Albreda
Albreda | |
---|---|
The Albreda-Jufureh archway | |
Albreda Location in the Gambia | |
Coordinates: 13°20′04″N 16°23′12″W / 13.33444°N 16.38667°W | |
Country | The Gambia |
Division | North Bank Division |
Population (2012) | |
• Total | 1,829 |
Albreda is a historic settlement in the Gambia on the north bank of the Gambia River, variously described as a 'trading post' or a 'slave fort'. It is located near Jufureh in the North Bank Division and an arch stands on the beach connecting the two places. As of 2008, it has an estimated population of 1,776.[1]
History
According to Wolof oral tradition, Musa Gaye, a Wolof marabout founded it sometime between 1520 and 1681. Wolof traders called the island Draga, while the Mandinkas called it Albadar.[2]
In 1681, a local ruler, Niumi Mansa, gave the land to the French because his people depended on trade with Europeans. The French exclave was never very large (never more than one factory) but its location was inconvenient for the British, who otherwise had a monopoly on trade on the Gambia River. The British also possessed Fort James on James Island, which was less than two miles away on the opposite bank, and which fulfilled a similar function. There was constant tension and occasional skirmishes between the two powers, with Fort James changing hands between them several times, until remaining definitively under British control in 1702.
Albreda was transferred from French control to the British empire in 1857. Today it contains a slave museum.
See also
References
- ↑ World Gazetteer, Retrieved on 20 August 2008
- ↑ CD-ROM: NRS – GAMBIA
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Albreda. |
Coordinates: 13°20′04″N 16°23′12″W / 13.33444°N 16.38667°W