Schmitz Sebastain 2007 By Ilyushin 18 to Mogadishu Airways 14 7 12 17 ISSN 1074 4320 External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Berbera Wikimedia Commons has media related to Berbera Berbera Coordinates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Berbera amp oldid 1135100116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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