Luuq


title: "Luuq" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["populated-places-in-gedo", "jubba-river"] topic_path: "general/populated-places-in-gedo" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luuq" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox settlement"]

FieldValue
official_nameLuuq
settlement_typeCity
image_skylineLuuq.jpg
image_captionThe town Luuq on a half island of Juba river
image_sealGedo Coat of Arms.jpg
pushpin_mapSomalia#Horn of Africa#Africa
pushpin_map_captionLocation within Somalia##Location within the Horn of Africa##Location within Africa
pushpin_relief1
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameSomalia
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_type3State
subdivision_name3Gedo
subdivision_type4Capital
subdivision_name4Garbahaarreey
unit_prefMetric
population_total134,000
timezoneEAT
utc_offset+3
coordinates
::

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Luuq (, , ) is a city in the southwestern Gedo province of Somalia. It is one of the older settlements in the area. It is the seat of the Luuq District. The town is located in a bend of the Ganana River, where the watercourse flows down from north to south in a horseshoe shape. Luuq is also known as Luuq Ganaane.

Overview

The name Luuq in the Somali language means "alley" by virtue of the city's geographical setting. The river has great influence on the city and its surrounding areas. The entrance of the city gate is situated not more than 100 meters from the river banks on both the eastern and western sides of the town. About 4 km past the city center and main Luuq Market, the river encloses the city again completely.

History

Medieval

With the expansion of coastal-interior trade in the south, both the coastal town of Benadir and its inland sister "town of Luuq" on upper Jubba had grown into an important emporium. The Bender-Luuq caravan trade used the southern region of Ethiopia as an economic catchment area to access new and valued commodities such as coffee, gold, and slaves. In the Shebelle and Jubba valleys, the emergence of the political power of the gasaargude saldante coincided with this period of southern expansion of the interior caravan trade which boosted urban centers across the inter-riverine regions. The Ajuran Somalis "established and maintained control over the coastal regions and built roads connecting the interior urban centers which further boosted prosperity in southern Somalia. As the political power grew, so the Ajuran extended their control of the coastal-interior caravan trade reaching Ethiopia."

Among the most important inland market towns were Luuq and Bardera on the Ganana river. Then the goods from the interior were exported as far as Southeast Asia.

Early Modern

Luuq was one of the most important cities in Geledi Sultanate led by the Gasaaragude dynasty part of the Geledi federation that governed the upper Jubba region. Luuq was the largest city in Jubba river and served as the military center for the kingdom. All prisoners were locked in the Luuq prison facility. Anyone who wanted to join the army were trained in Luuq. All the weapons were made in Luuq. According to captain Thomas Smee in his 1811 report to the authorities of British India wrote the city was heavily fortified and had over 2 thousand stone houses with mosques, roads including palaces, and castles in the center.

According to Scott Rees, the importance of the locally made cotton cloth Futa Benaadir "lay in its exchange". The inland commercial centers in Jubbaland "formerly a seat of flourishing and extensive trade, and a commercial and enterprising people" and the coastal commercial nodes of the Benadir, particularly Barawa, provided goods for the interior markets. The caravans from the Benadir stopped in Bale to attract trade goods from the surrounding regions. Cattle barter for "expensive beads, copper, and better quality goods" was popular. The traders of Luuq "reached such sophistication that [they had] a highly developed system of weights and measures, credit was available, and written contracts were signed between the merchants the caravans who carried their merchandise into the interior". The importance of Luuq was its proximity to the Arsi and Borana regions. Market transactions between Luuq-based Somali traders and the Oromo pastoralists were complex in terms of methods used to obtain ivory, the most valued trade item, from the interior: "Somali traders (Rahaween tribe) would first have to exchange cotton cloth for cattle from the Oromo herdsmen. The cattle were then traded to the hunters for ivory."

Colonial Period

Luuq came under indirect Italian control by 1907, and Italian interest in the town was serious enough for them to demarcate the only segment of the Somali-Ethiopian boundary in order to include Luuq as part of Italian Somaliland.

Modern

After independence in 1960, the city was made the center of the official Luuq District and served as the political center for Gedo region.

After the collapse of the Somali Democratic Republic in 1991, a Sharia court was opened in Luuq and the surrounding district came to be one of the safest regions in Somalia during the civil war. The town was later governed by Al-Itihaad Al-Islamiya until its administration was toppled by Ethiopian troops in 1996.

On March 7, 2011, Transitional Federal Government forces and allied militia captured Luuq from Al-Shabaab rebels, encountering little or no resistance.

In 2013, Luuq and other settlements in the wider Gedo region were officially incorporated into the newly formed Jubaland autonomous state.

Demographics

Luuq has a population of around 41,000 inhabitants. The broader Luuq District has a total population of 185,703 residents.

Climate

Luuq has a hot desert climate (Köppen climate classification BWh). It has two very short rainy seasons, in April/May and October/November, due to the passages of the Intertropical Convergence Zone. However, these two rainy seasons are extremely unreliable even vis-à-vis other similar hot and arid regions of the globe. Averages high temperatures exceed 40 °C in March, the hottest month of the year. Averages high temperatures remain above 33 °C during July and August, the least hot months of the year. Averages low temperatures are always above 20 °C throughout the whole year. Annual average rainfall is only 272 mm and the city receives just too little annual rainfall to achieve a “semi-arid” climate classification. Luuq is one of the hottest places year-round on Earth as the annual daily mean temperature exceeds 30 °C. The sky is almost always clear year-round and fair weather is extremely reliable.

|metric first = Y |single line = Y |temperature colour = pastel |Jan high C = 38.6 |Feb high C = 39.6 |Mar high C = 40.5 |Apr high C = 38.3 |May high C = 36.0 |Jun high C = 35.0 |Jul high C = 33.5 |Aug high C = 33.8 |Sep high C = 36.0 |Oct high C = 37.1 |Nov high C = 37.5 |Dec high C = 37.8 |year high C = |Jan mean C = 31.5 |Feb mean C = 32.3 |Mar mean C = 33.2 |Apr mean C = 31.8 |May mean C = 30.3 |Jun mean C = 29.5 |Jul mean C = 28.2 |Aug mean C = 28.2 |Sep mean C = 29.6 |Oct mean C = 30.5 |Nov mean C = 30.5 |Dec mean C = 30.5 |Jan low C = 23.8 |Feb low C = 24.5 |Mar low C = 25.3 |Apr low C = 25.0 |May low C = 24.8 |Jun low C = 23.8 |Jul low C = 23.1 |Aug low C = 22.6 |Sep low C = 23.5 |Oct low C = 23.7 |Nov low C = 23.7 |Dec low C = 23.0 |year low C = |rain colour = green |Jan rain mm = 1.0 |Feb rain mm = 1.0 |Mar rain mm = 18.0 |Apr rain mm = 82.0 |May rain mm = 52.0 |Jun rain mm = 2.0 |Jul rain mm = 2.0 |Aug rain mm = 1.0 |Sep rain mm = 3.0 |Oct rain mm = 48.0 |Nov rain mm = 50.0 |Dec rain mm = 12.0 |source 1 = Luuq Climate |url=http://www.faoswalim.org/subsites/River_Atlas_Files/River_Atlas_Documents/atlas/River_Atlas_Som_Luug_146-157.pdf |title= Luuq Climate |publisher= River Atlas Files |accessdate=4 November 2011}} |date=November 2011

Notable people

  • Mohamed Omar Salihi (1952-2021) - marine scientist and engineer
  • Suud Olat is a Somali American actor, refugee activist and storyteller. When he was just six months old, Suud and his family were forced to leave their entire life behind and flee to neighboring Kenya after civil war broke out in his native Somalia.

Notes

References

References

  1. Mohammed, Salah. (2005). "Huddur & the History of Southern Somalia". Nahda Bookshop Publisher.
  2. Obba, Gufu. (2014). "Climate Change Adaptation in Africa". Routledge.
  3. Obba, Gufu. (2014). "Climate Change Adaptation in Africa". Routledge.
  4. (25 February 2003). "Historical Dictionary of Somalia". Scarecrow Press.
  5. Edward A. Alpers, [https://www.jstor.org/stable/181253 "Muqdisho in the Nineteenth Century: A Regional Perspective", ''Journal of African History''], 24 (1983), p. 444
  6. Obba, Gufu. (2014). "Climate Change Adaptation in Africa". Routledge.
  7. Lewis, ''Modern History'', pp. 88f
  8. Elmi, Afyare Abdi. (2010-06-15). "Understanding the Somalia Conflagration: Identity, Political Islam and Peacebuilding". Pambazuka Press.
  9. Deforche, Robrecht. "Stabilization and common identity: reflections on the Islamic Courts Union and Al-Itihaad". Bildhaan.
  10. Guled, Abdi. (2011-03-07). "Somali president claims victory in war with rebels". [[Seattle Times]].
  11. (2011-03-07). "Somali troops, militia take two towns from rebels". [[Reuters]].
  12. (28 August 2013). "Somalia: Jubaland gains recognition after intense bilateral talks in Ethiopia". Garowe Online.
  13. "Somalia City & Town Population". Tageo.
  14. "Regions, districts, and their populations: Somalia 2005 (draft)". UNDP.
  15. Dewar, Robert E. and Wallis, James R; ‘Geographical patterning of interannual rainfall variability in the tropics and near tropics: An L-moments approach’; in ''[[Journal of Climate]]'', 12; pp. 3457-3466

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populated-places-in-gedojubba-river