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Dongola
2 reference results for: Dongola
Columbia Encyclopedia
Dongola, region, part of Northern state, Republic of Sudan. Old Dongola, c.75 mi (120 km) south of the present city of Dongola, was the capital of the Christian kingdom of Makurra or Nubia. It was taken by the Mamluks in 1275. The first Muslim ruler, a puppet of the Mamluks, ascended the throne in 1315. His successor gained independence in 1325, but the Muslims reconquered the land in 1366 and the capital was abandoned. Dongola was briefly ruled (1811-20) by Mamluk refugees from Egypt. The Mahdists, in the course of their revolt, held it from 1885 to 1896.
Wikipedia

You may be looking for the U.S. town of Dongola, Illinois.

Dongola (also spelled Dunqulah or Dunqula and formerly sometimes known as Al 'Urdi) is the capital of the state of Northern in Sudan, on the banks of the Nile. It should not be confused with Old Dongola, an ancient city located 80 km upstream on the opposite bank.

Dongola was also a province of Upper Nubia on both sides of the Nile and a centre for Nubian civilisations as manifested by its many archaeological remains from the Makurian, Orthodox and Islamic periods. The remains of the revered Baqt Treaty are to found in Dongola. The province of Dongola was part of the Makuria kingdom, which later became part of Egypt after Muhammad Ali Pasha ordered for the invasion and occupation of Sudan in 1820 after which it was designated as a seat of a pasha.

Dongola is a small, multicultural town, which has given its name to numerous other towns, particularly in the USA.

It was the scene of a victory by General Herbert Kitchener over the indigenous Mahdist tribes in 1896. Dongola Road in the Bishopston area of Bristol was named after this event. So was Dongola Road in Tottenham, North London which runs next to Kitchener Road.

Climate

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