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Annaba - History |
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Hippo
Regius later became a centre of Christian thought, housing the Council of
Hippo (ad
393) and forming the bishopric of St. Augustine (396-430). Destroyed by
the Vandals in 431, Hippo Regius passed to the Byzantine emperor Justinian
in 533, and about two centuries later (697) it was
conquered by the Arabs. An
early centre for piracy, it remained one of the small cities of northern
Africa under a succession of rulers until the French captured it in 1832.
In 1848 a commune was created administered from Paris.
Annaba
is Algeria's chief exporter of minerals, mainly iron ore and phosphates
from the Tébessa deposits to the southeast. Surrounded by fertile farms
(where wheat is grown), forests, and mines, it also serves as a trading
and fishing port and port of call. It is connected by roads or railroad
to several other cities of northeastern Algeria and to Algiers. Annaba's
major industries include an iron and steel complex, a fertilizer plant,
automobile and railway shops, and aluminium works. Pop. (1987) 222,518. |
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