About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 57. Chapters: Tuareg, Tifinagh, Azawakh, Tuareg people, Air Mountains, Trans-Saharan trade, Tuareg Rebellion, Essouk, Agadez, Araouane, In-Gall, Ghadames, Azaouad, In Salah, Essakane, Adansonia digitata, Arlit, Tassili n'Ajjer, Alexandrine Tinne, Ghat, Libya, Tenere, Bilma, Ahaggar Mountains, Kong, Cote d'Ivoire, Cure Salee, Acacus Mountains, Maradi, Niger, Tin-Essako, Tamanrasset, Aguelhok, Arbre du Tenere, Alexander Gordon Laing, Kidal, Illizi Province, Azalai, Sudano-Sahelian, Agadez Region, Tin Hinan, Tamanrasset Province, Bamba, Mali, Kidal Region, Tessalit, Tartit, West Saharan montane xeric woodlands, Soueloum Diagho, Abalak, List of rulers of Tuggurt, Tchin-Tabaraden, Tahoua Region, Bakal, Mali, Djanet, Henri Duveyrier, Frank Cole, Touareg tea, Tagelmust, Permanent Interstate Committee for drought control in the Sahel, Tanezrouft, List of rulers of Kel Ahaggar, Great Green Wall, Tessaoua, Adrar des Ifoghas, Popular Movement for the Liberation of Azawad, James Richardson, Popular Liberation Front of Azawad, Takoba, Timia, Mount Tahat, Asselar man, Revolutionary Armed Forces of the Sahara, Amenokal, Revolutionary Liberation Army of Azawad, Djado Plateau, Assode, Moussa Ag Amastan, Ubari, Azawagh and Ayr region, Tamust, Empires of Sand, Azjar. Excerpt: The Tuareg (also Twareg or Touareg, Berber: Imuhagh, besides regional ethnyms) are a Berber nomadic pastoralist people. They are the principal inhabitants of the Saharan interior of North Africa. They call themselves variously Kel Tamasheq or Kel Tamajaq; ("Speakers of Tamasheq"), Imuhagh, Imazaghan or Imashaghen ("the Free people"), or Kel Tagelmust, i.e., "People of the Veil." The name Tuareg was applied to them by early explorers and historians (since Leo Africanus). The origin and meaning of the name Tuareg has long been debated with various etymologies advance...