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DECLARED MONUMENTS IN NIGERIA
City Wall Kano:
Kano has probably a longer and more fully traceable history than any other
of the cities in Nigeria and its name along with that of Timbuktu throughout
the World, even those who have had no special reason for studying West
Africa in detail.
For nearly ten centuries, a city of Kano, significant in size and importance
has centred round the twin iron-bearing hills of Dalla and Goron Dutsen.
It was in the 15th century A.D, about a century before Shakespeare was
celebrating his own country as this royal throne of Kings. This fortress
built by nature for herself against infection and the hand of war that
Kano under its twentieth Emir, Muhammed Rumfa, achieved its greatest pre-eminence
in Hausaland.
In later times, amidst perpetual wash of balance of tides of forces Kano
was raided, besielged and occasionally conquered; sometimes by its Chief
rivals among the other Hausa states, especially Zaria and Katsina; sometime
by other immigrant peoples who were on the move in the western Sudan,
the Kwarafa, the Kanuri, the Zamfarawa, the Gobir, the Fulani, the Ningi,
the Maradi to say nothing of the British. Through all these vicissitudes,
the essential life of Kano as a centre of trade and communications continued
with little dislocation.
Until the end of the nineteenth century, it prospered as the principal
distribution centre for the trans-saharan caravan routes; during the twentieth,
as the chief collection centre at the rail-head of the Nigerian Railway
Network. The clear outline and depth of the moat is so marked that it
appears in even better preservation than the perimeter wall itself.
Possibly this: Section was never an outer wall, but was built as a second
line of defence, either of the time of Wambai Giwa or at an even later
period.
Declaration:
Declared monument on 15th December, 1964.
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