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  1. 21 de mai. de 2024 · The Spanish protectorate consisted of a northern strip on the Mediterranean and the Strait of Gibraltar, and a southern part of the protectorate [2] around Cape Juby, bordering the Spanish Sahara. The northern zone became part of independent Morocco on 7 April 1956, shortly after France relinquished its protectorate.

  2. 6 de mai. de 2020 · The French are constantly fighting against the activities of the Spanish services in Morocco between 1940 and 1942 always suspected as being on the payroll of the Germans. Several cases of espionage darken the french-spanish relationships. Michel Catala. There were 80 000 germans in the Peninsula.

  3. Spanish Morocco : special strategic map Creator Subject Transportation, Transportation--Morocco (Spanish zone)--Morocco Description First edition - AMS 2. "Prepared under the direction of the Chief of Engineers, U.S. Army, Washington, D.C. Compiled by the Army Map Service June 1943."

  4. Population in 1939. 25,637,000. Military Deaths in WW2. 4,500. Contributor: C. Peter Chen. In 1931, the Second Spanish Republic was established. Although social progress was made under this government, political instability led to the Spanish Civil War which began in 1936. The right-wing Nationalists sparked off their rebellion on 17 Jul 1936 ...

  5. The Spanish coup of July 1936, which gave way to the Spanish Civil War, began with the Ejército de África in Spanish occupied Morocco. Nationalism and transnational anti-colonial resistance. Morocco has been a key transnational hub in the struggle against colonialism in the Middle-east region.

  6. T he Arab Governor signing the Jewish Community Book, Tetouan, 1956. Most of the Jews in the Spanish Protectorate lived in Tetouan, where they made up about a sixth of the population. There also were Jews in the Atlantic coastal towns of Larache and Arcila and the mountain town of Chefchaouen. As Sephardim, they descended from the Jews exiled ...

  7. Rif War. Berber soldiers in the employ of the Spanish army guarding the royal train of Alfonso XIII during his review of Spanish troops in Morocco in the late stages of the Rif War. (more) The Rif War balance sheet was striking. Official Spanish casualty figures published in the late 1920s put losses at approximately 43,500 troops killed ...