Military Territory of Fezzan-Ghadames | ||||||||||
Territoire militaire du Fezzan-Ghadamès (French) إقليم العسكرية من فزان-غدامس (Arabic) |
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Military Administration | ||||||||||
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Map of Libya during World War II, showing Fezzan
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Capital | Sabha | |||||||||
Languages | French, Arabic | |||||||||
Political structure | Military Administration | |||||||||
Military governors | ||||||||||
• | 1943 | Raymond Jean Marie Delange | ||||||||
• | 1950–1951 | Auguste Cauneille | ||||||||
Hakim / Wāli | ||||||||||
• | 1946–1951 | Ahmad Sayf an-Nasr | ||||||||
French Resident | ||||||||||
• | 1950–1951 | Maurice Sarazac | ||||||||
History | ||||||||||
• | Occupation of Sabha by French Forces | 12 January 1943 | ||||||||
• | Established | 11 April 1943 | ||||||||
• | Joined Tripolitania and Cyrenaica to form the Kingdom of Libya | 24 December 1951 | ||||||||
Currency | Algerian franc | |||||||||
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Today part of | Libya |
The Military Territory of Fezzan-Ghadames was a territory in the southern part of the former Italian colony of Libya controlled by the French from 1943 until Libyan independence in 1951. It was part of the Allied administration of Libya.
Free French forces from French Chad occupied the area that was the former Italian Southern Military Territory and made several requests to annex administratively their Fezzan to the French colonial Empire. The administrative personnel remained the former Italian bureaucrats.
The British administration began the training of a badly needed Libyan civil service. Italian administrators continued to be employed in Tripoli, however. The Italian legal code remained in effect for the duration of the war. In the lightly populated Fezzan region, a French military administration formed a counterpart to the British operation. With British approval, Free French forces moved north from Chad to take control of the territory in January 1943. French administration was directed by a staff stationed in Sabha, but it was largely exercised through Fezzan notables of the family of Sayf an Nasr. At the lower echelons, French troop commanders acted in both military and civil capacities according to customary French practice in the Algerian Sahara. In the west, Ghat was attached to the French military region of southern Algeria and Ghadamis to the French command of southern Tunisia – giving rise to Libyan nationalist fears that French intentions might include the ultimate detachment of Fezzan from Libya.