FACTS ABOUT ALGERIA
AMAZING FACTS ABOUT ALGERIA
1.
The
official name of Algeria is the “People's Democratic Republic of Algeria”.
2.
Algiers is the capital city of Algeria.
3.
The
total population of Algeria is 40,263,711.
4.
The
natives of Algeria are called Algerians.
5.
The
Dinar (DZD) is official currency of Algeria.
6.
Algeria
shares a border with Mauritiana, Mali, Niger, Libya, Tunisia and Morocco.
7.
Algeria
is commonly called the country of cherries and dates. This refers to the
various types of weather found here; a mild climate in the north and a dry, hot
one in the Saharan south. Algerian dates are known to be some of the best on
earth. Visitors are traditionally greeted by being offered dates and milk.
8.
The
official name of Algeria is the People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria and its
National Holiday is also known as Revolution Day, honoring the day the final
bid for independence began on the first of November decades ago.
9.
Algeria’s
official language is Arabic. The people speak Arabic, Berber (called Tamazight
and Amazigh) or French. Algerian Arabic (called darja) is spoken by well over
half the population as well. Although English is not commonly spoken, it is
taught in Algerian schools.
10.
Algeria’s
official religion is Islam and it is illegal to proselytize (advocate or
promote) to the people about any other religion. The legal system is based on
the French court system and Sharia law.
11.
Even
though Western clothing is common, mostly in urban areas, traditional Muslim
clothing is also common. In areas under Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) control,
people wear some form of traditional garb, particularly the women. It is
considered proper to be dressed conservatively in public and modest clothing is
worn by all Algerians. The militant Islamists demand that women be veiled and
they are more than willing to enforce their orders.
12.
The
national animal of Algeria is the Fennec fox and their national football team
(soccer) is named after the animal: “Les Fennecs”. Football (soccer) is
Algeria’s national sport. The fennec is a small desert fox with
disproportionately large ears.
13.
Hospitality
is important among the Algerian people. It is a blend of Arabic customs with
French Gallic traditions. Everyone is cordial to strangers and friends alike.
In a small gathering, it is polite to greet each person individually, beginning
with the elders. Handshakes are common but using your fingers to point at
objects or people is considered rude. Never use the left hand separately: when
handing someone something, do it with the right hand or both hands.
14.
In
this male dominant society, sex roles are clearly defined. (Nevertheless, some
women do fill important positions in public and private professions.) Fathers
handle family finances while mothers take care of the children and the home.
Men often meet at coffeehouses to play games like chess, checkers, and
dominoes. The women tend to socialize in each others’ homes.
15.
Close
friends and relatives visit each other frequently and don’t have to have an
invitation or let each other know first. Others are expected to make advance
plans. When visiting someone socially, it is customary to bring the host a
small gift.
16.
Speech
in conversations that is too direct and frank is considered impolite. Key
attributes of the Algerian national character are courtesy and formality.
17.
All
but two percent of Algeria’s exports are fossil fuels. Petroleum and natural
gas make up 98 percent of the country’s exports. The country’s crude oil
reserves are the 16th largest in the world with 12,200 million barrels of oil
reserves (at the start of 2017). Algeria is also Africa’s largest oat market.
18.
Algeria
owes no money to other countries; it has no external debt. Unfortunately, one
in every four of its citizens lives on less than a dollar a day. Many Algerians
are poor. This situation is made worse by the fact that Algeria has North
Africa’s highest cost of living. The national currency is the Algerian Dinar.
19.
Only
about three percent of the country’s land is cultivated, far too little for
feeding their population self-sufficiently. As a result, malnutrition is one of
the nation’s principal health problems. Five percent of Algeria’s population is
undernourished, according to the World Bank.
20.
Free
national health care was introduced by the government in 1974 and helps pay for
those who are sick and injured. Nearly all of the people living in urban areas
and 80 percent of the population in rural areas have access to adequate
sanitation.
21.
Algeria’s
literacy rate is 80 percent; more men can read than women. Women have
traditionally been discouraged from attending school to stay home with their
mothers. French is the instructional language at school. English is taught as
well.
22.
Only
12 percent of Algeria’s land area is inhabited. The northern coastal area is
home to 90 percent of the population while the remaining nomadic or partly
nomadic population lives in oases in the Sahara desert. Twenty-nine percent of
Algerians are under 15 years old.
23.
People
gather for helping in the harvest and then feasting in a celebration known as
“La Touiza”. Huge amounts of the national dish of couscous are served after the
hard work of harvest.
24.
Algerian
born Nobel Prize winners are Albert Camus and Claude Cohen-Tannoudj (Physics,
1997). Camus (Literature, 1957) was the goal keeper for the football (soccer)
team while at the University of Algiers. His family was French and lived in
Algeria during the colonial years.
25.
Algeria
has competed at every summer Olympics since 1964, winning five gold medals and
17 medals overall. They won two silver medals in the 2016 games in Brazil.
26.
Women
in Algeria, unlike those in other Islamic nations, make up 60 percent of the
student population. They also have considerable prominence in society as 70
percent of Algeria’s lawyers and 60 percent of its judges are women. Algerian
women make a larger contribution to household income than their male
counterparts.
27.
The
largest country by area in all of Africa is Algeria. It is the tenth-largest in
the world.
28.
Only
12 percent of its land is inhabited. Over 90 percent of the country is covered
by the Sahara desert.
29.
The
capital city of Algeria is Algiers, which is also the country’s largest city.
30.
Algeria
is in North Africa and is located on the Mediterranean Ocean with Morocco to
the west and Tunisia to the east.
31.
Algeria
recorded its record high temperature in August of 2011. The thermometer topped
off at 123.8°F (51°C). Its coastal region, though, has a typical Mediterranean
climate that is pleasant all year round. Rainfall is abundant along the coast
and scarce in the desert. The mountains receive a lot of frost and some snow.
32.
Mount
Tahat is Algeria’s highest mountain and is 3,003 meters (1.9 miles) high. Its
longest river is the Chelif. It flows from near the city of Aflou through the
Tell Atlas to empty into the Mediterranean and is 700 kilometers (435 miles)
long.
33.
Algeria’s
Tassili National Park is also called “Plateau of the Rivers”. It is a large
open sky museum where there are many prehistoric rock art drawings and other
archaeological sites from the Neolithic era. Some drawings are called the
‘Aliens on the rocks’.
34.
Algeria’s
mountainous and fertile northern regions have cork and olive trees. There are
also evergreen forests that are home to wild boars and jackals. Various palm,
agave and fig trees also grow in the warmer climates. Grapes are native to the
coastal plain.
35.
Central
Algeria has the region of High Plateaus with shallow or dry lakes and salt
marshes. The further south you travel, the more arid the land and climate
becomes. The vegetation here is sparse. Rabbits, snakes, scorpions, and camels live
in the desert climate.
36.
There
are seven UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Algeria.
37.
Al
Qal’a of Beni Hammad is ruins of an ancient fortified Muslim city that give us
an authentic picture of the style of life there. The Kasbah of Algiers (also
spelled Casbah) is a historic citadel Napoleon III visited in 1860.
38.
Timgad
is a Roman-Berber ruin in the Aurés Mountains. Djémála features some of the
best preserved Berbero-Roman ruins in North Africa. They demonstrate a unique
adaptation of Roman architecture to a mountainous environment.
39.
The
M’Zab Valley contains five “walled villages” or ksours (qsurs) known as the
Pentapolis. Tipasa is a ruined city on the central coast of the Mediterranean
that emperor Claudius turned into a military colony.
40.
During
Algeria’s history, the country has been ruled by Romans, Germanic tribes,
Byzantines, the Spanish, Turks and the French. In its earliest time, the
country was known as Numidia.
41.
There
are many interesting architectural sites of significant historical interest in
Algeria and seven of them have been designated UNESCO World Heritage
Sites.
42.
The
8th and 11th centuries AD saw the arrival
in Algeria of Islam and with it the Arabic language. The introduction of both
had a significant impact on all the Maghreb (North African) people with changes
in economic and social relationships and the establishment of links with a rich
and well-established culture.
43.
Algeria’s
political history is interesting and full of conflict. More than a million
Europeans were captured and then sold as slaves in North Africa. France
conquered Algeria in 1830 and the practice stopped. France ruled Algeria until
1962.
44.
The
modern borders of Algeria were established by the French during their
colonization. Though France controlled the entire country, the traditional
Muslim rural communities remained separated from the French’s economic
infrastructure and the European community in their country.
45.
The
French in Algeria were known as Colons (colonists) or pieds noirs (black feet)
and they controlled both the government and the majority of the country’s
wealth. Political unrest in the 1930s made the Colons burden the people with
more restrictive laws.
46.
The
Algerians Muslims did fight with the French in World War I and World War II but
from 1954 to 1962 Algeria was engaged in a fight with France for their
independence that was bloody and long. It resulted in more than a million
Algerian deaths. The conflict involved many atrocities, including guerrilla
warfare, terrorism and counter-terrorism, and torture.
47.
Algeria’s
modern flag was designed to symbolize very specific points. The colors are
green, red and white. The green, believed to be the Prophet Muhammad’s
(P.B.U.H) favorite color, represents Islam and paradise (nature). Red
symbolizes the deaths and sacrifice of all those who fought for Algeria’s
independence, and for liberty. White symbolizes purity and peace. To be
acceptable for the flag, the exact wavelength that each color must absorb is
specified officially, which is highly unusual for an African country’s flag.
48.
The
current Algerian flag was adopted on 3 July 1962.
49.
Algeria
mediated negotiations between Iran and the U.S. in 1980 to liberate the
Americas hostages Iran kidnapped from the American embassy. This led to the
signing of the Algiers Accords and the prisoners’ release.
50.
Algerian
cuisine has been influenced by the ancient cultures and various countries that
have visited and/or ruled it. The Berbers brought wheat cultivation and were
the first to create couscous which is the country’s national dish. The Romans
brought barley and other grains. Vegetables such as potatoes, tomatoes,
chilies, and zucchini came from the New World.
51.
Muslim
Arabs introduced exotic spices like cloves, saffron, ginger, cinnamon, and
nutmeg from Indonesia’s Spice Islands. Olives and olive oil, as well as
peaches, plums, and oranges, came with the Spanish. Tea came from European
traders.
52.
When
the French arrived, they forced the Algerians to surrender their land and crops
to them. In return, the French introduced their culture and cuisine to the
Algerians, including sidewalk cafes, as well as their crusty long loaves of
bread, eaten daily in the country even now.
53.
Today
traditional Algerian cuisine is a colorful combination of Turkish, Berber, Arab
and French influences and tastes. Flavors may be packed with seasonings or
extremely mild. Essential pantry supplies include mint, cinnamon, parsley,
cumin, garlic, coriander, ginger, saffron, onion, parsley, garlic, and onion.
54.
Algeria
produces its own citrus fruit, grapes, cherries, figs, wheat and famous dates,
which some regard as the best in the world. They just can’t produce enough for
all their people, so 45 percent of their food must be imported.
55.
There
are three key Algerian dishes (one is a range of drinks, actually). One is
couscous, a pasta-like dish made from semolina wheat. It is served as a bed for
chicken, meat, lamb, and vegetables. It can even be a dessert with a topping of
cinnamon of other toppings.
56.
Another
is Mechoui. This is a whole roasted lamb cooked on an outdoor spit, prepared
for large group gatherings. Seasoned with herb butter, the skin turns crispy
while the meat inside is cooked tender and juicy. It is usually served with
vegetables and dried fruits as well as bread.
57.
Etzai,
the mint tea popular all over North Africa, is the favorite gift. Alcohol is
forbidden for Muslims. Coffee with cardamom is another drink. Children like to
drink apricot nectar. Fruit or nut-flavored milk drinks called Sharbats are
also popular.
58.
Meals
are eaten at a leisurely pace and are sociable occasion. Food like couscous is
traditionally eaten with the thumb, forefinger and middle finger of the right
hand. Never use more than three fingers or you are displaying greed. Never eat
with the left hand, which is considered unclean. Leaving a little on your plate
is considered a sign that your host is able to amply provide for your needs.
59.
The
atmosphere at the table in a middle-class family may be a bit more elegant. A
servant or young family member may offer each guest a bowl of perfumed water
for washing their hands before dining.
60.
Algeria Exports: petroleum, natural gas, and
petroleum products.
61.
Algeria Imports: capital goods, foodstuffs and
consumer goods.
62.
The
internet country code for Algeria is .dz.
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