Archive for the ‘Libya Desert’ Category

  • March20

    The Garamantian Empire

    Capture


    Descended from Berbers and Saharan pastoralists, the Garamantes were likely present as a tribal people in the Fezzan by at least 1000 B.C. They first appeared in the historical record in the fifth century B.C., when Herodotus noted the Garamantes were an exceedingly numerous people who herded cattle (that grazed backward!) and who hunted “troglodyte Ethiopians” from four-horse chariots.


    The success of the Garamantes was based on their subterranean water-extraction system, a network of tunnels known as foggaras in Berber. It not only allowed their part of the Sahara to bloom again–it also triggered a political and social process that led to population expansion, urbanism, and conquest. But in order to retain and extend their newfound prosperity, they needed above all to maintain and expand the water-extraction tunnel systems–and that necessitated the acquisition of many slaves.


    Luckily for the Garamantes–but less so for their neighbors–Garamantian population growth gave the new Saharan power a demographic and military advantage over other peoples in Saharan and sub-Saharan Africa, enabling them to expand their territory, conquer other peoples, and acquire vast numbers of slaves.


    By around A.D. 150 the slave-based Garamantian kingdom covered 70,000 square miles in present-day southern Libya. It was the first time in history that a nonriverine area of the Sahara (or indeed any other major desert) had produced an urban society. The largest town, Garama (in what is now called the Jarma Oasis), had a population of some four thousand. A further six thousand people probably lived in suburban satellite villages located within a three-mile radius of the urban center.


    Thanks to their aggressive mentality and the slaves and water it produced, the Garamantes lived in planned towns and feasted on locally grown grapes, figs, sorghum, pulses, barley, and wheat, as well as on imported luxuries such as wine and olive oil. “The combination of their slave-acquisition activities and their mastery of foggara irrigation technology enabled the Garamantes to enjoy a standard of living far superior to that of any other ancient Saharan society,” says archaeologist Andrew Wilson of the University of Oxford, who has been surveying the foggara system. Without slaves, they would not have had a kingdom, let alone even a whiff of the good life. They would have survived–just–in conditions of relative poverty, as most desert dwellers have done before and since.


    In the end, depletion of easily mined fossil water sounded the death knell of the Garamantian kingdom. After extracting at least 30 billion gallons of water over some 600 years, the fourth-century A.D. Garamantes discovered that the water was literally running out. To deal with the problem, they would have needed to add more man-made underground tributaries to existing tunnels and dig additional deeper, much longer water-extraction tunnels. For that, they would have needed vastly more slaves than they had. The water difficulties must have led to food shortages, population reductions, and political instability (local defensive structures from this era may be evidence for political fragmentation). Conquering more territories and pulling in more slaves was therefore simply not militarily feasible. The magic equation between population and military and economic power on the one hand and slave-acquisition capability and water extraction on the other no longer balanced.


    The desert kingdom declined and fractured into small chiefdoms and was absorbed into the emerging Islamic world. Like its more famous Roman neighbor, the once-great Saharan kingdom became, little by little, simply a thing of myth and memory. Along with the rest of the world, Berbers living in the Fazzan today have all but forgotten their ancestors. The kingdom’s legacy has faded so dramatically that local residents believe the vast water-extraction system–the pride of the Garamantes–is the handiwork of Romans.


    This abstract was taken from an article in Archaeology magazine, by David Keys, titled “Kingdom of the Sands.”

     

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  • February26

    The Timeless Desert


    “And all around is the Desert; a corner of the mournful Kingdom of Sand.”
    Pierre Loti, French Novelist and Naval Officer


    The desert has a strong relationship with spiritual quests. The desert itself invokes images of a vast expanse, where man may be alone to commune with the higher power and forces of nature. For the Sufi poet Rumi, poetry about the desert was an allegory for a spiritual quest of the Soul journeying into the infinite.
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    The Libyan Desert (Arabic: الصحراء الليبية‎) is located in the northern and eastern part of the Sahara Desert. It occupies Egypt west of the Nile (the Egyptian portion is thus called the Western Desert), eastern Libya and northwestern Sudan alongside the Nubian Desert. Covering an area of approximately 1,100,000 square kilometers, it extends approximately 1100 km from east to west, and 1,000 km from north to south, in about the shape of a rectangle. Like most of the Sahara, this desert is primarily sand and hamada or stony plain.The desert features a striking diversity of landscapes including mountains like Jebel Uweinat (1980m, the Gilf Kebir plateau, and sand seas as detailed below. The Libyan Desert is barely populated apart from the modern settlements in eastern Libya.
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  • February19

    Luxury in the Libyan Desert


    Akakus & Ubari Magic Lodges nestled in the heart of the Libyan Sahara, protected by the impressive sand dunes of Ubari or the moon like rock formations from the Akakus, the two Magic Lodges reveal their brand new faces. Both Lodges, composed of 35 Deluxe tents, offer a high standard of confort: Spacious and elegant tents with private bathroom, a saharian restaurant, a bedouin tent . . . The best service in an idyllic landscape.


     

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  • November18

    National Geographic goes to Libya


    National Geographic Photographer George Steinmetz takes his lightweight para glider to the Libyan desert and unveils never before seen stunning aerial footage of the Libyan desert.


    Don’t forget to pick up a copy of the October issue of National Geographic to see the stunning photos, and check out George’s official site for more stunning aerial photography at www.georgesteinmetz.com.


     

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