Savelugu

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Savelugu
Town & District Capital
Savelugu is located in Ghana
Savelugu
Savelugu
Location Savelugu in Northern region
Coordinates: 9°37′N 0°50′W / 9.617°N 0.833°W / 9.617; -0.833Coordinates: 9°37′N 0°50′W / 9.617°N 0.833°W / 9.617; -0.833
RegionNorthern Region
DistrictSavelugu-Nanton District
Population
 (2012)
 • Total38,074[1]
Time zoneGMT
 • Summer (DST)GMT

Savelugu is a town and the capital of Savelugu Municipal, a municipality in the Northern Region of north Ghana.[2] Savelugu has a 2012 settlement population of 38,074 people.[1] There are many villages under Savelugu kingship. Most of the villages are smaller.

History[]

In the 19th-century Savelugu was the center of one of the major divisions of the Dagomba and ruled over by who was involved in fighting with the raiding forces of the Zabarima (emirate).[3]

Culture[]

Savelugu is one of the native towns of the Dagbon Kingdom and along with Karaga and Mion. It is one of the two traditional areas that are known as the gate skins to the sacred paramountcy of the Dagbon Kingdom, reserved only for the Princes of the Ya-Na.

Economy[]

The town is situated on an economically important route of and serves as the administrative and economic capital of the Savelugu Municipal District. Being an Agricultural hub itself and surrounded by towns and villages whose primary economic activity is Agriculture, it hosts the largest market in the district which serves as the main trade point for farmers in the district and other neighboring districts.

Education[]

The town of Savelugu is known as Yoo yili. Which has Senior High School with the name Savelugu Senior High School (SAVESS), a second cycle institution and the Savelugu School for the Deaf, one of the few schools for the deaf in Ghana. There are also scattered Day-care centers, primary schools and junior high schools within.

References[]

  1. ^ a b "World Gazetteer online". World-gazetteer.com. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007.
  2. ^ Savelugu-Nanton district
  3. ^ [copied Wilks, Ivor. "'He Was With Them': Malam Abu On The Zaberma Of The Middle Volta Basin." Sudanic Africa 4 (1993): 213-22. https://www.jstor.org/stable/25653233.]


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