Spanish West Africa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Northwestern African territories under Spanish control in 1912, some of which would later be grouped to form Spanish West Africa.
Northwestern African territories under Spanish control in 1912, some of which would later be grouped to form Spanish West Africa.

Spanish West Africa (Spanish: (Territorios de) África Occidental Española) is a former possession in the western Sahara Desert that Spain ruled after giving much of its former northwestern African possessions to Morocco. As a political entity, it included Ifni, on the western coast of Morocco, the Tarfaya Strip, at its southern border, and a stretch of land including and connecting the cities of Ceuta and Melilla. The area between the two cities are under Moroccan sovereignty today, but the ports themselves are autonomous communities of Spain.

Spain also controlled Spanish Sahara (now known as Western Sahara), and the Canary Islands, off the coast, comprise two Spanish provinces.

In other languages