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Anonymous Anonymous said...

Perhaps that is the big problem that no one can find the romantic Casablanca they think they know from the movie. Apart from the first airport sequence the entire studio-oriented film was shot in a Warner Bros. Hollywood/Burbank studio.
The big attraction in Casablanca should be the Hassan II Mosque. It is formidable.

Monday, March 20, 2006

Anonymous Anonymous said...

some corrections !

Before the French Protectorate:

The area which is today Casablanca was settled by Berbers by at least the 7th century. A small independent kingdom, in the area then named Anfa, arose in the area around that time in response to Arab Muslim rule, and continued until it was conquered by the Almoravids in 1068.

During 14th century, under the Marinids, Anfa rose in importace as a port. In the early 15th century, the town became an independent state once again, and emerged as a safe harbour for pirates and privateers, leading to it being targeted by the Portuguese, who destroyed the town in 1468.

The Portuguese established a new town in the ruins of Anfa in 1515, which they named Casa Branca. They eventually abandoned the area in 1755 following an earthquake which destroyed most of the town. The area was reintegrated into Morocco, under the rule of the then sultan Sidi Mohammed III, who renamed the town Casablanca in commemoration of a trade agreement with Spain in 1781.

In the 19th century, the area's population began to grow as Casablanca became a major supplier of wool to the booming textile industry in Britain and shipping traffic increased (the British, in return, began importing Morocco's now famous national drink, gunpowder tea). By the 1860s, there were around 4,000 residents, and the population grew to around 9,000 by the late 1880s [1]. Casablanca remained a modestly-sized port, with a population reaching around 12,000 within a few years of the French conquest and arrival of French colonialists in the town, at first administrators within a sovereign sultanate, in 1906. By 1921, this was to rise to 110,000 [2], largely through the development of bidonvilles.

the source is wikipedia.

you know something the last people that we like to see in Casablanca are the tourists and especiallly the young tourists.

Allah bless Casablanca their folks are good and God likes good people :)

something else there is a lot of attractions in Casablanca ! not only the Hassan 2 Mosque. this is why who lives on it can't leave it and even whom coming from other cities.

as we say : Who enter to Casablanca never exit ;)

Marocain/Casablancais

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

Blogger Suzanna Clarke said...

Salam - and thank you for the comments. As we said at the beginning of the post, the article was from a British tourist site, so I don't think we could have expected much scholarship :)

Mind you, I don't think saying that you don't like to see young tourists is going to be very popular with the thousands of Moroccans who rely on them for their livelyhood! Most Moroccans are genuinely welcoming of tourists.

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

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