Ségou (French pronunciation:[seɡu];Bambara:ߛߋߜ߭ߎ߫,Segu) is a town and anurban commune in south-centralMali that lies 235 kilometres (146 mi) northeast ofBamako on the right bank of theRiver Niger. The town is the capital of theSégou Cercle and theSégou Region. With 130,690 inhabitants in 2009, it is the fifth-largest town in Mali.
In the middle of the 19th century there were four villages with the name of Ségou spread out over a distance of around 12 km (7.5 mi) along the right bank of the river. They were, starting from the most upstream, Ségou-Koro (Old Ségou), Ségou-Bougou, Ségou-Koura (New Ségou) and Ségou-Sikoro. The present town is on the site of Ségou-Sikoro.[3][4]
Ségou has contested origins. Some claim that the word Ségou come from "Sikoro", meaning to the foot of ashea butter tree. Others argue that it was named after Cheikou, amarabout who founded the city, while still other theories support the claim that Ségou was founded by the Bozo fishermen coming from the north in the 4th century, who established their villages along the Niger River. The 11th century CE saw an influx of theSoninke people, who were trying to escape from the collapse of theGhana Empire, withMandinka populations following.[citation needed]
Around 1650Kaladian Coulibaly overthrew the ruling Koita dynasty and established a powerful if short-lived kingdom with Ségou-Koro as capital.[5][6]
One of Koulibaly's great-grandsons,Mamary Coulibaly, also known as Bitòn, became the chief of històn, an association of men, sometime after 1700. By 1712, Bitòn had used his military strength to displace local elders and expand theBambara Empire. In the subsequent decades, he expanded its territory to encompass regional commerce centers such asMacina andDjenné. The city ofTimbuktu would become atributary state to Bitòn's Bambara Empire.[7] At this time Segou was capital of the Bambara Empire,[8][9] and a distinct urban architecture began to emerge at Ségou Koro, includingmosques.[7]
After Bitòn's death in 1755 a period of instability followed, during which the capital of the Empire moved repeatedly.[6][10] In 1766Ngolo Diarra, a former slave and warrior, took control the Bambara Empire and inaugurated a period of prosperity. The Diarra dynasty ruled Ségou until the mid-19th century.[5][7] He moved the kingdom's capital from Segou-Koro to Ségou-Sikoro, close to the site of the current city.[6]
Mungo Park, passing through Segou in 1797 recorded a testament to the Empire's prosperity:
The view of this extensive city, the numerous canoes on the river, the crowded population, and the cultivated state of the surrounding countryside, formed altogether a prospect of civilization and magnificence that I little expected to find in the bosom of Africa.[11]
Entrance to the palace ofAhmadu Tall at Ségou-Sikoro in around 1866
On March 10, 1861, the MuslimToucouleur leader,El Hadj Oumar Tall, conquered the town.[8][12][13] Under his rule, the prominent military architect Samba Ndiaye rebuilt some of the town's defenses.[14] On his death in 1864, he was succeeded by his sonAhmadu Tall, who dealt repeatedly with rebellions and challenges from his brothers.[15] After years of tensions and conflict, Segou was conquered by theFrench when forces led by ColonelLouis Archinard entered the town on April 6, 1890.[12][16]
France attempted indirectly ruling Ségou until March 13, 1893, when they incorporated the town as the capital of a localcercle.[12] Ségou continued to serve as a regional commercial center throughout French rule.[12]
Ségou is situated 235 kilometres (146 mi) fromBamako, on the right bank of theNiger River.[12] Theurban commune is bordered to the east by the commune ofPelengana, to the west by the commune ofSébougou and to the south by the commune ofSakoïba.[12]
The commune is subdivided into 15quartiers: Alamissani, Angoulême, Bagadadji, Bougoufié, Comatex, Dar Salam, Hamdallaye, Médine, Mission Catholique, Missira, Ségou Coura, Sido Soninkoura, Somono, Sokalakono, Bananissabakoro.[17]
Ségou has ahot semi-arid climate (KöppenBSh). The city is irrigated by two important waterways: the Niger and theBani River. Ségou has two seasons: a rainy season and a dry season. The rainy season starts in June and lasts about four months until September. Ségou's dry season includes a relatively mild period followed by a period of sweltering heat. The average yearly rainfall is about 640 millimetres or 25 inches. Theharmattan is the dominant wind in the dry season and it blows from north to south. The monsoon blowing from south to north-west is frequent during rainy season (hivernage).
The town of Ségou itself is home to a variety of ethnic groups, including the Malinke, the Soninke, the Fulani, and the Toucouleur, due to its complex history and status as a regional commercial center.[20]
Bambaras are mostly farmers and are the most numerous ethnic group.[citation needed] Their language is Bambara orDjoula.[citation needed] The Bozos are the second most populous ethnic group.[citation needed] They typically live near the shore of the Niger river, in small towns of small houses.[citation needed] The Bozo economy is based on fishing.[citation needed] Bozo people have a monopoly on the transport system because of their knowledge of the Niger, its shallows and seasonal lakes, and are regarded as the masters of water.[citation needed] TheSomono, a group known to specialize in fishing and boating, are largely concentrated in Ségou and its surroundings.[21] TheMalinké/Mandinka/Maninka are closely related to Bambaras: They share costumes, religious beliefs, and practices with the Bambaras.[citation needed] TheMarka,Saracollé orSoninke are merchants and warriors.[citation needed] The Soninke people are great travelers and Muslims, and have largely conserved their traditions.[citation needed]
Women with food for sale in dishes on their heads, Niger River bank, Segou 1972
Four men wash clothes in the Niger River, Segou 1972.
An alley in between mud houses, Segou 1972.
Weavers at work, Segou 1972
A market on the bank of the Niger River, 1993
The Bamanan Bar Restaurant Dancing Ségou, 1993
A girl on a street near a mosque, Segou 1993
Market of cooking pans on the Niger River bank, Segou 1993
The Bambaras used to transmit their knowledge by oral tradition, hence much of their art and culture is unknown. Ségou's cultural heritage includes traditional musical instruments, wonderfulgriots, folkloric groups and the traditional masks and marionettes. The history of the Bambara state's traditional religious practices are ambiguous. They practice animism and fetishism as cultural practices, and also totemic and monism (cult of ancestors). The most famous Ségou handcrafts are based on pottery, weaving (blankets, wrappers and carpets), manufacturing ofBogolan (a distinctive variation ofMud cloth), painting and sculpture. Ségou is also regarded as the capital of Malian pottery with a large pottery district inKalabougou situated on the left bank. Women make the pottery by hand with the clay coming from the Niger River and bring the finished works to the local Monday market.[citation needed]
The most well-known festival in Ségou is the annual Festival sur le Niger (Festival on the Niger).[22] This festival celebrates music and the arts and culture of the Bambara people, and includes theCaravane culturelle de la paix since 2013.[23] The 16th edition of the festival took place in 2019, when for the first time it combined with Ségou' Art, a contemporary art fair.[24] The two festivals continue to be combined for the 2023 event, which takes place over six days in early February.[25][23]
Ségou has two architectural styles:French Colonial and traditionalSudanese and neo-Sudanese. The Sudanese style influenced public building and important residences. Monuments and great mosques are also built according to this style. Many ofSudano-Sahelian's kings built imposing palaces in the cities over which they ruled and most of these buildings are in red clay. The materials used for building are generally quite poor and many of the buildings need to be restored to maintain their state.
Today, Ségou is known for its pottery, its market and its fishing industry. Attractions in the old town ofSégou-Koro included a mosque, Coulibaly's tomb and an ancient tree. In the city center, the main landmark is thewater tower.
The most important economic activities are fishing, cattle herding and small scale farming.Millet is the main crop in Ségou, with other major cereals includingsorghum, andcowpea.[27] The main type of millet crop isricepearl millet.[citation needed]Black-eyed peas are also grown.[citation needed] Crop yields in Ségou are generally low.[27] Common types of livestock in Ségou includessheep,poultry,cattle,goats, anddonkeys.[27] Both artisanal and commercial fishing are practiced in Ségou.[27] Men often do the fishing, while women usually market the fish.[27]
While most consumer goods are imported into Ségou, the city produces, and exports, handicraft and agricultural products.[28]
As of 2008, the town is served by two telecom operators:Ikatel andSotelma.[29]
There are two factories processing cotton: Compagnie Malienne des Textiles (COMATEX) andCompagnie malienne pour le développement du textile (CMDT). Commerce consists mostly of the small scale exchange and sale of products from the primary sector, sold weekly at the large Sudano-Sahelian market, drawing customers from far outside of the city. The main products sold are vegetables, pottery, cotton, leather, fruit, ovens, cattle and cereals.
The headquarters of theOffice du Niger is based in the town.[8] The Office du Niger is a semi-autonomous government agency that administers a large irrigation scheme in the Ségou Region to the north of the Niger River.[30]
Ségou used to be served bySégou Airport (IATA: SZU,ICAO: GASG). The airport lay south-west of the city center and is visible on old maps as well as satellite imagery.[31]
^abPage, Willie F. (2005). Davis, R. Hunt (ed.).Encyclopedia of African History and Culture. Vol. III (Illustrated, revised ed.). Facts On File. p. 239.
^abcTauxier, Louis (1930). "Chronologie des rois bambaras".Outre-Mer: 9.
Kanya-Forstner, A.S. (2009) [1969],The Conquest of the Western Sudan: A Study in French Military Imperialism, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,ISBN978-0-521-10372-5.
Schreyger, Emil (2002), "De la 'mission Bélime' à l'Office du Niger", in Bonneval, P.; Kuper, M.; Tonneau, J-P. (eds.),L'Office du Niger, grenier à riz du Mali: Succès économiques, transitions culturelles et politiques de développement (in French), Paris: Karthala,ISBN978-2-84586-255-5.