Category
page 1Colonial history of Morocco
Spanish protectorate in Morocco
1912–1956 protectorate in northwest Africa

Ifni
The Territory of Ifni () was a Spanish province on the Atlantic coast of Morocco, south of Agadir and across from the Canary Islands. It had a total area of , and a population of 51,517 in 1964. The main industry was fishing. The present-day Moroccan province in the same area is called Sidi Ifni, with its capital in the city of the same name, but encompassing a much larger territory.
Spanish West Africa
Spanish colony from 1946 to 1958
Mohammed Ameziane
Moroccan resistance leader (1859–1912)
Souira Guedima
human settlement in Morocco

Annual
settlement in northeastern Morocco
Santa Cruz de la Mar Pequeña
former Spanish North African colony
Portuguese Tangier
former territory of the Kingdom of Portugal
Casa del Mar
Casamar, also known as Port Victoria and '''''Mackenzie's factory''''', was a historical coastal fort built in 1882 in Cape Juby near the city of Tarfaya in Morocco, by the founder of the British North West Africa Company, Donald MacKenzie, who positioned there early in 1879 in the goal of trading with commercial caravans coming from Timbuktu and heading to Wadi Noun. Following an attack on the fortress in 1888, the company gave up the building in 1895 to the Sultan of Morocco Moulay Abd al-Aziz, and withdrew from it after the Treaty of Cape Juby.