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  1. MAPS. Le Maroc pendant l’ère idrisside (VIIIe-Xe siècles) Morocco: Les Idrissides après la mort d’Idriss II en 809. Les Almoravides, 1056-1147 (larousse.fr) Le Maroc: L’Empire des Almoravides, 1056-1147. Le Maroc: L’Empire des Almohades, 1147-1269. Sultanate of Morocco, 1844 (in German)

  2. 5 de jun. de 2021 · In Morocco they call them the occupied "Sebtah and Melilah". The rest of the world knows them as the Spanish enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla in North Africa.

  3. Spanish Morocco, one of the major events organised by Tarradell during his stay in the. Spanish Protectorate. The Congress was held in Tétouan on June 22-26, 1953. It was sponsored by the office representing the Spanish government in the protectorate, the Alta Comisaría de España en Marruecos.

  4. Spanish Morocco Share Add a Comment. Be the ... Map of Celtic Tribes, Celticized peoples and Para-Celts in their maximum extent (250 BCE/503 AUC)

  5. A secret Franco-Spanish agreement of 1904 acknowledged Spain’s “historic” claim to the entire north of Morocco, with the exception of Tangier, whose “special” character was recognized by the Great Powers in the 1906 Treaty of Algeciras. In the final division of Moroccan spoils between France and Spain in November 1912, Tangier’s ...

  6. Ceuta was a Spanish enclave. This map shows the division of colonized Morocco between Spain and France. The French Protectorate (green) controlled a larger portion of Morocco than the Spanish Protectorate (pink/red). The coastal city, Tangier (yellow), was an international zone while the rest of Morocco was taken over.

  7. 28 de ago. de 2018 · After Spain lost its last colonies in Cuba and the Philippines in 1898, its interest in the African continent increased. The effective Spanish colonization of Africa was finally established in the first third of the 20th century. North Morocco, Ifni, the Tarfaya region, Western Sahara, and the territories of early-21st-century Equatorial Guinea ...