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  1. The French conquest of Morocco began with the French Republic occupying the city of Oujda in 29 March 1907. The French launched campaigns against the Sultanate of Morocco which culminated in the signing of the Treaty of Fes and establishment of the French Protectorate in Morocco on 30 March 1912.

    • 1907-1934
    • Morocco
  2. El protectorado francés de Marruecos (en francés: Protectorat français au Maroc; en árabe: حماية فرنسا في المغرب ‎, Himaïet Fransa fi el-Maghreb) fue un protectorado francés establecido en Marruecos durante la primera mitad del siglo XX.

  3. The French military conquest of Morocco began in the aftermath of Émile Mauchamp's assassination in Marrakesh on 19 March 1907. In the French press, his death was characterized as an "unprovoked and indefensible attack from the barbarous natives of Morocco."

  4. France decided to use both diplomacy and military force. The French colonial authorities would establish control over the Sultan, ruling in his name and extending French influence. The British acceded to any French designs in Morocco in the Entente Cordiale of 1904.

  5. The French conquest of Morocco began with the French Republic occupying the city of Oujda in 29 March 1907. The French launched campaigns against the Sultanate of Morocco which culminated in the signing of the Treaty of Fes and establishment of the French Protectorate in Morocco on 30 March 1912.

    • 1907-1934
    • Morocco
  6. 10 de ago. de 2022 · Conquest of Morocco. The colonial regime was not entirely French. In 1904, the French government had promised to preserve what they recognised as economic, strategic and political Spanish “interests”. Spanish troops already occupied some districts. Hence a ‘zone of Spanish influence’ (not a separate protectorate) was given to ...

  7. France, maneuvering for possession of Morocco, which bordered on her Algerian colony, tried to obtain the acquiescence of the other powers by both secret and open treaties granting Italy a free hand in Libya, allotting to Spain a sphere of influence, and acknowledging Britain’s paramountcy in Egypt.