el-Djerid, also al-Jarīd, (; Tunisian Arabic: Jrīd; ) or more precisely the South Western Tunisia Region is a semi-desert natural region comprising three southern Governorates, Gafsa, Kebili and Tozeur with adjacent parts of Algeria and Libya.
It remains the principal center of Ibadi in North Africa, with remaining Ibāḍī communities on Djerba in Tunisia, in the M'zab in Algeria, and in Jabal Nafusa in Libya. In Middle Ages times, it often formed a politically separate entity under the control of Ibāḍī .
In administrative terms, it is associated in Tunisia with the province (governorate) of Tozeur and, at least in part and according to some sources, also the province of Gafsa and Kebili. The latter is part of the Nefzaoua region, which is sometimes considered part of Jerid.Morris, Peter; Jacobs, Daniel. The Rough Guide to Tunisia . 6th ed. London: Rough Guide, 2001. p.297 .
The region is dotted with oases scattered between two (largely dry salt lakes most of the time). Among the chotts stands out Chott el Jerid. In economic terms, the region stands out for its production of date palm, namely the superior deglet nour variety, and since the 1990s tourism has gained importance. There is also the mining of phosphate deposits, mainly in the north of the region (Gafsa).
With the arrival of Christianity, the region hosted two bishopric, one in Thusurus (Tozeur) and one in Nepte (Nefta). After a fleeting passage of the Vandals in the 5th century AD, the rule of the Byzantines continued until the invasion of the Muslim Arabs of the Umayyad Empire in the 7th century, who occupied all of Tunisia and Arabized and Islamized.Puig, Nicolas. Bédouins sédentarisés et société citadine à Tozeur (Sud-Ouest tunisien) (in French). Paris: Karthala, 2004. p.32. During the Middle Ages, Jerid had remarkable economic progress, mainly due to the strategic position in the caravan routes that connected the Mediterranean Basin to sub-Saharan Africa. Until the 11th century, the trade routes and movement of gold were managed by Ibadi Arabs of the Djarid. Among the "goods" transported were numerous slaves, who were bought to work in the oases. During the Ottoman Empire period, the region was the scene of revolts against high taxes and nomadic incursions. The relative decline of the region since that time is due in large part to the loss of the strategic and economic importance of the trans-Saharan trade.
Biledulgerid was a term used in early European maps for the Maghreb south of the Atlas Mountains.
In ethnic terms, the population results from the intermarriage of native Berbers, , and slaves from sub-Saharan Africa.
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