Spanish Morocco

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Protectorado español de Marruecos
المغرب الإسباني
Spanish Morocco
Protectorate of Spain

1913 – 1956
Flag Coat of arms
Flag Coat of arms
Location of Spanish Morocco
Map of the northernmost territories belonging to the Spanish Protectorate of Morocco (1912–56)
Capital Tétouan
Language(s) Spanish, Arabic
Religion Catholic, Muslim
Political structure Protectorate
History
 - Established 1913
 - Disestablished 1956

Spanish Morocco (Arabic: المغرب الإسباني), was the area of Morocco (Protectorado español de Marruecos in Spanish) under colonial rule by Spain, established by the Treaty of Fez in 1912 and ending in 1956, when both France and Spain recognized Moroccan independence.

Contents

The territories of Spanish Morocco included northern Morocco (the territory in between the cities of Ceuta and Melilla, which have been Spanish since the 16th century and 15th century respectively), also the Tarfaya Strip, and Ifni. The capital of Spanish Morocco was Tetuán (Tétouan).

The rest of the country was ruled by France under the name of French Morocco also in 191256.

The city of Tangier was declared an international zone, though this status was suspended during World War II when it was provisionally occupied by Spanish troops on 14th June 1940, on the pretext that an Italian invasion was imminent[1].

The Republic of the Rif led by the guerilla leader Abd El-Krim was a break away state that existed in the Rif region from 1921 to 1926, when it was dissolved by joint expedition of the Spanish Army of Africa and French forces.

Ceuta had been Portuguese before becoming Spanish in 1580. The city of Melilla had been part of Spain since 1497. As for the rest of territories others than the plazas de soberanía, most of them they were only gained after by the middle of the 19th century and, specially, after 1912 and the First Moroccan Crisis.

In the late 19th century, Queen Isabella II of Spain encouraged the officers of southern Spain to curb the migration of unauthorized poor Spaniards to the new territories.

The Protectorate system was established during the Second Spanish Republic, technically it didn't include the cities of Ceuta and Melilla, which had been part of Spain from an early moment of its history and so were regarded as Spanish proper territory.

The legal Islamic qadis system was formally maintained.

The Moroccan Sephardi Jews—many of them living in this part of the Maghreb after being expelled from Spain and Portugal in 1492 and 1497 respectively after the end of the Reconquista process—flourished in commerce, profiting from the similarity of Spanish and Ladino language and benefitting from the tax-exempt area in Tangier and a flourishing trading activity in the area.

After Francisco Franco came to power in Spain, paradoxically, the protectorate enjoyed more political freedom than Franco-era Spain proper[citation needed], allegedly because local Muslim troops were loyal from the very beginning to Franco, who was serving in África—as the Protectorate was informally known in the Spanish military parlance. Franco was the military commander of the Spanish Morocco at the time of his uprising and from there he started it. He was backed by a noticeable number of Moroccan Muslim troops in the following Spanish Civil War. Franco was based in Tetouan.

Thus, there were political parties in the Protectorate—unlike in the rest of Spain—and the Moroccan nationalist press would criticize the Spanish authorities, contrasting with the Spanish single party and state-controlled press in the rest of the country.[citation needed]

In 1956, when French Morocco became independent, Spain discontinued the Protectorate and surrendered most of its occupied territories to the newly independent Morocco, but retained control of Ceuta, Melilla and the rest of plazas de soberanía, also of Sidi Ifni, Tarfaya and the Spanish Sahara (Saguia el-Hamra and Rio de Oro regions). The Moroccan Army of Liberation waged a war against Spanish forces, that started from Ifni and spread south to Rio de Oro. As a result of this war, Spain in 1958 returned Tarfaya to Morocco. Morocco continued to lay claim over the remaining regions, and in 1969, it got back the region of Ifni.

Morocco claims Ceuta and Melilla as integral parts of the country, considering them to be under foreign occupation, comparing their status to that of Gibraltar, while Spain regards them as a constituent part of itself.

  1. ^ C.R. Pennel, Morocco Since 1830, A History

  • Hardman, Frederick (2005). The Spanish Campaign in Morocco. W. Blackwood and sons.  (download book)
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