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・ Ginals
・ Ginamaría Hidalgo
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・ Ginan Station
・ Ginan, Gifu
・ Ginandjar Kartasasmita
・ Ginanggang
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・ Ginaton
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Ginbo
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・ Ginchy
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・ Gindalbie, Western Australia
・ Gindanes
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・ Ginde
・ Ginde Beret
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・ Gindie, Queensland
・ Gindl
・ Gindling Hilltop Camp
・ Gindokhar


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Ginbo : ウィキペディア英語版
Ginbo

Ginbo (sometimes spelled Gimbo) is one of the woredas in the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region of Ethiopia. The name Ginbo comes from one of the provinces in the former Kingdom of Kaffa. That province, as well as the Kafficho provinces Bonga and Manjo, became districts with the Ethiopian conquest in 1896, and these districts were later merged to form the modern woreda.
Part of the Keffa Zone, Ginbo is bordered on the south by Decha, on the west by Chena, on the northwest by Gewata, on the north by the Gojeb River which separates it from the Oromia Region, and on the east by Menjiwo. Towns in Ginbo include Diri, Gojeb, Ufa and Wushwush. Ginbo surrounds Bonga town. The western part of Ginbo was used to create Gewata woreda.
== Overview ==
The primary food crops include enset and maize; other staple foods include wheat and barley. A major cash crop in this woreda is tea; there is a large tea plantation at Wushwush.〔Joachim Ahrens, ("Kefa - the Cradel of Coffee" ) UNDP-EUE Report, January 1997 (accessed 19 February 2009)〕 Notable landmarks include a Christian monastery 12 kilometers from Bonga which dates to 1550, and the Bonga Forest Reserve covering some 500 square kilometers of the surrounding hillsides.〔Philip Briggs, ''Ethiopia: the Bradt Travel Guide'', 5th edition, updated by Brian Blatt (Chalfont St. Peter: Bradt, 2009), p. 565〕
Ginbo was selected by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development in 2004 as one of several woredas for voluntary resettlement for farmers from overpopulated areas, becoming the new home for a total of 7800 heads of households and 31,200 total family members.〔("Resettlement 2004" ), Disaster Prevention and Preparedness Agency (DPPA) (accessed 26 November 2006)〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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