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Oualata or Walāta () (also Biru in 17th century chronicles). Walata is the arabized form of the Manding wala meaning a "shady place" while Biru is the Soninke word and has a similar meaning. is a small oasis town in southeast , located at the eastern end of the basin. Oualata was important as a in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries as the southern terminus of a trans-Saharan trade route and now it is a World Heritage Site.

The whole Oualata commune has a total size of , mostly consisting of desert. The main town is located in the south of the commune.


History
The Oualata area is believed to have been first settled by an agro-pastoral people akin to the Mandé who lived along the rocky promontories of the Tichitt-Oualata and Tagant cliffs of Mauritania facing the basin. There, they built what are among the oldest stone settlements on the African continent.

The town formed part of the and grew wealthy through trade. At the beginning of the thirteenth century Oualata replaced as the principal southern terminus of the trans-Saharan trade and developed into an important commercial and religious centre. By the fourteenth century the city had become part of the .

(2025). 9780691177427, Princeton University Press.

An important trans-Saharan route began at and passed through with its salt mines and ended at Oualata. The French historian estimated that in the the town would have accommodated between 2000 and 3000 inhabitants.

Moroccan explorer found the inhabitants of Oualata were Muslim and mainly Massufa, a section of the . He was surprised by the great respect and independence that women enjoyed. He only gives a brief description of the town itself: "My stay at Iwalatan (Oualata) lasted about fifty days; and I was shown honour and entertained by its inhabitants. It is an excessively hot place, and boasts a few small date-palms, in the shade of which they sow watermelons. Its water comes from underground waterbeds at that point, and there is plenty of mutton to be had." His visit highlights the increased use of the Berber name Iwalatan at the expense of the original name Biru, a reflection of the changing identity of the residents. Nevertheless, the , a mix of (Mande) and Berber, was still spoken widely until at least the end of the 16th century.

From the second half of the fourteenth century gradually replaced Oualata as the southern terminus of the trans-Sahara route and it declined in importance, becoming an increasingly poor backwater in comparison to the previous wealth of the town. In 1433, the lost control of Walata. The town was besieged for a month and then sacked by the in 1480. The inhabitants managed to regroup, pursue the invaders as they made off with their spoils, and rescue many of the slaves who had been taken.

The Berber diplomat, traveller and author visited the region in 1509–1510, and gives a description in his book Descrittione dell’Africa: "Walata Kingdom: This is a small kingdom, and of mediocre condition compared to the other kingdoms of the blacks. In fact, the only inhabited places are three large villages and some huts spread about among the palm groves." By that time, the composition of the kingdom seems to have changed to reflect a large -speaking population residing within the town. "The language of this region is called Songhai, and the inhabitants are black people, and the most friendly unto strangers." Oualata was a tributary of the ; also reflected within Africanus' book Descrittione dell’Africa explaining "In my time this region was conquered by the king of Timbuktu and the prince of Oualata fled into the deserts, whereof the king granted him peace conditionally that he pay great yearly tribute and so the prince has remained tributary to the king of Timbuktu until this present."

(2017). 9781317028925, Taylor & Francis. .
Today there is a deserted settlement called Tizert at a distance of 5 km from the town.

The early 17th century saw an influx of into the town, whose influence would lead to the development of the current name, Walata. The local political scene was dominated for a century and a half by the Lemhajib, a group of three families who, like the rest of Biru's Mande population, were gradually assimilated into the Berber and Arab milieu.


Description
The old town covers an area of about , some of it now in ruins. The sandstone buildings are coated with banco and some are decorated with geometric designs. The mosque now lies on the eastern edge of the town but in earlier times may have been surrounded by other buildings. Oualata is home to a , and is known for its highly decorative vernacular architecture. It was made a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996 together with , and .

==Gallery==


See also
  • Ancient Ksour of Ouadane, Chinguetti, Tichitt and Oualata
  • Twelve Doors of the Mali Empire
  • En attendant les hommes, 2007 documentary film about women muralists in Oualata.
  • Mauritania: Oualata, “the big sister of Timbuktu” documentary film on TV5MONDE Info, 2023


Sources


Further reading


External links
  • .

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