Kati Cercle

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Kati Cercle in the Koulikoro Region.
Kati Cercle in the Koulikoro Region.

Kati Cercle is an administrative subdivision of the Koulikoro Region of Mali. Its seat is the city of Kati, which is also its largest city. It lies at the southwest corner of the region, and completly surrounds the Bamako Capitol District. Until the capitol was hived off in 1977, the combined Cercle was called Bamako Cercle, with the capitol city as its seat. Kati Cercle's population as of 1998 was 458,333 people, making it the third most populous Cercle in the nation.[1]

The Kati Cercle is divided into 37 Arrondissements and their constituent communes.

Kati Cercle is home to primarially Bambara farmers, as well as Bozo and Fula populations. The Kati area formed part of the pre-colonial Beledougou region of the Bambara Empire, and was amongst the first places colonised by the French in the last decade of the 19th century.

The Cercle falls largely south of the dryer Sahel land, in the wetter Sudan. Through it runs the fertile valley of the Niger River, home to groundnut, cotton, and tobacco farms, as well as being a major transportation and fishing resource.

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