Mtsamboro Explained

Mtsamboro
Commune Status:Commune
Map:Locator map of Mtsamboro 2018.png
Map Caption:Location of the commune (in red) within Mayotte
Canton:Mtsamboro
Insee:97612
Postal Code:97630
Mayor:Laïthidine Ben Saïd[1]
Term:2020 - 2026
Intercommunality:CA Grand Nord de Mayotte
Coordinates:-12.701°N 45.068°W
Elevation Min M:0
Elevation Max M:480
Area Km2:13.71
Population:7705
Population Date:2017
Population Footnotes:[2]

Mtsamboro (in French pronounced as /mtsɑ̃bɔʁo/) is a small fishing town and commune in northwest Mayotte, a French overseas department in the Indian Ocean. Its population according to the 2017 census is 7,705.[2] Included in the commune are the Choazil Islands and Chissioua Mtsamboro. The main economic activity is fishing and orange production.

History

Archaeology has revealed an occupation existed in thirteenth and fourteenth centuries on the Jiva beach named Mshambara,[3] and traces of a medina dating from the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries in the quartier of Mjikura. Mtsamboro has an important place in the history of Mayotte: this town was the first capital of the Shirazi Sultanate as it hosted the first Sultan of Mayotte at the end of the fifteenth century. Mtsamboro was the main commercial port of the island and was visited by many European vessels. The town, like many others in Mayotte, was ruined and abandoned in the eighteenth century. In Mjikura are the ruins of a royal palace and tombs, an important location for the Sultans of Mayotte.[4] [5]

Geography

The village of Mtsamboro lies on the northwest coast of the island along National Road 1.[6] To the northeast is the village of Mtsahara and to the southwest is Mtsangadoua. Two small peninsulas jut out in the village area, the larger of which lies roughly a mile north of the village centre and separates the main village of Mtsamboro and Hamjago from Mtsahara.[6] The larger peninsula is also the nearest point of land to Choazil Island, which with another form the Choazil Islands.[6] [7] This stretch of water is known as the Choazil Passage, part of the Mozambique Channel.[8] North of the Choazil Islands is the larger Chissioua Mtsamboro (widely known as Zamburu Island); both islands are under the administration of the commune of Mtsamboro. Chissiou Mtsamboro is separated from the Choazil Islands by the Zamburu Passage.[9] Chissiou Mtsamboro is a mountainous island, providing shelter to the main stretch of beach, tucked away in the southwest of the island which contains a main settlement and numerous huts dotted along the beach. The area to the southeast is heavily forested and forms part of the Reserve Forestiere Des Cretes Du Nord.[6] To the east is a mountain called Dziani Bole, with an altitude of 472 metres.

Climate

Mtsamboro has a tropical savanna climate (Köppen climate classification Aw). The average annual temperature in Mtsamboro is . The average annual rainfall is with January as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in April, at around, and lowest in August, at around . The highest temperature ever recorded in Mtsamboro was on 12 April 2020; the coldest temperature ever recorded was on 9 September 2000.

Economy

The economy is mainly based around agriculture and fishing; it is notable area for orange production.[10]

Notable landmarks

The main mosque is Wemani Mosque. It contains the Collège de M'tsamboro and Hôtel Mtsamboro. There are at least 3 small sports grounds, two of which lie in very close proximity to the larger peninsula, near Mtsahara.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Répertoire national des élus: les maires. data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises. 13 September 2022. fr.
  2. https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/3291775?sommaire=2120838 Populations légales de Mayotte en 2017
  3. Book: Maestri. Edmond. Université de la Réunion. Esclavage et abolitions dans l'océan indien: (1723 - 1860) : actes du colloque de Saint-Denis de la Réunion organisé par l'Université de la Réunion ..., 4 - 8 décembre 1998. 15 June 2011. 2002. L'Harmattan. 978-2-7475-3017-0.
  4. Book: Mayotte. 15 June 2011. Petit Futé. 978-2-7469-3606-5. 164. 2011.
  5. Web site: Mayotte et les Comores, Escales Sur la Route des Indes. Babelio. 16 June 2011.
  6. Google Maps. Google. 15 June 2011-->.
  7. Book: United States. Hydrographic Office. South Indian Ocean pilot: Islands westward of longitude 92 ̊east including Madagascar and the Comoro Islands. 15 June 2011. 1927. G.P.O..
  8. Book: United States. Hydrographic Office. Publications. 15 June 2011. 1 January 1952. 157.
  9. Book: Rosser. William Henry. Imray. James Frederick. The seaman's guide to the navigation of the Indian Ocean and China Sea: including a description of the wind, storms, tides, currents, &c., sailing directions; a full account of all the islands; with notes on making passages during the different seasons. 15 June 2011. 1867. J. Imray & Son. 364.
  10. Book: Auzias. Dominique. Labourdette. Jean-Paul. Mayotte. 15 June 2011. 2008. Petit Futé. 978-2-7469-1967-9. 160.