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Sagallo

Sagallo
Sagallou.jpg
Sagallo is located in Djibouti
Sagallo
Sagallo
Location in Djibouti
Coordinates: 11°40′N 42°44′E / 11.667°N 42.733°E / 11.667; 42.733
Country Flag of Djibouti.svg Present-day Djibouti
Region Tadjoura Region
Established 6 January 1889
Disbanded 5 February 1889
Founded by Nikolay Ivanovitch Achinov
Elevation 21 m (69 ft)

Sagallo (Russian: Сагалло, French: Sagallou) was a short-lived Russian settlement established in 1889 on the Gulf of Tadjoura in present-day Djibouti.

In 1883, Nikolay Ivanovitch Achinov (an adventurer, and burgess of Penza b. 1856) visited Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in order to establish clerical and political ties between the two countries. After his return to Russia, Achinov voiced his plans for a 1888 expedition to French Somaliland, while claiming to be a free cossack.

Achinov assured the participants that the sultan of Tadjoura, Mohammed Loitah, had permanently leased him land in the region.

On 10 December 1888, Achinov along with 165 Terek cossacks boarded Kornilov, a ship heading from Odessa to Alexandria. The expedition then boarded the Russian ship Lazarev which brought them to Port Said. There, Achinov rented the Austrian ship Amfitrida, which entered the gulf of Tadjoura on 6 January 1889. The expedition was greeted by a group of Ethiopean priests.

Achinov struggled to keep the cossacks under his control, but some raided the Danakil, stealing a cow and a sheep after driving off the local tribesmen with rifle fire. The sultan accepted 60 francs from Achimov as reparations. The French foreign office demanded an explanation of Achimov's actions, and the Russian ambassador in Paris distanced the Russian Empire from Achimov.

On January 14 the abandoned Egyptian fort of Sagallo was chosen as the new base of the expedition. Achinov named the fort New Moscow. A tent was erected to serve as the church of St. Nicholas and a flag of the expedition was raised.


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