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Battle of Sidi Bou Othman

Battle of Sidi Bou Othman
Mangin enters Marrakesh (September 1912).jpg
Charles Mangin enters Marrakesh, 9 September 1912
Date 6 September 1912
Location Sidi Bou Othman, Morocco
31°54′12″N 7°56′32″W / 31.9033°N 7.94222°W / 31.9033; -7.94222
Result French victory
Belligerents
French colonial army Moroccan resistance
Commanders and leaders
Charles Mangin Ahmed al-Hiba
Merebbi Rebbo
Strength
5,000 10,000
Casualties and losses
27 4,000
Battle of Sidi Bou Othman is located in Morocco
Battle of Sidi Bou Othman
Location within Morocco

Coordinates: 31°54′12″N 7°56′32″W / 31.9033°N 7.94222°W / 31.9033; -7.94222

The Battle of Sidi Bou Othman was an important battle fought at Sidi Bou Othman, some 40 kilometers north of Marrakesh, during the French conquest of Morocco. It saw the victory of a French column under Colonel Charles Mangin over the forces of the south Moroccan leader Ahmed al-Hiba in September 1912. As a result of the victory, the French captured the city of Marrakesh and annexed southern Morocco into the French protectorate of Morocco. The conquest was facilitated by the defection of the great qaids of the south, notably the El Glaoui brothers.

French encroachment on Morocco began in 1907, with the military occupation of the towns of Casablanca and Oujda, following the assassination of some French nationals in Moroccan cities during disorders marked by xenophobic violence. The French military presence outraged domestic opinion in Morocco, but the new Alawite sultan Abd al-Hafid of Morocco, facing severe financial difficulties and dependent on French loans, was unable to do much about it. Some tribal leaders took matters into their own hands and attacked the French themselves. Notable among these was the Saharan marabout Ma al-'Aynayn, who had previously led the anti-French resistance in Mauritania. In 1910, al-Aynayn crossed the High Atlas with his veiled, camel-riding Saharan troops (nicknamed the "Blue Men"), aiming to liberate Casablanca, but he was defeated by the French at Tadla on 23 June 1910, and forced to retreat to Tiznit (in the Anti-Atlas foothills of the Souss valley), where he died shortly after.


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