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Cotonou
(redirected from Cotonou, Benin)

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Cotonou (kōtōn`), city (1992 pop. 536,827), capital of Atlantique prov., S Benin, on the Gulf of Guinea. It is Benin's chief seaport and commercial center. Cotonou's airport and road and rail connections also make it the transportation and communications hub of Benin. The city has small-scale industries; manufactures include palm oil and cake, brewing, textiles, cement and other construction materials, aluminum sheet, beverages, and processed seafood. Motor vehicles and bicycles are assembled, and there are sawmills in the city. Cotonou is a distribution center for petroleum products, and bauxite and iron are exported (primarily to Guinea) from there. Drilling for offshore oil is carried on nearby. Cotonou was originally a small state that was dominated by the kingdom of Dahomey (see Benin Benin , officially Republic of Benin, republic (2005 est. pop. 7,460,000), 43,483 sq mi (112,622 sq km), W Africa, bordering on Togo in the west, on Burkina Faso and Niger in the north, on Nigeria in the east, and on the Bight of Benin (an arm of the Gulf of Guinea)
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) from the 18th cent. In 1851 the French made a treaty with the Dahomean king Gezo that allowed them to establish a trading post at Cotonou. In 1883 the French navy forcibly occupied the city to forestall British ambitions in the area. The port was enlarged and modernized in the 1960s. Cotonou has research institutes concerned with textiles, tropical agriculture, and geology.

Cotonou

Port city (pop., 1998: 649,580), de facto capital of Benin. Situated along the Gulf of Guinea, it is the starting point of the Benin-Niger Railway and the site of deepwater port facilities, completed in 1965, that serve both Benin and Togo. Cotonou is the economic hub of Benin and its largest urban centre. Its industries include brewing, textile production, and palm-oil processing. It is home to the National University of Benin (1970).


Cotonou
the chief port and official capital of Benin, on the Bight of Benin. Pop.: 891 000 (2005 est.)

Cotonou 

a city and port in southern Dahomey, on the coast of the Gulf of Guinea. Population, 120,000 (1967). A railroad station. The city exports oil-palm kernels and oil, copra, coffee, and cotton. Beer, oil, and soap are produced in Cotonou. A sawmill is located in the city. Cotonou’s inhabitants engage in wood carving, basket weaving, and other cottage industries.



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Byline: The Tripoli Post Summary: Ninety five Sultans, Emirs and chiefs of African tribes in Benin, Togo and Ghana entered Islam on Monday as they came for an audience with the Leader of the Revolution Muammar Al-Qathafi in Cotonou, Benin.
Byline: TOM PARRY in COTONOU, BENIN HIDDEN away in a corner of this foul and sprawling market, boys as young as five toil in the festering heat.
In Cotonou, Benin, at the Congress of the African Society of Gynaecologists and Obstetricians (SAGO), in the Palais des Congres, December 13-18, 2004, I received a very warm welcome from Madame Laurence Odounlami Monteiro, President of the Association of Midwives of Benin, and the President of the Congress, Professor Alihonou.
 
 
 
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