Logone-Birni Logone, Lagone |
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Logone-Birni, 1892
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Location in Cameroon | |
Coordinates: 11°47′N 15°06′E / 11.783°N 15.100°E | |
Country | Cameroon |
Province | Far North Province |
Division | Logone-et-Chari |
Population | |
• Ethnicities | Kotoko |
• Religions | Islam |
Logone-Birni is a town and commune in Cameroon. The town lies on the left (west) bank of the Logone River which at this point forms the state boundary between Camaroon and Chad. It is the capital of the Kotoko people, whose two other principal cities are Kousséri and Goulfey.
Logone-Birne means Fort Logone and was founded around 1700 by Prince Bruha.Dixon Denham visited Logone on 23 January 1824. He reported:
Logone-Birni has been suggested as the birthplace of Abram Petrovich Gannibal (1696-1781), a General in the Imperial Russian Army and great-grandfather of Alexander Pushkin. This view was first aired by Vladimir Nabokov in 1962, albeit in a dismissive remark. The predominant view, however, was that Gannibal was from Ethiopia. As Hugh Barnes suggested this may have arisen from the generic use of the term "Ethiopian" to cover all of Africa. However, in 1996 Dieudonné Gnammankou convincingly argued that Logone-Birni was his birthplace. This view was further elaborated by Hugh Barnes in Gannibal: The Moor of Petersburg (2005).
Logone-Birni has given its name to the Logone Birni Basin, which covers an area of 27,000 km2 and is part of the West and Central African Rift System.
Coordinates: 11°47′N 15°06′E / 11.783°N 15.100°E