Chap. XXIV. MAGNITUDE OF THE TOWN. 
79 
at his accession to the throne had to forward a sort 
of tribute or present to Birni Ghasreggomo, the 
ScsJle of Geographical Miles 
L House where I was lodged during my first stay in Katsena in 1851. 
2. House belonging to the quarter Ddka where I was lodged in 1853. 
3. The Zensere. 
4. Palace of the governor. 5. Market-place. 
6. Old mosque. 7. Kofa-n-Guga. 
8. Kofa-n-Yendukki. 9. Kofa-n-Koya. 
10. Kofa-n-Gazubi. 11. Kofa-n-Kaura. 
12. Kofa-n-Marusa. 13. Kofa-n-Durdu. 
14. Kofa-n-Samrf. 15. A brook formed by a spring. 
16. Former place of encampment of salt caravan. 
capital of the Bornu empire, consisting of one hun- 
dred slaves, as a token of his obedience ; but this 
being done, it does not appear that his sovereign 
rights were in any way interfered with. In fact, 
Katsena, during the seventeenth and eighteenth cen- 
