Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Each year Meknes holds the International Agriculture Show in Morocco (French: Salon International de l'Agriculture au Maroc) since April 2006. This agriculture show has an area of more than 250000 square meters, with more than 60 countries participating, and more than 1200 exhibitors. [ 57 ]
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
Mauritania location map.svg (by Sting). This vector image includes elements that have been taken or adapted from this file: Morocco Regions 97-11 numbered.svg (by Tachfin ).
In Morocco, the 75 second-level administrative subdivisions are 13 prefectures and 62 provinces. They are subdivisions of the 12 regions of Morocco . [ 1 ] Each prefecture or province is subdivided into arrondissements (only in prefectures of some metropolitan areas ), municipalities ( communes , sing.
It is also known, among other names, as the Imperial City (French: Ville Impériale) or Palace of Moulay Ismail, or the Kasbah of Meknes. [1] [2] [3] It was built by Moulay Isma'il over the many decades of his reign between 1672 and 1727, when he made Meknes the capital of Morocco, and received occasional additions under later sultans.
Location Coordinates Identifier Upload Photo: Agdal Basin Meknes: 33°52'53.573"N, 5°33'36.752"W: ... Dar Al Makhzen (Meknes) Meknes: 33°53'14.161"N, 5°33'16.031"W:
Sidi Said, Morocco is a hamlet in Morocco located at 28° 27' 36" North, 10° 34' 12" [2] was one of five castra that, during the Roman period, guarded the city of Volubilis from incursion over the nearby Limes Africanus. Sidi Said was the base for the Cohors IV Gallorum equitata, an auxiliary cavalry unit from Gaul.
Sefrou was named for the Ahel Sefrou, a Berber tribe that once inhabited the area. [3] Sefrou's name might be brought from the berber name "Asfru" (ⴰⵙⴼⵔⵓ) which means "the solution" (in Morocco). [4] Sefrou was once home to one of the largest settlements of Moroccan Jews, the population estimated to have been as high as 8,000. [5]