Grand-Bassam
Grand-Bassam izvafa widava ( francavon Ville historique de Grand-Bassam ), tir burkaf debak ke Koteivoira. Grand-Bassam tir tano katcalapafo izvaxo ke tawava nume bak 2012 wetce arayaf debak ke tamavafa gadakiewega ke UNESCO zo bendeyer.
Taneafu kelu ke Koteivoira, Grand-Bassam izvafa widava tir boniaxofa widavafa tula ke tena ke XIX-eafa decemda is taneafu acku ke XX-eafa decemda. Va azedera ton revava tuaptana gu kaza ok ristula ok europafo irubaxo oku lizukafo tarkar. Debak va Nzima afrikafa onasa wida dere ruldar, is va konaka tula ke boniarafa vegeduropa, i va tulon flifa mona dem lupaxa ik tciga is jontika matela. Grand-Bassam tiyir moltafu is skapafu is malyerotafu kelu ke Koteivoira ; va birtafa seltafa skeda wal europik is afrikik az lizor mu volruptesuca vrutackar. Widava tiyir skapaf rizack ke tawavo dem francafo kazaxo kene Guinea pargalu, abdi witafa Koteivoira, ise va yona sanelia mal cuga coyunta ke Afrika is Europa is mediterraneafa Asia al koimpar. ~ UNESCO : Grand-Bassam (en) The first capital of Côte d’Ivoire, the Historic Town of Grand-Bassam, is an example of a late 19th- and early 20th-century colonial town planned with quarters specializing in commerce, administration, housing for Europeans and for Africans. The site includes the N’zima African fishing village alongside colonial architecture marked by functional houses with galleries, verandas and gardens. Grand-Bassam was the most important port, economic and judicial centre of Côte d’Ivoire. It bears witness to the complex social relations between Europeans and Africans, and to the subsequent independence movement. As a vibrant centre of the territory of French trading posts in the Gulf of Guinea, which preceded modern Côte d’Ivoire, it attracted populations from all parts of Africa, Europe and the Mediterranean Levant. ~ UNESCO website, licence CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0
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