Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The First Moroccan Crisis or the Tangier Crisis was an international crisis between March 31, 1905, and April 7, 1906, over the status of Morocco. [1] Germany wanted to challenge France 's growing control over Morocco, aggravating France and Great Britain.
The Algeciras Conference [a] of 1906 took place in Algeciras, Spain, and lasted from 16 January to 7 April.The purpose of the conference was to find a solution to the First Moroccan Crisis of 1905 between France and Germany, which arose as Germany responded to France's effort to establish a protectorate over the independent state of Morocco. [1]
1905 La Dépêche marocaine newspaper begins publication. Anglican Church of St. Andrew consecrated. 1905/06 - First Moroccan Crisis leading to the Algeciras Conference; 1910 - Population: 40,000 (approximate figure). [4] 1911 - Agadir Crisis & Treaty of Fes (1912) 1913 – Gran Teatro Cervantes opens. [9] 1917 – Sidi Bou Abib Mosque built. [6]
A major turning point in establishing America's role in European affairs was the Moroccan crisis of 1905–1906. France and Britain had agreed that France would dominate Morocco, but Germany suddenly protested aggressively, with the disregard for quiet diplomacy characteristic of Kaiser Wilhelm.
The Kaiser's dramatic intervention in Morocco in March 1905 in support of Moroccan independence became a turning point on the road to the First World War. The international Algeciras Conference of 1906 formalized France's "special position" and entrusted policing of Morocco jointly to France and Spain.
The French military navy in the direction of Kiel in Le Petit Journal of June 18, 1895.. The title of the work draws its origin from two events: the naval review of Kiel on June 18, 1895 where the French military navy takes part alongside German and Russian ships in an anti-British demonstration [3] and the first Moroccan Crisis of March 31, 1905, triggered by the German Emperor Wilhelm II ...
Moroccan Crisis could refer to: . The First Moroccan Crisis, or the Tangier Crisis, brought about by the visit of Kaiser Wilhelm II to Tangier in Morocco in 1905; The Second Moroccan Crisis, or the Agadir Crisis, sparked by the deployment of a German warship to the Moroccan port of Agadir in 1911
The agreement threatened Germany, whose policy had long relied on Franco-British antagonism. A German attempt to check the French in Morocco in 1905 (the Tangier Incident, or First Moroccan Crisis), and thus to upset the Entente, served only to strengthen it.