Tourism in Zanzibar

The islands of Zanzibar are located about 40 kilometers from the African continent, in the shallow coastal waters of the Indian Ocean. As the remnant of an economic center of the Omani Empire, which attained its climax in the middle of the 19th century, Zanzibar today boasts a culture and history closely linked with its historic events: Shirazi, Persian and Omani settlers, Indian and Arabian architecture, spicy dishes, slave caves, and historical figures such as Speke, Livingston and Tipu Tipp have all left their marks. Everywhere on the island, mementos of this past can be seen and are recounted in tales of myth and reality passed down from one generation to the next. Furthermore, the abundance of unique marine and terrestrial fauna and flora make Zanzibar an ideal destination for enthusiasts of tropical island ecosystems. It is perhaps the clove tree, which was introduced to the Zanzibar islands in the 1820s and culminated into a rapidly expanding trade that won Zanzibar its ultimate economic power and popularity. Until today, the name “Spice Islands“ refers to this capital of Swahili culture which is observed along the coast of East Africa. The distinguished mixture of cultures, professions and religions have in the course of time contributed to the metropolitan characteristic typical to this region, and is especially vivid on the islands of Lamu, Mafia and Zanzibar.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Heita-Mwampamba, N.
Format: Theses and Dissertations biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:Tourism,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/344
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-3442021-05-19T06:22:22Z Tourism in Zanzibar Heita-Mwampamba, N. Tourism The islands of Zanzibar are located about 40 kilometers from the African continent, in the shallow coastal waters of the Indian Ocean. As the remnant of an economic center of the Omani Empire, which attained its climax in the middle of the 19th century, Zanzibar today boasts a culture and history closely linked with its historic events: Shirazi, Persian and Omani settlers, Indian and Arabian architecture, spicy dishes, slave caves, and historical figures such as Speke, Livingston and Tipu Tipp have all left their marks. Everywhere on the island, mementos of this past can be seen and are recounted in tales of myth and reality passed down from one generation to the next. Furthermore, the abundance of unique marine and terrestrial fauna and flora make Zanzibar an ideal destination for enthusiasts of tropical island ecosystems. It is perhaps the clove tree, which was introduced to the Zanzibar islands in the 1820s and culminated into a rapidly expanding trade that won Zanzibar its ultimate economic power and popularity. Until today, the name “Spice Islands“ refers to this capital of Swahili culture which is observed along the coast of East Africa. The distinguished mixture of cultures, professions and religions have in the course of time contributed to the metropolitan characteristic typical to this region, and is especially vivid on the islands of Lamu, Mafia and Zanzibar. Unpublished 2005-07-14T08:41:59Z 2005-07-14T08:41:59Z 2003 Theses and Dissertations Bachelor thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1834/344 en 1124057 bytes application/pdf Zanzibar
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Tourism
Tourism
spellingShingle Tourism
Tourism
Heita-Mwampamba, N.
Tourism in Zanzibar
description The islands of Zanzibar are located about 40 kilometers from the African continent, in the shallow coastal waters of the Indian Ocean. As the remnant of an economic center of the Omani Empire, which attained its climax in the middle of the 19th century, Zanzibar today boasts a culture and history closely linked with its historic events: Shirazi, Persian and Omani settlers, Indian and Arabian architecture, spicy dishes, slave caves, and historical figures such as Speke, Livingston and Tipu Tipp have all left their marks. Everywhere on the island, mementos of this past can be seen and are recounted in tales of myth and reality passed down from one generation to the next. Furthermore, the abundance of unique marine and terrestrial fauna and flora make Zanzibar an ideal destination for enthusiasts of tropical island ecosystems. It is perhaps the clove tree, which was introduced to the Zanzibar islands in the 1820s and culminated into a rapidly expanding trade that won Zanzibar its ultimate economic power and popularity. Until today, the name “Spice Islands“ refers to this capital of Swahili culture which is observed along the coast of East Africa. The distinguished mixture of cultures, professions and religions have in the course of time contributed to the metropolitan characteristic typical to this region, and is especially vivid on the islands of Lamu, Mafia and Zanzibar.
format Theses and Dissertations
topic_facet Tourism
author Heita-Mwampamba, N.
author_facet Heita-Mwampamba, N.
author_sort Heita-Mwampamba, N.
title Tourism in Zanzibar
title_short Tourism in Zanzibar
title_full Tourism in Zanzibar
title_fullStr Tourism in Zanzibar
title_full_unstemmed Tourism in Zanzibar
title_sort tourism in zanzibar
publishDate 2003
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/344
work_keys_str_mv AT heitamwampamban tourisminzanzibar
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