حرقيقو

حرقيقو
Arkiko
بلدة
HirgigoPowerplant.jpg
حرقيقو is located in إرتريا
حرقيقو
حرقيقو
الموقع في إرتريا.
الإحداثيات: 15°32′N 39°27′E / 15.533°N 39.450°E / 15.533; 39.450
Country إرتريا
المنطقةشمال البحر الأحمر
منطقة التوقيتUTC+3 (EAT)

حرقيقو (إنگليزية: Arkiko، وأحياناً Archigo, Arqiqo, Ercoco, Hirgigo, Hargigo أو Harkiko) هي بلدة في منطقة شمال البحر الأحمر في إرتريا. وتطل على البحر الأحمر، على البر الرئيسي المقابل لمدينة مصوع.

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استعراض عام

Arkiki or known by the locals Saho tribe; the clans of Dasamo, as Hirg-Higo. The clan of Dasamo are the inhabitant of this area, it is also known by the name Dahano, from either the Saho or Afar word for "elephant". The meaning of Higo is legend of legends in Saho language. Richard Pankhurst explains this etymology to the importance of the ivory trade to Hirg-Higo or known as Arkiko.[1]

مدرسة إيطالية في حرقيقو، إرتريا، حفر من صورة فوتوغرافية التقطها ن. كوراتزيني، من مجلة الصور الإيطاليةـ 14 أبريل 1889.

In 1826–48 (during the Ottoman period, but not the phase under de facto Egyptian rule), parts of Eritrea were ruled by the Naib (or deputy) of Hirg-Higo, according to some sources part of the time cumulating with the office of wali (regular military governor) of Massawa, the present capital.

This town was the site of a terrible massacre by the Dergue military junta of Ethiopia in 1975, during the Eritrean War of Independence. Also located in this town is Eritrea's largest power generation facility. This facility was partially destroyed during the Eritrean-Ethiopian War, but has now been fully repaired.


المناخ والموئل

The region is reputedly one of the hottest inhabited places on earth, with temperatures soaring well above 40°C (104°F) for much of the year, combined with an average annual rainfall of less than two centimetres (an inch).

Formerly covering significant portions of the Eritrean coast, original mangrove forest was destroyed by overgrazing by camels or cutting for firewood or the building of homes and boats.

الاقتصاد

Today, Arkiko is the site of the artificial planting on mangrove trees with the help of low-cost slow-release fertilizer packs of nitrogen, phosphorus and iron, allowing the plant growth in areas previously uninhabited by trees. It is supported by the Eritrean Ministry of Fisheries, in the hope to restore mangrove coastline boosting the numbers of livestock, fish and seafood.[2]

الهامش

  1. ^ Richard Pankhurst, The Ethiopian Borderlands (Asmara: Red Sea Press, 1997), p. 104
  2. ^ https://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080414/sc_afp/eritreaenvironmentpovertyfishing[dead link]
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