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Libya

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Libya



Other countries · Atlas
Politics portal

There are twenty-two districts of Libya, known by the term shabiyah (Arabic singular شعبية sha'biyah, plural sha'biyat). In the 1990s these replaced the older baladiyat system.

Historically the area of Libya was considered three provinces (or states), Tripolitania in the northwest, Cyrenaica in the east, and Fezzan in the southwest. It was the conquest by Italy in the Italo-Turkish War that united them in a single political unit. Under the Italians Libya was eventually divided into four provinces and one territory: Tripoli, Misurata, Benghazi, Derna, (in the north) and the Territory of the Libyan Sahara (in the south).[1] After the French and British occupied Libya in 1943, it was again split into three provinces: Tripolitania in the northwest, Cyrenaica in the east, and Fezzan-Ghadames in the southwest. [2]

Article 176 of the constitution of Libya stated "The Kingdom of Libya shall be divided into administrative units in conformity with the law to be promulgated in this connection. Local and regional councils may be formed in the Kingdom. The extend of these units shall be determined by law which shall likewise organize these Councils." in exact quote.[citation needed]

After independence, Libya was divided into three governorates (muhafazat), matching the three provinces of before, but in 1963 it was divided into ten governorates. In 1983 a new system was introduced dividing the country into forty-six districts (baladiyat). In 1987 this was reduced to twenty-five districts.

On 2 August 1995, Libya reorganized into thirteen districts (shabiyat). In 1998 this was increased to 26 shabiyat districts. In 2001 it was increased to thirty-two districts plus three administrative regions. Finally in 2007 to was reduced to twenty-two districts.

Libyan districts are further subdivided into Basic People's Congresses which act as townships or boroughs.

Contents

[edit] Shabiyat

Shabiyah is a neologism exclusive to Libya. The term basically means a district, that is, a top level administrative division. In 2007 the current twenty-two shabiyah replaced the older thirty-two shabiyah[3][4][5].

The current list is as following:

The current twenty-two shabiyat system in Libya (since 2007)
شعبية English Pop (2006)[6] Number
(on map)
البطنان Al Butnan 159,536 1
درنة Darnah 163,351 2
الجبل الاخضر Al Jabal al Akhdar 203,156 3
المرج Al Marj 185,848 4
بنغازي Benghazi 670,797 5
الواحات Al Wahat 177,047 6
الكفرة Al Kufrah 50,104 7
سرت Surt 141,378 8
مرزق Murzuq 78,621 22
سبها Sabha 134,162 19
وادي الحياة Wadi Al Hayaa 76,858 20
مصراتة Misratah 550,938 9
المرقب Al Murgub 432,202 10
طرابلس Tarabulus 1,065,405 11
الجفارة Al Jfara 453,198 12
الزاوية Az Zawiyah 290,993 13
النقاط الخمس An Nuqat al Khams 287,662 14
الجبل الغربي Al Jabal al Gharbi 304,159 15
نالوت Nalut 93,224 16
غات Ghat 23,518 21
الجفرة Al Jufrah 52,342 17
وادي الشاطئ Wadi Al Shatii 78,532 18

[edit] 32 shabiyat

The 2001 reorganization of Libya into shabiyat districts[7] resulted in thirty-two districts and three administrative regions (المنطقة الإدارية):

The old thirty-two shabiyat system in Libya
شعبية Sha'biyah Population Area
(sq km)
Number
(on map)
إجدابيا Ajdabiya 165,839 91,620 1
البطنان Al Butnan 144,527 83,860 2
الحزام الاخضر Al Hizam Al Akhdar 108,860 12,800 3
الجبل الاخضر Al Jabal al Akhdar 194,185 7,800 4
الجفارة Al Jfara 289,340 1,940 5
الجفرة Al Jufrah 45,117 117,410 6
الكفرة Al Kufrah 51,433 483,510 7
المرج Al Marj 116,318 10,000 8
المرقب Al Murgub 328,292 3,000 9
النقاط الخمس An Nuqat al Khams 208,954 5,250 10
القبة Al Qubah 93,895 14,722 11
الواحات Al Wahat 29,257 108,670 12
الزاوية Az Zawiyah 197,177 1,520 13
بنغازي Benghazi 636,992 800 14
بنى وليد Bani Walid 77,424 19,710 15
درنة Darnah 81,174 4,908 16
غات Ghat 22,770 72,700 17
غدامس Ghadamis 19,000 51,750 18
غريان Gharyan 161,408 4,660 19
مرزق Murzuq 68,718 349,790 20
مزدة Mizdah 41,476 72,180 21
مصراتة Misratah 360,521 2,770 22
نالوت Nalut 86,801 13,300 23
تاجوراء والنواحي الأربع Tajura Wa Al Nawahi AlArba' 267,031 1,430 24
ترهونة و مسلاته Tarhuna Wa Msalata 296,092 5,840 25
طرابلس Tarabulus 882,926 400 26
سبها Sabha 126,610 15,330 27
سرت Surt 156,389 77,660 28
صبراته و صرمان Sabratha Wa Surman 152,521 1,370 29
وادي الحياة Wadi Al Hayaa 72,587 31,890 30
وادي الشاطئ Wadi Al Shatii 77,203 97,160 31
يفرن Yafran 117,647 9,310 32

The three administrative regions are missing from the above map, Al Qatrun,[8] Maradah,[9] and Al-Jaghbub[10]

[edit] 26 shabiyat

In 1998 Libya was reorganized into twenty-six districts which were: Al-Batan, Al-Jafarah, Al-Jofra, Al-Kofra, Al-Marj, Al-Morqib, Al-Qoba, Al-Wahad, Ben Walid, Benghazi, Derna, Gharyan, Jabal Al-Akhdar, Murzaq, Musrata, Nalout, Nikat Al-Khams, Sabah, Sabrata/Sorman, Sirte, Tarhouna/Msallata, Tripoli, Wadi Al-Hait, Wadi Al-Shaati, Yefrin, and Zawiyah[11]

[edit] 13 shabiyat

On 2 August 1995 Libya dropped the baladiyat system and reorganized into thirteen districts (shabiyat). Among them were Al Butnan (formerly Tobruk), Al Jabal al Akhdar, Al Jabal al Gharbi, Al Jufrah, Az Zawiyah, Benghazi and Tarabulus. However there is not agreement about the other six names.[5].

[edit] Former baladiyat

Baladiyah (singular) or baladiyat (plural), are Arabic words used in many Arab countries to denote administrative divisions of the country. In Libya, the baladiyat system of districts was introduced in 1983 to replace the govenornate system. Originally there were forty-six baladiyat districts,[5] but in 1988 that number was reduced to twenty-five baladiyat. The table hereunder lists the old twenty-five baladiyat in alphabetical order with a link to each one. Note that each district linked may be both a baladiyah and a shabiyah. The many changes may not always be reflected in the article.

Map showing subdivision of former govenornates into the 25 baladiyat

LibyaNumbered.png

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Pan, Chia-Lin (1949) "The Population of Libya" Population Studies, 3(1): pp. 100-125, p. 104
  2. ^ "Map of Libya 1943-1951" Zentrale für Unterrichtsmedien
  3. ^ شعبيات الجماهيرية العظمى – Sha'biyat of Great Jamahiriya, accessed 10 May 2009, in Arabic
  4. ^ :"Libya population statistics". Geohive. http://www.geohive.com/cntry/libya.aspx. Retrieved 30 October 2009. 
  5. ^ a b c "Municipalities of Libya". Statoids.com. http://statoids.com/uly.html. Retrieved 30 october 2009. 
  6. ^ Libyan General Information Authority accessed 22 July 2009
  7. ^ "الشعبيات بالجماهيرية" ("Districts of Libya") Website of the General People's Committee of Libya, from WebArchive dated 30 August 2006
  8. ^ "Districts of Libya:Alqtron Tjrhi" Website of the General People's Committee of Libya, in Arabic, from Web Archive dated 30 August 2006
  9. ^ "Districts of Libya:Mradq" Website of the General People's Committee of Libya, in Arabic, from Web Archive dated 30 August 2006
  10. ^ "Districts of Libya:Aljgbob" Website of the General People's Committee of Libya, in Arabic, from Web Archive dated 30 August 2006
  11. ^ "Libya" 2006 Statesman's Yearbook

[edit] External links




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