FACTOID # 164: If you're looking to invade someone by sea, try Canada! Canada has only 9000 Navy personnel guarding the longest national coastline in the world.
 
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Encyclopedia > Bengasi

Benghazi is a seaport in Libya, Africa. The present name is derived from that of a pious benefactor of the city named Ghazi or "Sidi Ghazi," as the locals called him, who died about 1450. The city was renamed "Bani Ghazi".


History

Modern Benghazi, on the Gulf of Sidra, lies a little southwest of the site of the ancient Greek city of Berenice or Berenicis. That city was traditionally founded in 446 BCE, by a brother of the king of Cyrene, but got the name Berenice only when it was refounded in the 3rd century BCE under the patronage of Berenice (Berenike), the daughter of Magas, king of Cyrene, and wife of Ptolemy III Euergetes, the ruler of Egypt. The new city was later given the name Hesperides, in reference to the Hesperides, the guardians of the mythic western paradise. The name may have also referred to green oases in low-lying areas in the nearby coastal plain. The city superseded Cyrene and Barca as the chief center of Cyrenaica after the 3rd century CE and during the Persian attacks, but when the Arabs came, in 642-643, it had dwindled to an insignificant village among magnificent ruins.


In 1578 the Turks invaded Benghazi and it was ruled from Tripoli by the Karamanlis from 1711-1835, then it passed under direct Ottoman rule until 1911. Under the Ottomans, Levantines, Greeks and Jews formed the trading community, Turks, Arabs and Berbers formed a ruling castes, and Black Africans acted as labourers and domestics. The city was a port in the slave trade that supplied Islamic markets, until European consuls agitated for its suppression not long before before Italian sponge fishermen worked its coastal waters. The city was a center for Islamist activists. In 1858 and again in 1874 Benghazi was devastated by bubonic plague.


Under the Italian colonial occupation, particularly under Mussolini, Cyrenaica suffered ruthless repression of the Libyan resistance. In 1931 the Libyan patriot Omar al_Mucktar was hanged at Souluk, a village just west of Benghazi, effectively ending Libyan resistance. Heavily bombed in World War II, Benghazi was rebuilt as a gleaming showplace of modern Libya. The city was bombed by the United States, 17 April 1986. 6-7 Sept 1995 saw clashes between police and militant Islamists in Benghazi. Thousands of arrests were made, including many Sudanese expatriates.








  Results from FactBites:
 
Ocean Zone Divers - Wrecks Italy - Bengasi (334 words)
The Bengasi was a cargo of 1784 tx for a total length of 84.5m by 11.1m at the beam.
The Bengasi was built at the shipyard of Cantieri Navali Riuniti in Palermo for the Societa Nazionale di Servizi Marittimi.
The wreck of the Bengasi is a fantastic dive due to her nearly intact structure and her cargo.
History of Libya as Italian Colony - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (832 words)
In 1929 Tripoli and Cyrenaica were united as one colonial province, then in 1934, as Italy struggled to retain colonial power, the classical name "Libya" was revived as the official name of the colony, which was split into four provinces, Tripoli, Misurata, Bengasi, and Derna.
In 1920 (25 October) the Italian government recognized Sheikh Sidi Idris the hereditary head of the nomadic Senussi, with wide authority in Kufra and other oases, as Emir of Cyrenaica, a new title extended by the British at the close of World War I. The emir would eventually become king of the free Libyan state.
Counterattacks of British Allied forces from Egypt, later commanded by Montgomery and their successful two-month campaign (Tobruk, Bengasi, El Argheila), and the counteroffensives under Rommel, 1940-43, are part of the wider history of World War II.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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