A fabulous map card!! Well, it comes from a hard to get country...so it has to be special :) And nevertheless, its a great map too! (For some reason, im overusing the word "nevertheless" lately...i honestly, dont know why...just comes spontaneously...malapropism wouldnt be surprising...
There are loads of information on the back of the card, but unfortunately, its all in French, so unfortunately they are of no use to me.
All i can tell you is that this card shows the town of Setif, which among else is famous for Djemila, the Unesco whs...something i have already posted about here, on my first Algerian card.
The sender says that it is also famous for the massacres committed by the French army on May 8th, 1945. It is said that the initial outbreak occurred on this day, the same as when the Nazi Germany surrendered in the WWII. A parade by the Muslim Algerian population of Setif to celebrate Victory in Europe Day ended in clashes between the marchers and the local French gerdarmerie. Attacks on pied noirs in the neighbouring countryside then resulted in the deaths of 103 Europeans, mostly civilians, plus another hundred wounded.
After five days of chaos French military and police restored order but then carried out a series of reprisals. The army, which included Senegalese troops, carried out summary executions. These reprisals killed anywhere between 1,020 and 45,000 people (of course, this depends on which source is trying to implement the information into your brain). he Setif outbreak and the repression that followed marked a turning point in the relations between France, which had colonized Algeria since 1830, and the Muslim population.
the stamp is a commemorative one from a set of two, issued in 2009, called Islamic Heritage - city views. This one shows the Mausoleum Sidi-Ibrahim El Atteuf in Ghardaia
Showing posts with label Algeria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Algeria. Show all posts
Sunday, August 2, 2009
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Djemila, Algeria
I think ive complained more than enough about work overload, so ill just skip it...and again a big notice to whomever has sent me a postcard...due to how things have been, and still are, im somewhat stuck in getting back to all of you upon receiving your cards, so i hope you understand if i take time with it, or if you had seen your card here already and havent been informed about my receiving it..im really sorry for all this, but life really gets in the way sometimes, and at this point I have around 15 notifications left to send :(( im awful....hope you wont regret having traded with me :((
Well, after going crazy of worries due to mr. Postman avoiding me, and thinking how my cards have been lost...finally some have come...and among them was my first ever card from Algeria...yippieee!! New Country!! Number.....duh, have no idea...im totally not on track with that...but hehehee, new country!!!
And apart from being a new country, its as well a UNESCO site!
Djemila is a mountain village in Algeria near the northern coast east of Algiers where some of the best preserved Berbero-Roman ruins in North Africa are found. It was recognized as a UNESCO whs because of its unique adaptation of Roman architecture to a mountain environment. Buildings present in Djemila include a theatre, two fora, temples, basilicas, arches, streets, and houses.
These Roman ruins date back from the 3rd centruy....
Djemila in Arabic means 'beautiful'
Well, after going crazy of worries due to mr. Postman avoiding me, and thinking how my cards have been lost...finally some have come...and among them was my first ever card from Algeria...yippieee!! New Country!! Number.....duh, have no idea...im totally not on track with that...but hehehee, new country!!!
And apart from being a new country, its as well a UNESCO site!
Djemila is a mountain village in Algeria near the northern coast east of Algiers where some of the best preserved Berbero-Roman ruins in North Africa are found. It was recognized as a UNESCO whs because of its unique adaptation of Roman architecture to a mountain environment. Buildings present in Djemila include a theatre, two fora, temples, basilicas, arches, streets, and houses.
These Roman ruins date back from the 3rd centruy....
Djemila in Arabic means 'beautiful'
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