Haa Dhaalu Atoll

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Haa Dhaalu Atoll
Country Maldives
Corresponding geographic atoll(s) Thiladhunmathi Dekunuburi
Location 6° 48' N and 6° 30' N
Capital Kulhudhuffushi
Government
  Atoll chief -
Population
  Total 23,875
Letter code B
Dhivehi letter code HDh (ހދ)
• Number of islands 38
• Inhabited islands Finey Hanimaadhoo Hirimaradhoo Kulhudhuffushi Kumundhoo Kunburudhoo MakunudhooKurinbi Naivaadhoo Nellaidhoo Neykurendhoo Nolhivaram Nolhivaranfaru Vaikaradhoo
• Uninhabited islands Bodunaagoashi, Dafaru Fasgandu, Dhorukanduhuraa, Faridhoo, Maavaidhoo, Fenboahuraa, Hirinaidhoo, Hondaafushi, Hondaidhoo, Innafushi, Kamana, Kattalafushi, Kaylakunu, Kudamuraidhoo, Kudanaagoashi, Muiri, Rasfushi, Ruffushi, Vaikaramuraidhoo, Veligandu
Resort islands, airports and industrial islands are also considered uninhabited.

Haa Dhaalu Atoll officially referred as Thiladhunmathi Dhekunuburi (Southern Thiladhunmathi Atoll) is an administrative division of the Maldives. It is the southern section of Thiladhunmathi Atoll, a natural atoll of the Maldives.

This administrative division includes the island of Makunudhoo or Maamakunudhoo (Malcolm Atoll in the Admiralty Charts) with its large reef, as well as the southern part of the larger Thiladhunmathi or Tiladummati Atoll. Thiladhunmathi was divided into its northern and southern divisions on May 21, 1958.

There is a domestic airport on the island of Hanimaadhoo about 15 km from its capital Kulhudhuffushi. Before Kulhudhuffushi, the island of Nolhivaranfaru was the capital of the atoll until May 6, 1992.

Haa Alifu, Haa Dhaalu, Shaviyani, Noonu, Raa, Baa, Kaafu, et cetera are code letters assigned to the present administrative divisions of the Maldives. They are not the proper names of the natural atolls that make up these divisions. Some atolls are divided into two administrative divisions while other divisions are made up of two or more natural atolls. The order followed by the code letters is from North to South, beginning with the first letters of the Thaana alphabet used in Dhivehi. These code letters are not accurate from the geographical and cultural point of view. However, they have become popular among tourists and foreigners in the Maldives who find them easier to pronounce than the true atoll names in Dhivehi, (save a few exceptions, like Ari Atoll).[1]

References

  1. Tim Godfrey, Atlas of the Maldives, Atoll Editions 2004
  • Divehi Tārīkhah Au Alikameh. Divehi Bahāi Tārikhah Khidmaiykurā Qaumī Markazu. Reprint 1958 edn. Malé 1990.
  • Divehiraajjege Jōgrafīge Vanavaru. Muhammadu Ibrahim Lutfee. G.Sōsanī.
  • Xavier Romero-Frias, The Maldive Islanders, A Study of the Popular Culture of an Ancient Ocean Kingdom. Barcelona 1999.

Coordinates: 6°37′N 72°52′E / 6.617°N 72.867°E / 6.617; 72.867

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