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Ceuta y la Guerra de África de 1859–1860 (PDF). Ceuta: Instituto de Estudios Ceutíes. pp. 459– 492. ISBN 978-84-92627-30-1. Romero Morales, Yasmina (2014). "Prensa y literatura en la Guerra de África (1859–1860). Opinión publicada, patriotismo y xenofobia". Historia Contemporánea (49). Bilbao: University of the Basque Country: 619 ...
Mexico utilizes a form of jurisprudence constante. The decisions of the Supreme Court are binding on lower courts as jurisprudencias only upon five consecutive and uninterrupted decisions ( ejecutorias ) approved by at least eight justices when in plenary sessions ( en banc ) or by at least four justices when in chambers. [ 1 ]
Henri Mordacq (1908), La guerre au Maroc : enseignements tactiques des deux guerres Franco-marocaine (1844) et Hispano-marocaine (1859–1860) (2e édition). [2] French Africa Committee and Morocco Committee (1925), French Africa: monthly bulletin of the French Africa Committee and the Morocco Committee.
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La constitución de 1857 y sus críticos. Mexico City: SepSetentas 98, 1973. García Granados, Ricardo. La constitución de 1857 y los leyes en México. Mexico City: Tipografía Económica 1906. Guerra, François-Xavier, México: del antiguo régimen a la revolución. Vol. 1. Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Económica 1988.
Abd al-Rahman died in Meknes on August 28, 1859, and was buried in the Mausoleum of Moulay Ismail. [2] He was succeeded by his son Muhammad , who took the title of sultan Muhammad IV . [ 32 ] Immediately upon Sidi Muhammad's ascension to throne in August 1859, Spain declared war on Morocco, culminating into the Hispano-Moroccan War in which ...
During the reigns of Muhammad IV (1859–1873) and Hassan I (1873–1894), the Alawis tried to foster trade links, especially with European countries and the United States. The army and administration were also modernized to consolidate control over the Berber and Bedouin tribes. In 1859, Morocco went to war with Spain.
The second French intervention in Mexico (Spanish: segunda intervención francesa en México), also known as the Second Franco-Mexican War (1861–1867), [12] was a military invasion of the Republic of Mexico by the French Empire of Napoleon III, purportedly to force the collection of Mexican debts in conjunction with Great Britain and Spain.