States of Sudan

From Free net encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 15:09, 22 March 2006
BanyanTree (Talk | contribs)
change Junqali to [[Jonglei]] per page move, some copyediting
Next diff →

Current revision

Image:Sudan political map 2000.jpg Anglo-Egyptian Sudan had eight mudiriyas, or provinces, which were ambiguous when created but became well defined by the beginning of the Second World War. The eight provinces were: Blue Nile, Darfur, Equatoria, Kassala, Khartoum, Kurdufan, Northern, and Upper Nile. In 1948 Bahr al Ghazal split from Equatoria.

There were numerous new provinces created on 1 July 1973. North and South Darfur were created from Darfur, while Kurdufan divided into North and South Kurdufan. Al Jazirah and White Nile were split off from Blue Nile. River Nile split off from Northern. Red Sea was split off from Kassala.

A further fracturing of provinces occurred in 1976. Lakes split from Bahr al Ghazal, and Jonglei split off from Upper Nile. Equatoria divided into East and West Equatoria. There were thus eighteen provinces. In 1991, the government reorganized the administrative regions into nine federal states, matching the nine provinces that had existed from 1948 to 1973. On 14 February 1994, the government reorganized yet again, creating twenty-six wilayat (states). The majority of the wilayat were either the old provinces or administrative subregions of a province. As part of the new government structure in South Sudan in 2005, Bahr al Jabal was renamed Central Equatoria.

List

Below is a list of the 26 states of Sudan organized by their original provinces under British rule. Arabic language versions are, as appropriate, in parentheses. States that were never provinces prior to 1994 are marked with a (*). Transliterations from Arabic to English may vary; in particular, the article "al" is sometimes transliterated as "el".

External links

Template:Sudande:Sudanesische Bundesstaaten es:Estados de Sudán fa:سودان fr:Subdivisions du Soudan id:Negara Bagian di Sudan nl:Staten van Soedan