Agreements with Pennsylvania and New York extinguished the land claims by Connecticut within its neighbors, and the Western Reserve lands were relinquished to the federal government, which brought the state to its present boundaries.
Sunni Arabs from Shiraz, Iran, the Shirazi traded along the coast of East Africa as well as in the Middle East and India, and established colonies in the Comoros.
The Comoros' real GDP growth was a low 1.9 percent in 2004 and real GDP per capita was declining annually ($600 by a 2005 estimate).
Development of the Comoros is divided into phases beginning with Swahili influence and settlement from the ninth to tenth centuries, in which the islands maintained only a single central village each.
Comoros has an inadequate transportation system, a young and rapidly increasing population, and few natural resources.
Ahmed Abdallah became the first president and proclaimed the Comoros' independence on September 5, 1975.
The Comoros claims the Banc du Geyser and the Glorioso Islands as part of its exclusive economic zone.
Comoros is a member of the African Union, the Arab League, the European Development Fund, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the Indian Ocean Commission, and the African Development Bank.
When Comoros became a member of the United Nations in 1975, the new nation was defined as consisting of the entire archipelago, although France maintains control over Mayotte.
The Comoros (officially the Union of the Comoros) is an island nation in the Indian Ocean.
The Comoros continued to be used as a way station for merchants to the Far East and India until the construction of the Suez Canal greatly reduced traffic passing through the Mozambique Channel.
The country consists of three islands in the volcanic Comoros archipelago: Njazidja, Mwali, and Nzwani.
The BBC reported that Azali's takeover was the Comoros' eighteenth coup d'etat since independence in 1975.
The Comoros (or Les Comores) was officially made a French colony in 1912, and the islands were placed under the administration of the French colonial governor general of Madagascar in 1914.
Comoros is located off the eastern coast of Africa on the northern end of the Mozambique Channel between northern Madagascar and northeastern Mozambique.
The military resources of the Comoros consist of a small standing army and a 500-member police force, as well as a 500-member defense force.
Radio Comoros is the national radio service and Comoros National TV is the television service.
The islands of Anjouan and Mohйli had declared their independence from the Comoros in 1997, attempting to rejoin French rule.
The islands of Comoros became populated by a succession of diverse groups from the coast of Africa, the Persian Gulf, Indonesia, and Madagascar.
By the early seventeenth century, slaves had become Comoros' most important export commodity.
The area occupied by the Comoros Islands is slightly more than 12 times the size of Washington, D.C.
Beginning in 1785, the Sakalava of the west coast of Madagascar began slaving raids on Comoros.
The Comoros continued to be used as a way station for merchants to the Far East and India until the construction of the Suez Canal greatly reduced traffic passing through the Mozambique Channel.
Comoros also lays claim to Mayotte (aka Mahorй), a neighboring island in the Comoro archipelago that remains a French Overseas Territory.
When Comoros became a member of the United Nations in 1975, the new nation was defined as consisting of the entire archipelago, although France maintains control over Mayotte.
The Comoros is notable for its diverse culture and history, as a nation formed at the crossroads of many civilizations.
Comoros' poverty and instability make it a fertile area to recruit adherents.
Comoros is the world's largest producer of ylang-ylang (whose essential oil is used in distilling perfumes) and the second-largest producer of vanilla.