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Rufisque

Rufisque
Town
Industrial Rufisque, 2006
Industrial Rufisque, 2006
Rufisque is located in Senegal
Rufisque
Rufisque
Coordinates: 14°43′N 17°16′W / 14.717°N 17.267°W / 14.717; -17.267
Country  Senegal
Region Dakar Region
Area
 • Total 372 km2 (144 sq mi)
Population (2013)
 • Total 490,694
 • Density 1,300/km2 (3,400/sq mi)
Time zone GMT (UTC+0)

Rufisque is a city in the Dakar region of western Senegal, at the base of the Cap-Vert Peninsula. It has a population of 179,797 (2002 census). In the past it was an important port city in its own right, but is now a suburb of Dakar.

Rufisque is also the capital of the department of the same name and is lying 25 kilometres (16 mi) south-east of Dakar, the capital of Senegal.

Originally a Lebou fishing village called Tenguedj (Wolof: Tëngéej), Rufisque became important in the 16th century as the principal port of the kingdom of Cayor, being frequented by Portuguese (who named it Rio Fresco or "Freshwater River"), Dutch, French and English traders. A Euro-African Creole, or Métis, community of merchants grew up there, in close contact with similar communities in Saint Louis, Gorée and other places along the Petite Côte (Portudal, Joal) south to the Gambia River.

In 1840 a couple of Saint Louis merchants built warehouses on the waterfront to stock peanuts. Gorée merchants followed suit. There followed a period of commercial expansion as peanut production in Cayor boomed. In 1859 a fort was built by the French and Rufisque was annexed to the Colony of Senegal. The "Escale" commercial and administrative neighborhood along the waterfront was laid out in 1862—the African inhabitants being pushed out in the process. Rufisque became a "commune" in 1880 and its port was connected to the Dakar-Saint Louis railroad in 1885. In 1909 Galandou Diouf (died 1941) was elected to represent Rufisque in the General Council of the colony in Saint Louis, being the first African elected to that position.


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