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Spain 1984, It’s stamp day, why not remember our time in the Sahara

Spain usually does not remember fondly their time as a colonial power in North Africa. Indeed a late 1950s war there attempting to hold on to long established enclaves in the Sahara, Cape Juby, and Ifni is often called the forgotten war. Well this website likes to use postage stamps to remind of the nearly forgotten. For Stamp Day in 1984, Spain joined in that effort. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

The forgotten war was won militarily but only put off the inevitable of ceding the enclaves to independent Morocco and the Spaniards departing. This stamp remembers the better time when the daring horsemen on the noble Arab charger horses were in the service of Spain delivering the mail. Indeed the main Spanish town in the Cape Juby area Villa Bens, had an airfield that was a major transshipment point for airmail going between the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. There was a big problem of Moors kidnapping the airmail pilots, but what is adventure without a little danger. Villa Bens is now the Moroccan town of Tarfaya, but of course the airmail like the Spanish is gone.

Todays stamp is issue A668, a 17 Peseta stamp issued by Spain on October 5th, 1984. It was a single stamp issue. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents.

Spanish fishermen operating off the southern coast of Morocco in the 18th century were often facing sneak attacks by Tekna tribesmen. Under economic and trade treaties signed by Spain with the Sultan of Morocco, this should not have been happening. Spain decided however to sign a further treaty and pay an additional tribute so that Sultan Slimane would cede the coastal strip of land near Cape Juby to Spain. In 1797 a British private company North West Africa Company set up a trading post named Port Victoria next to Cape Juby. Not going through Sultan Slimane saw it attacked relentlessly by the Moroccans until the British gave up, Spain lasted almost 200 years.

You might wonder what was the attraction of the very sparsely populated by nomads area adjoining a vast dessert. Well in fact there were dreams of doing something transformative. It was imagined that if a small, short canal was dug inland from the coast near Cape Juby that water from the Atlantic could flood in to the Sahara desert turning it into a vast sea. The water then could be used for agriculture turning the whole land area around the Sahara Sea green. The dreamers believed much of the Sahara consisted of Wadis that lied below sea level and indeed were inland seas in earlier times. Though there are a few spots in the Sahara below sea level, connecting them so they can fill with sea water would have required much more work than a short canal. The notion of a Sahara Sea has not completely gone away but has moved. There is a proposed project to flood the Qattara Depression in Egypt with Mediterranean water brought to it by newly built canals.

I mentioned that the forgotten war was won militarily by the greatly outnumbered Spanish Foreign Legion supported by Franco’s Air Force and Navy. Pressure on Spain then turned to the United Nations where it was always easy to gin up anti colonial sentiment. Cape Juby was ceded in 1958, Ifni in 1969, and the Spanish Sahara in 1975.

Spanish Heinkel He-111 bombers that dropped their last bombs in anger during the forgotten war. Ju-52 3Ms were also dropping supplies and paratroopers.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast the dreamers who imagine flooding a desert. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

 

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Saharaui, semi nation on the other side of the wall, of course with fake stamps

Nomads want independence, but colonialism can survive if it is not European colonialism. It can get totally entrenched once there is a wall. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

Todays stamp looks real enough. They were printed in Britain and some issues were labeled Sahara Occidental. At the insistence of the Moroccan Postal Authority the Universal Postal Union has condemned these issues based on the fact that there is no Sahara republic and no postal service in rebel areas. They have gone so far as to declare dealers in these issues which have been issued now for 30 years as disreputable.  The old Spanish Sahara issued stamps long enough. So a Sahara stamp that omits Spain makes some sense. However the country is more an aspiration than a reality. Given the trajectory of some African nations post independence, perhaps hope is better than the later reality.

Catalogs do not recognize stamps of Sahrawi. The UN both recognizes the Polisario Front as the spokesman for the Sahrawi people and Morocco as the administrative power. So stamps are not official although they may be available for postage in Sahrawi refugee camps in Algeria and the few towns the Polisario controls. I am going to guess the value at 25 cents.

The Spanish Sahara was a mainly nomadic area of about 100,000 people. Spain was under a lot of pressure from Morocco and to a lesser extent Mauritania to exit their colony. Spain also faced a movement within the colony for independence. When Franco died in Spain, the new Spanish government withdrew it’s officials and declared to the UN it’s administration over. Spain left an ungoverned vacuum. There had been a secret deal stuck though that divided the Spanish Sahara between Morocco and Mauritania. The people were not consulted.

A Spanish military asset in the colony had been the Tropas Nomadas. This was an indigenous military force that formally had Spanish officers. A quite large number of Saharan tribesman had served with the force and during the last year of the colony the force had transferred it’s allegiance to the local pro-independence Polisario political front. Being a desert force, it was fairly lightly armed and mainly dependent on camels and a few Spanish Land Rovers for mobility.

The day after the Spanish declared their administration over, the Polisario declared the Sahrawi Arab republic. The laid claim to the entire territory but with a temporary capital until Laayone was liberated. The Moroccan army tried to enforce the deal and occupied most of the coastal area. Many of the Sahrawi people decamped for refugee camps in sympathetic Algeria. Mauritania gave up it’s territorial gain after 2 years unable to fight the Polisario but Morocco took over their area. Morocco than built a long wall that left the Polisario out with just the landlocked dessert. Many African and Arab countries recognize Saharawi but the wall has seemed to make the situation permanent.

A Spanish actress waves the Sahrawi flag while visiting the Polisario held area
There is of course another side as to what Moroccan administration offers the Sahara. Here is a new solar energy project that opened in 2018. Morocco is earning many international brownie points for a project like this. A closer look however reveals it was funded by the African Development Bank, the Saudis and you guessed it, Spain. Solar projects in the desert don’t work to well as the solar panels need to be washed regularly with a high pressure water hose, So where to get the water?

Former American Secretary of State James Baker tried to mediate at the UN’s suggestion. He proposed a joint administration between Polisario and Morocco for four years allowing the return of refuges. This would be followed by self determining elections that most thought Polisario would win. Morocco refused to accept the peace plan.

My drink is empty. By all accounts the disputed area is a fairly desolate place, so economically the people are probably better off with Morocco as they were with Spain. That said, it is amazing that the people were never given their say. Come again for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2018.

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French Morocco 1947, Managing the turning tide against Protectorate

Mainly American forces landed and faced brief fighting with Vichy French forces. This provided an opening to end the French Protectorate, but under what terms? So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

Morocco’s status as a Protectorate complicates the French Moroccan stamp issues. They use the tradition of showing exotic views of the empire outpost, but edit out the French overlay. This was perhaps a tacit admission that the French were on their way out.

Todays stamp is issue A37, a 10 Centimes stamp issued by French Morocco in 1947. It was a 15 stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 40 cents unused.

The Sultan of Morocco had acquiesced to French Protectorate status. In return he retained his position. Previously there had been a similar arrangement with the Ottomans but they expected a tribute from Morocco instead of the reverse as the Sultan got from France. In the French area, there was a marked increase in economic activity, but that mainly involved colonials and long resident Jews, leaving out the Muslim majority.

In 1937 the French banned a left leaning, Muslim independence movement. The World War II years saw the French administration side with the pro German Vichy French government. The successful American landing of Operation Torch changed that. America communicated openly that at the war’s conclusion the Moroccan people could decide how they wish to be governed. This was not the position of the tiny Free French presence.

Into this, pro independence Muslims crafted a Proclamation of the Independence of Morocco. It was the same figures of the left as before but attempted to display a united front by talking up the quite modest participation of Moroccans on the Allied side of the war and claiming they wanted to be ruled by the Sultan as a King. This was in early 1944 when there was still an American military presence in Morocco.

The Sultan at first did not rise to the challenge/opportunity and the Free French were able reestablish their administration. The Sultan finally gave a speech in the then international city of Tangier referring to the Proclamation of three years before and demanding that French Morocco, Spanish Morocco, Tangier, and the Spanish Sahara be returned to him. The people responded with anti French and anti Jewish riots in the major cities. 1947 was a time when security forces were again being lead by French. Senegalese Tirailleurs were then sent in to put down the riots which they did in what Moroccans considered brutal fashion. The Sultan was sent into exile in Madagascar and the French tried to recognize his cousin as Sultan. The independence forces then on Christmas Eve set off a huge bomb in the market of Casablanca.

The Senegalese fighting on behalf of the French

The increase in violence disturbed the French and the Sultan in exile promised he could end it if he was allowed to return to his Throne. The cousin was forced into exile, first in Tangier and then in Nice, France.

One by one, the areas to Morocco have indeed come under the Sultan who rebranded himself King of Morocco. The lefty independence forces immediately passed into opposition to the Monarchy. The biggest change though was to change the place from an international place where different people mix to non Muslims voting with their feet and leaving. Even some Muslim Moroccans voted with their feet. About 1.5 million of them live in France.

Well my drink is empty. Come again tomorrow when there will be another story to be learned from stamp collecting.

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Morocco 1939, the old capital Fez struggles with the strange French that have come to protect them

The Allouite Dynasty had a long run in Fez having avoided Ottoman occupation and being a mercantile center for Barbary pirates and the Timbuctoo gold trade. Then they signed on for French protection and had to flee partly from the strange people they suddenly found themselves dealing with. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

This is a great image of period Fez. You get a sense of it’s ancient status, it’s inland desolateness, and the Picasso style rendering communicates what a wild place it must have been. Sadly all the things that used to make it interesting faded as all diversity there fled after independence and now Fez is just left with masses of poor and a few rich enclaves.

Todays stamp is issue A33, a three Franc stamp issued by French Morocco in 1939. It was a 37 stamp issue in various denominations that lasted over many years. According to the Scott catalog the stamp is worth 30 cents used.

Fez was founded by Berbers in the 8th century AD. It was ruled for most of it’s history by an Arab Sultan. The Sultan was fairly unique in having successfully resisted Ottoman domination. The place really took off when Muslims and Jews were expelled from Spain but welcomed in Fez. The place became a center of somewhat elicit business dealings involving the Timbuctoo gold trade and Barbary pirate loot. The Sultan protected all this in order to take his cut, but there was always much intrigue. There was also some manufacturing including leatherwork and of course the hats named after the place. Early on all Fezzes were made there and the color came from a berry native to the area. In the early 20th century the Sultan of Fez signed on as a French protectorate after French had replaced the Ottomans in neighboring Algeria. Suddenly all hell broke loose.

French Protector Lyautey

The Frenchman sent to work with the Sultan was Hubert Lyautey. French Prime Minister Clemenceau referred to Lyautey as an admirable and courageous man who always had balls stuck up his ass. It just a shame that they are not always his. He communicated with the local Arabs through multilingual authoress Isabelle Eberhardt. She was Swiss of Russian anarchist ancestry who wrote dirty stories of sexual deviancy in North Africa often involving necrophilia. She herself professed a conversion to Islam but dressed as a man and was plagued by bouts of syphilis and malaria. When details of the treaty of Fez got out the city reacted immediately with outright rebellion. The French protection turned out to be minimal. Most of the troops they commanded were local Askaris and they mutinied and joined the rebellion. You can read about other Askari troops in the Congo here, https://the-philatelist.com/2018/10/10/belgian-congo-1942-can-colonials-rely-on-askari-soldiers-when-the-home-country-is-occupied/   .

Authoress, diplomat, and spy Isabelle Eberhardt

Eventually the city was bought back under French control but not before the Sultan had to flee and set up a new capital at Rabat. The Jewish quarter was especially hard hit and with that the economy collapsed. Isabelle Eberhardt died mysteriously in a flash flood at age 27.

Well my drink is empty and I am left wondering if the French sent there started acting crazy because of how Fez was or in spite of it. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Morocco 1988, In the Age of Lead, stop firing you fools, the Tyrant is dead, or is he?

Ruling a place full of hotheads, a firm hand is required. Perhaps even an age of lead. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

Todays Royal portrait stamp dates from 1988. As is the tradition among Royal stamps, the portrait used is from a decade earlier. No point seeing the King age, it might imply weakness, and that wouldn’t do in a country of hotheads. This fakery worked for King Hassan II, he died of natural causes still on the throne after a long rule.

Todays stamp is issue A236, a 1.2 Dirham issued by the Kingdom of Morocco in 1988. There were many versions of this stamp issued over many years as higher denominations were required due to inflation. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used.

King Hassan II took over from his father upon the latter’s natural death in 1961. See https://the-philatelist.com/2019/05/08/morocco-1956-the-alaouite-sultan-muhammed-v-outlasts-the-french-to-become-independant-and-king/  . The Alaoite Dynasty has ruled Morocco for centuries and claims the Prophet Mohamed as an ancestor. At first there were affectations of a modern state with a multiparty parliament. This did not go well as a traditional Royal regime is not compatible with a typical 60s style pan Arabist mob. Leaders were rounded up and disappeared and riots were dealt with harshly. Parliamentary power was stripped and the King instituted the “state of exception” where he could rule by decree. The time is remembered as the age of lead.

At first the King was militarily aggressive. He restated the old Spanish Rif War. There was a sand war with Algeria. He took Infi back from Spain see https://the-philatelist.com/2018/10/25/spanish-morocco-it-is-useful-to-have-a-second-stringer-occupy-much-of-a-large-dangerous-place/ , and the old Spanish Sahara from Mauritania see https://the-philatelist.com/2018/07/27/mauritania-1938-the-french-are-not-staying-so-someone-should-try-to-make-this-a-country/   and https://the-philatelist.com/2018/08/02/saharaui-semi-nation-on-the-other-side-of-the-wall-of-course-with-stamps/ . I know too much homework to read all that, but think of all the fun I had writing them. By the early 70s, King Hassan II got less militaristic as he no longer trusted his army as much. In 1971, he was held under house arrest  by military cadets while  Libyan backed Moroccan generals got on the radio claiming the King was dead and a republic declared. Not so fast, loyal parts of the army saved him.

In 1972 there was another coup attempt. The Royal 727 was returning to Morocco from France when 4 F5 fighter planes from the air force rose to meet it. There was much wild firing, the 727 took several 20 millimeter cannon hits but kept flying. The King ran to the cockpit and pretended to be the pilot getting on the radio and saying “Stop firing you fools, the tyrant is dead”. The fools indeed stopped firing at the 727  but strafed the dignitaries awaiting the King in Rabat. It was his birthday. The Defense Minister behind the attack later committed suicide in custody, by multiple gunshots. It was the age of lead. Aviation fans may recall that the F5 was a simple American fighter plane designed to be handed out to the third world. It was nicknamed the Freedom Fighter, but this incident is reflective of the kind of losers who too often got them.

When Hassan II died in 1999 his son took over. There was then a new round of pretend reforms, even a Royal truth commission on the crimes of the father. Meanwhile hotheaded Moroccans flood Europe. Apparently they would prefer to be ruled by the EU than a King related to the Prophet Mohamed.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to celebrate the end of the age of lead and dread the age of the hothead. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Morocco 1956, The Alaouite Sultan Muhammed V outlasts the French to become independant and King

The Royal Dynasty in Morocco has been kept around a long time and the country has been fairly stable by Arab standards. The dynasty was brought in to the country in the hopes that being of Mohammed’s family they might bring God’s blessings. Well it went as well as it could have. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

If we put this stamp into it’s time we see how traditional it is. Morocco was just getting it’s independence and instead of pan Arabist socialist in the vein of Egypt’s Nasser, or the Phoenician traders that first organized the place, or even Berber nomads like Libya’s Kaddafi. we see a Sultan from a dynasty that has ruled for 300 years to one extent or another. Will he be able to stand without the French and Spanish behind him?

Todays stamp is issue A1, a 30 Franc stamp that was the first issue of independent Morocco in 1956. It was a 7 stamp issue in various denominations featuring Sultan Mohammed V before he took the title of King. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used.

The first settlements in Morocco were set up by Phoenician traders but the area had long been home to Bedouin and Berber nomadic Muslim tribesman. The trading posts on the coasts thus developed somewhat differently from the interior. The first Alaouite was brought in in the 13th century from Hejaz to serve as an Imam. The Alaouites could trace their heritage to Mohammed. By the  15th century, they were ruling from the then capital at Fez. There was some rudimentary agriculture involving date palms and of course the piracy that targeted richer European ships. This criminality was defended as some sort of tax due to Allah for Europeans heresy.

Naturally this criminality saw to it that the area was colonized by Spain and France with the trading post of Tangier set aside as an international city. See https://the-philatelist.com/2017/11/16/spain-claims-an-international-city-in-morrocco-annoying-the-morroc-er-the-british/ . The Europeans did not have much interest in the interior so left the Alouite sultan in place to deal with the interior. The Alaouites showed their flexibility in bending into this new role as memorialized by the Treaty of Fez in 1912. Unfortunately for especially the Spanish, the Sultans were not much help against the Berbers from the Rif mountains who fought a costly but losing war against Spain. See https://the-philatelist.com/2018/10/25/spanish-morocco-it-is-useful-to-have-a-second-stringer-occupy-much-of-a-large-dangerous-place/ .

In 1943, with The Americans landing in Morocco to push out the Vichy French and trap the German Africa Corp in Tunisia, Sultan Mohammed V saw it was time to again show the Dynasty’s flexibility and expressed support for the socialist independence movement. The Free French for a while tried to hold on. They forced Mohammed V into exile first in Corsica and then more uncomfortably in Madagascar. The French also made a more accommodating cousin Sultan as Mohammed VI. The area got very violent and the French and the Spanish decided it was time for their exit. They allowed Mohammed V to return and both Spanish and French Morocco becoming united and independent. The traditional Monarchy, the Sultan soon declared himself King was not what everyone had in mind. The pro independence socialist became the opposition and the trading posts such as Tangier lost their international flavor as they lost their previous diversity. At least the piracy never started back up and I have no information on how the palm date crop goes. Mohammed V’s grandson is currently King as Mohammed VI. The previous Mohamed VI having been memory holed when he was forced into exile. The poor fellows old Royal Seal was even stolen from him in Beirut.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another in a non monetary tribute to the Sultan from Fez wearing a fez, Mohammed V. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting

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Spanish Morocco, it is useful to have a second stringer occupy much of a large dangerous place

Morocco was in the hands of France. That does not mean they wanted the expense and danger of occupying the whole thing. Sounds like a way for a second string empire to expand. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

I like the visuals of todays stamp as it puts you back in time. The vision of a brave Arab warrior on horseback. It might seem a strange colonial stamp as wouldn’t he be presumed to be opposed to the Spanish colonials. Not always. In fact during much of the Spanish Civil War, many of Franco’s forces were just such warriors. In fact this issue of stamps contained a postal surtax that supported disabled African veterans of the Spanish Civil War.

Todays stamp is issue PT2, a 10 Centimos postal tax special delivery stamp issued by Spanish Morocco in 1941. This was a 4 stamp issue in various colors but with the same denomination and image. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used. The stamp also exists as an imperforate, and that ups the value to $15.

France acquired Morocco in 1905. There was a measure of self government through a local sultan. There had long been Spanish enclaves to the North near Gibraltar and Tangier and to the south near the bordering Spanish Sahara. France maintained ultimate sovereignty over these areas but felt right to divest administration to the Spanish. This was also favored by Great Britain who had interests in Gibraltar and Tangier and by Imperial Germany that also had economic interests. A lessor European power to police the area but not be a military threat to anyone was advantageous to all Europeans.

Well perhaps not so beneficial to Spain. There was a rebellion of Moroccans that attempted to break away from Spain by attempting to form the Republic of Rif. This was put down but at the cost of over 10,000 Spanish troops killed, most locally recruited. This was a discrediting factor of Spain’s home government that lead to the Spanish Civil War. General Franco made much use of Spanish Moroccan soldiers during the Spanish Civil War. The Republican Socialist side offered Spanish Morocco independence if they won  in the hope of Franco’s Moroccans changing sides. They later backed off this offer at the demand of their ally the French.

In 1956 most of French and Spanish Morocco united to form a united independent Morocco under the old Sultan who now becoming King. Over the objections of Morocco, Spain tried to hold on to the Spanish Enclave of Ifni. The Moroccan army attacked but was beaten back by the Spaniards in 1958. These battles saw the last combat use of German World War II era Heinkel He-111 bombers that had been made in Spain post war and many built with Rolls Royce Merlin engines. With the Heinkels bombing and Junker Ju 52s dropping paratroopers, it must have seemed to the Moroccans like the German Africa Corps last battle. The war ended with Spain still in Ifni but it was eventually turned it over to Morocco after a UN resolution in 1969. They gave up the Spanish Sahara to the south after Franco died in 1976.

Heinkel He 111 in Spanish post war markings

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast the British pilots who downed so many Heinkel He 111s during the Battle of Britain and the Blitz. I bet they would have never guessed the Heinkel would eventually acquire Rolls Royce Merlin engines. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Spain claims an international city in Morocco, annoying the Morroc.. er the British?

Welcome readers to todays offering from The Philatelist. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. We have an interesting story to tell of one of those international cities that gets invaded in World War II by a neutral.

The stamp today is kind of hard to figure out. Not Spain, despite saying Republica Espanola on it. Not even Spanish Morocco, even though it is from a part of present day Morocco that was at the time of the stamp occupied by Spain. Hard to imagine a country walking a very fine line to stay out of a world war going on all around them, yet still having the perhaps foolhardy guts to take by force an internationally mandated free city. But it did, and then issued this .05 ptas stamp.

In 1911, Morocco was divided up between Spain and France with France taking the central part and Spain taking the northern and southern parts. At this time the British had long held the Rock of Gibraltar as a colony at the gateway to the Mediterranean Sea. Near the northern tip of Morocco lay Tangier on the Atlantic Ocean. It was an important trading city with a majority of non Muslim residents including a large Jewish community. The League of Nations agreed to recognize Tangier as a free state that was to be jointly administered by France, Spain, and Great Britain. It became a hotbed of spies and literary types with the likes the deposed last sultan of Morocco, then exiled Italian leader Garbaldi. American writer Jack Kerouac, Tennessee Williams, British writer George Orwell, and Rolling Stone Mick Jagger spending time there.

In 1940, Spain under the fascist leader Franco, was neutral in World War II, but took the opportunity to take military control of Tangier. They did this on the day after Paris fell to the Germans. Britain did notice and strongly protested but British in Tangier were not harassed and Franco promised not to fortify the city. My guess that if the war had continued to go so badly for the Allies Spain would have entered the war on the side of the Axis and used Tangier as a springboard to take Gibraltar from Britain, a long standing goal of Spain. Spain ended their occupation without a fight in late 1945. Tangier reverted to being an international city.

The special status of Tangier was not to last. When Spanish and French Morocco were united as the independent kingdom of Morocco, Tangier became part of Morocco. As such the international character of the place has faded and although moderate Muslim, Morocco has not kept the religious diversity of the city intact. The city now has 13 times the population it had at the end of the special status.

It is interesting to me that todays stamp from the period of Spanish occupation includes the Grand Mosque and the attached orphanage. I wonder if they were trying to make the point that the Muslims in the area were better off with Spain than Britain. The French part of Morocco was Vichy so a natural ally of Spain. The site of the Mosque had previously been a Catholic Cathedral built by the Portuguese and before that a Roman temple to the God Hercules.

Well, my drink is empty and so it is time to open the conversation in the below comment section. Was Tangier better off as an international city or does being a part of Morocco better reflect the character of the place. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.