Ségou


Ségou

or

Segu

(both: sāgo͞o`), town (1993 est. pop. 85,000), SW Mali, a port on the Niger River. It is the administrative and commercial center for an area where cotton, rice, millet, and peanuts are grown and cattle are raised. Cotton textiles are made in Ségou. In the late 17th cent. Ségou developed as the capital of a Bambara kingdom that reached its peak in the 18th cent. In 1861 the town was captured by al-Hajj UmarHajj Umar, al-
or Hajj Omar
, 1797–1864, Muslim religious and military leader in W Africa. A chieftain of the large Tukulor tribe of Senegal, he desired to convert the pagan tribespeople of the W Sudan.
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, a militant Muslim reformer. Umar (d.1864) and his son and successor Ahmadu, who ruled to 1890, made Ségou their capital. In 1890 the town was occupied by the French. It is the headquarters of a large-scale agricultural development project on the Niger River that was begun in 1932 by the French.

Ségou

 

a city in the Republic of Mali, located on the right bank of the Niger River; capital of Ségou Region. Population, 33,000 (1970). A highway junction, it is the trade center of an agricultural region where peanuts, rice, and millet are grown and cattle are raised. Ségou has a textile combine.