Subject: Re: [BoundaryPoint] Re: Exclaves
Date: Nov 21, 2002 @ 19:16
Author: Jesper Nielsen ("Jesper Nielsen" <jesniel@...>)
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If I had to find only ONE exclave I should say Cabinda, even though it's not a real exclave. The Spanish areas in the north can also not be so unknown to a person with geographic interest. Lesotho could be the one, even if again it's doesn't really qualify.
 
Perhaps the two Malawi island in Mozambique water under one.
 
Jesper 
----- Original Message -----
From: acroorca2002
To: BoundaryPoint@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, November 21, 2002 7:37 PM
Subject: [BoundaryPoint] Re: Exclaves

then i think he must have been purely winging it in order to fudge
over his own uncertainty in these areas
since we know there are several african ones
depending on how one defines them
& hundreds of indian ones by even the most conservative
definition

--- In BoundaryPoint@y..., "Jesper Nielsen" <jesniel@i...> wrote:
> 1984
>
> Before going into the telling about the Berlin exclaves, he starts
his chapter explaining what an exclave is (more or less Rolf
Palmberg's version) naming the European ones, and
mentioning the Asian and African ones without names.
>
> Jesper 
>   ----- Original Message -----
>   From: acroorca2002
>   To: BoundaryPoint@y...
>   Sent: Thursday, November 21, 2002 12:01 PM
>   Subject: [BoundaryPoint] Re: Exclaves
>
>
>   --- In BoundaryPoint@y..., "Jesper Nielsen" <jesniel@i...>
wrote:
>   > In Tommy Book's book about Berlin exclaves, he mentions
that
>   Asia has 4 exclaves in connection with the Indian peninsula
and
>   Africa has 1.
>   >
>   > Can anybody make up which he is talking about?
>
>   what is the date of the book & the full context of the statement
>
>
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