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Maghreb

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Image:Atlas_Mountains_over_roofs_of_Marrakech.jpg Marrakech.html"_title="Meaning of thumb thumb|300px|[[Marrakech,_Morocco, in front of Atlas Mountains in Maghreb.html" title="Meaning of 300px|[[Marrakech">thumb|300px|[[Marrakech, Morocco, in front of Atlas Mountains in Maghreb">300px|[[Marrakech">thumb|300px|[[Marrakech, Morocco, in front of Atlas Mountains in Maghreb The '''Maghreb''' (المغرب العربي {{unicode|''al-Maġrib al-ʿArabÄ«}}''; also rendered ''Maghrib (disambiguation) Maghrib'' (or rarely ''Moghreb''), meaning "western" in Arabic, is the region of Africa north of the Sahara Desert and west of the Nile — specifically, coinciding with the Atlas Mountains. Geopolitically, the area is reckoned to include Morocco, Western Sahara, Algeria, Tunisia, sometimes Libya, and rarely Mauritania. ''Apropos'', the Arab Maghreb Union includes all of the territories listed above except, Foreign relations of Morocco#Western Sahara due to its political status, Western Sahara. The Maghreb's inhabitants are called '''Maghrebins'''. The word ''maghrib'' is an Arabic language Arabic term for "of the setting (sun)"; from the root "''ghuroob''", "to set"; "to be hidden" (but it is not used for the setting of the moon). It is also used in a manner similar to the metaphorical use of "to be eclipsed", which is used in the English language. In Arabic, but not in English, Al Maghreb (meaning 'The West') commonly means Morroco. The full Arabic name of Morroco translates to 'The Western Kingdom'. Historically, Morroco used to be called Al Maghreb al Aqşá (The Furthest West). The Arab Maghreb Union (Union du Maghreb Arabe) is an effort to coordinate political and economic policies across this region; disagreements among its members and security problems in Algeria have posed it serious setbacks.

Culture and Roots
Though Maghreb culture has both African and Middle Eastern roots, Maghrebis are of mixed origins. They are either of African- Moorish, Arabic language Arabic, Berber languages Berber, Moriscos or convert Jewish ancestry in some old cities like Fes, Sale, Rabat or Tlemcen, while a few are of predominantly African ancestry brought in by the trans-Saharan trade. The Privateer corsairs also brought in significant amounts of French, Italian, Spanish, and Turkish ancestry in the big coastal cities. The Maghreb Arabic Arabic dialects of the Maghreb share many common characteristics (like a first person singular present with ''n-'') that set them apart from the dialects of the Middle East and most of Egypt; Berber languages are almost exclusively spoken in the Maghreb, and were originally spoken throughout it. It largely shares a common culinary tradition; indeed, the Maghreb was jocularly defined by Habib Bourguiba as the part of North Africa where couscous is the staple food.

History
From the end of the Ice Age, when the Sahara Desert dried up, contact between the Maghreb and sub-Saharan Africa was extremely limited by the difficulty in crossing the desert. This remained the case until after the time of the Arab expansion and the spread of Islam; even then, trade was restricted to costly (but often profitable) caravan expeditions, trading such goods as salt, gold, ivory, and slaves. Originally, the Maghreb was inhabited by "European European" Cro-Magnoids (Iberomaurusians) in the north and by "African African" peoples in the Sahara. Later, about 8000 BC, there came from the east "European" speakers of northern Afro-Asiatic languages such as Berber at least since the Capsian culture. Many ports along the Maghreb coast were occupied by Phoenicia Phoenicians, particularly Carthage Carthaginians; with the defeat of Carthage, many of these ports naturally passed to Rome, and ultimately it took control of the entire Maghreb north of the Atlas Mountains, apart from some of the most mountainous regions like the Moroccan Rif. The Arabs reached the Maghreb in early Umayyad times, but their control over it was quite weak, and various Islamic "heresies" such as the Ibadis and the Shia, adopted by some Berbers, quickly threw off Caliph Caliphal control in the name of their interpretations of Islam. The Arabic language became widespread only later, as a result of the invasion of the Banu Hilal (unleashed, ironically, by the Berber Fatimids in punishment for their Zirid clients' defection) in the 1100's. Throughout this period, the Maghreb fluctuated between occasional unity (as under the Almohads, and briefly under the Hafsids) and more commonly division into three states roughly corresponding to modern Morocco, western Algeria, and eastern Algeria and Tunisia. After the Middle Ages, the area was loosely under the control of the Ottoman Empire, except Morocco. After the 19th century, it was colonized by France, Spain and later Italy. Today over two and a half million Maghrebins live in France, especially from Algeria, as well as many more French of Maghrebin origin. Image:Maghreb.PNG right|thumb|350px|Location of modern '''Maghreb'''.

Modern territories of the Maghreb
* Algeria * Ceuta * Libya * Mauritania * Melilla * Morocco * Tunisia * Western Sahara

Medieval regions of the Maghreb
* Ifriqiya * Djerid * Sus/Sousse * Zab * Hodna * Rif * Maghreb al-Awsat (Central Maghreb) * Morocco (Maghreb al-Aqsa) * Tamesna

See also
* Barbary Coast * Berber * Moors * History of Algeria * Maghreb toponymy * North Africa * Tamazgha * Mashreq * Northwest Africa {{region}} Category:Maghreb ar:مغرب عربي bg:Магреб ca:Magrib cs:Maghreb cy:Maghreb de:Maghreb es:Mágreb eo:Magrebo fr:Maghreb gl:Maghreb hr:Magreb is:Magreb it:Maghreb he:מגרב lt:Magribas nl:Magreb ja:マグリブ pl:Maghreb pt:Magrebe ru:Магриб sl:Magreb fi:Maghreb sv:Maghreb Category:North Africa Category:Arab Category:Berber Category:Mediterranean Category:Regions of Africa ar:تصنيÙ?:مغرب (منطقة) de:Kategorie:Maghreb

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[The article Maghreb is based on the the dictionary Wikipedia, the free encyklopedia. There you will find a list of all editors and the possibility to edit the original text of the article Maghreb.
The texts from Wikipedia and this site follow the GNU Free Documentation License.]

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