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The Hausa were known for fishing, hunting, agriculture, salt-mining, and blacksmithing. By the 14th century, Katsina had become the most powerful city-state. Katsina was the base for the trans-Saharan trade in salt, cloth, leather, and grain.
Since independence, Kano State has developed a diverse economy, establishing itself as a center for industry, [16] agriculture, [17] and Islamic banking. [18] The Hausa and Fulani make up the majority of Kano State's population. [19] The Hausa language is the dominant language in the state, as it is in most of Northern Nigeria.
Hausa cuisine features a variety of snacks and desserts, including kuli-kuli, a deep-fried snack made from ground peanuts and spices, and masa, a type of rice cake that is typically served with a spicy sauce. Other popular desserts include kunun gyada, a sweetened peanut milk, and dakuwa, a sweet snack made from crushed peanuts and sugar.
However, the Hausa had sufficient agricultural expertise to realise cotton required more labour and the European prices offered for groundnuts were more attractive than those for cotton. "Within two years the peasant farmers of Hausaland were producing so many tonnes of groundnuts that the railway was unable to cope with the traffic.
The agitation for the creation of the state was led by Malam Inuwa-Dutse, a former commissioner in the Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources during the governorship of late Audu Bako, the governor of old Kano State (comprising present Kano and Jigawa states). By the 1999 Constitution of Federal Republic of Nigeria, the state comprises ...
Gusau before the colonial period, was an agrarian society, agriculture was the backbone of the economy of the Gusau, the economic activity of the people during this period consisted mainly in farming with other minor supplementary occupation, Although, like most other Hausa town’s agriculture remained the main activity.
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Baba was born to a Hausa Muslim family in the small African town of Karo. [4] Her birth took place in the 19th century, before Karo became part of the British Empire. [4] Karo was an agrestic town where harvesting and agriculture were important. [5] Before British rule, Hausa women could be found harvesting the fields. [5]