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Saïda (Arabic: سعيدة, saʿīda, pronounced [saʕiːda]) is a commune and the capital city of Saïda Province, Algeria. History. The city's site has been of military importance ever since the Romans built a fort there. [1] . Saïda was a stronghold of Abd al-Qadir, the Algerian national leader, who burned the town as French forces approached it in 1844.
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En-us-Saida from Algeria pronunciation (Voice of America).ogg 1.5 s; 35 KB Inauguration de la ligne de Saïda à Djenien-bou-Rezg (Le Petit Journal du 18 février 1900).png 1,580 × 2,115; 9.18 MB Nature Oranie Algérie 2.jpg 1,920 × 2,560; 1.42 MB
Saïda was a stronghold of Abd al-Qadir, the Algerian national leader, who burned the town as French forces approached it in 1844. [1] Modern Saïda was founded as a French military outpost in 1854 and once housed a regiment of the French Foreign Legion. Its growth was stimulated by the arrival of the Oran-Béchar (narrow-gauge) railway in 1862.
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Cheb Mami (born July 11, 1966, Saïda, Algeria) is an Algerian popular singer who was a major force in the introduction of raï music to Western audiences at the turn of the 21st century. As a youth, Mohamed Khélifati took a job as a welder, apparently ready to follow in the occupational footsteps of his father.
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Saïda, city, northwestern Algeria, on the southern slopes of the Tell Atlas Mountains and the northern fringe of the High Plateau (Hauts Plateaux). The city’s site has been of military importance since the construction there of a Roman fort. Saïda was a stronghold of Abdelkader, the Algerian.