Alger (department)

Coordinates: 36°44′37.1″N 3°5′41.1″E / 36.743639°N 3.094750°E / 36.743639; 3.094750
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

36°44′37.1″N 3°5′41.1″E / 36.743639°N 3.094750°E / 36.743639; 3.094750

Administrative map of French Algeria from 1934 to 1955, showing the Alger department in pink

The Department of Algiers (French: département d'Alger, [depaʁtəmɑ̃ dalʒe], Arabic: عمّالة الجزائر)[1] was a former French department in Algeria. The department of Alger existed between 1848 and 1974.

The origin of the administrative divisions[edit]

Considered as a French province, Algeria was departmentalised on 9 December 1848, thereby operating according to the same administrative structure as metropolitan France. Three civil zones (départements) replaced the three beyliks into which the Ottoman former rulers had divided the territory. The principal town of the central département, also called Alger, became the prefecture of the eponymous département. The two other Algerian departments were Oran in the west and Constantine in the east.

Size and structure of the département[edit]

The département of Alger covered an area of 54,861 km2 (21,182 sq mi), and comprised six sub-prefectures: these were Aumale, Blida, Médéa, Miliana, Orléansville and Tizi-Ouzou.

It was not until the 1950s that the Sahara was annexed into departmentalised Algeria, which explains why the département of Alger was limited to what is the north-central part of Algeria today. Until 10 January 1957, when the Sahara regions received their own administrative structure, these territories were administered by the département of Alger.

Religious affiliations[edit]

The 1954 census recorded the stated religious affiliations of the population. The majority in the département of Alger declared themselves to be Muslims. In the city of Alger itself, however, 296,041 or 46% of the 645,479 people counted were declared to be non-Muslims. This placed Alger second only to the city of Oran in terms of the proportion of the population stating that they were non-Moslems. Non-Moslem appears to have been seen as a surrogate description for people of European origin, or for Algerian Jews.

Reorganisation and independence[edit]

Map of the Alger department after the reorganisation of 1956

On 26 January 1956 population increases triggered the creation of three new stand-alone departments. These were the département of Médéa, along with the coastal départements of Orléansville [fr] and Tizi-Ouzou [fr] formed respectively from the southern, western and eastern portions of the département of Alger.

The very much truncated département of Alger now covered just 3,393 km2, and was home to a population of 1,079,806. It was subdivided into the two sub-prefectures of Blida and Maison-Blanche (modern Dar El Beïda).

The 1957 departmental reorganisation was marked by a change in the "suffix" number appearing on automobile license plates and in other places that used the same code. Until 1957 Alger was department number "91": after 1957 the much diminished département of Alger became department number "9A". (In 1968, under a law enacted in 1964, the number "91" would be reallocated to Essonne, a new département comprising the southern suburbs of Paris.)

After independence the department continued to exist until 1974 when it was split into Alger Province and Blida Province.

People[edit]

See also[edit]

Départements français d'Algérie (not yet translated into English) [fr].

References[edit]

  1. ^ Fatah, Ibrahim (1904). Méthode directe pour l'ensiegnement de l'Arabe parlé, rédigée conformément aux nouveaux programmes (in French). A. Jourdan.