Aurès Mountains

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The Aures Mountains (Template:Langx, known in antiquity as Template:Langx) are a subrange of the Saharan Atlas in northeastern Algeria.<ref name="Encyclopedia Britannica 1998">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The mountain range gives its name to the mountainous natural and historical region of the Aurès.

GeographyEdit

The Aures mountains are the eastern continuation of the Saharan Atlas. The highest peak in the Aurès mountain range is Djebel Chélia in Khenchela Province, which sits at Template:Convert.

The Belezma Range is a northwestern prolongation of the Aures Mountains located where the Tell Atlas and the Saharan Atlas come together. Its main summits are Template:Convert high Djebel Refaâ and Template:Convert high Djebel Tichaou.<ref>Belezma National Park - Travel to Algeria</ref> The Atlas chain of mountains extends over 1000 kilometers in total over Northern Africa.

HistoryEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Historically, the Aures served as a refuge and bulwark for the Berber tribes, forming a base of resistance against the Romans, Vandals, Byzantine, and Arabs along the centuries.<ref name=Conant>Template:Cite book</ref>

The mountain area was also a district of French Algeria that existed during and after the Algerian War of Independence from 1954 to 1962. It was in this region that the Algerian War of Independence was started by Berber freedom fighters. The rugged terrain of the Aures makes it still one of the least developed areas in the Maghreb.

PopulationEdit

In eastern Algeria, the Aures is a large Berber-speaking region, home of the Chaoui people. The Chaoui eastern Berber population practices traditional transhumance, farming fixed stone terraces in the mountains where they grow sorghum, as well as other grains and vegetables. Seasonally they move their cattle to relatively warm areas in the lowland valleys where they pitch tents or live in other temporary structures and tend livestock through the winter.<ref>La vie économique du Chaouia de l'Aures</ref>

FeaturesEdit

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

Template:Mountains of Algeria Template:Major African geological formations

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