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The Archives du Maroc (est. 2007) is an archive in Rabat, Morocco, on Avenue Ibn Battouta. Jamaâ Baida became director in 2011. [ 1 ] It opened to the public in 2013. [ 2 ]
Les Temps Modernes was first published by Gallimard and was last published by Gallimard. In between, the magazine changed hands three times: Julliard (January 1949 to September 1965), Presses d'aujourd'hui (October 1964 to March 1985), Gallimard (from April 1985). Les Temps Modernes ceased publication in 2019, after 74 years. [3]
"Dahir no. 1-03-200 du 16 ramadan 1424 (11 novembre 2003) portant promulgation de la loi no. 67-99 relative à la Bibliothèque nationale du Royaume du Maroc" (PDF). Bulletin officiel du Royaume du Maroc (in French) (5184): 150– 152. 2004. ISSN 0851-1217. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-02-02; Marcel Lajeunesse, ed. (2008). "Maroc ...
Aujourd'hui Le Maroc was first published in 2001 by ALM Publishing. [1] [2] The paper was founded by Khalil Hachimi Idrissi, who later served as director of the state official press agency Maghreb Arabe Presse, and who owned a stake in the publishing company of ALM. [3]
Terrasse was born in France in 1895. In 1921, he emigrated to the French protectorate of Morocco, where he taught first at the Collège Moulay Youssef. [1] In 1923 he became professor at the important Institut des Hautes Études Marocaines in Rabat, where he collaborated with French orientalist Henri Basset for a series of studies on Almohad mosques.
Monument in memory of the 11 January 1944 proclamation in Salé, Morocco.. The Proclamation of Independence of Morocco (Arabic: وثيقة الاستقلال, French: Manifeste de l'Indépendance du Maroc), also translated as the Manifesto of Independence of Morocco or Proclamation of January 11, 1944, is a document in which Moroccan nationalists called for the independence of Morocco in its ...
Sidi Mohammed ben Abdallah al-Khatib (Arabic: سيدي محمد بن عبد الله الخطيب), known as Mohammed III (Arabic: محمد الثالث), born in 1710 in Fes and died on 9 April 1790 in Meknes, [1] was the Sultan of Morocco from 1757 to 1790 as a member of the 'Alawi dynasty.
Charroux also distributed a leaflet about this entitled L’ébouriffante histoire du "curé aux milliards" that has not survived, but is referred to in French newspapers of the period. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] He described his activities there in his 1962 book Trésors du Monde enterrées, emmurés, engloutis (Fayard) that was published in English in 1967.