MELILLA


Meaning of MELILLA in English

chief town of a Spanish plaza (enclave) on the northern coast of Morocco. The town is located on the eastern side of the Cap des Trois Fourches, a rocky peninsula that extends approximately 25 miles (40 km) into the Mediterranean Sea. Though physically contiguous with Morocco, Melilla is administered by Spain. Colonized by the ancient Phoenicians (later Carthaginians) and Romans under the name of Rusaddir, it fell as a Berber town to Spain in 1497 and remained Spanish thereafter despite a long history of attack and siege. After acquiring the adjacent area in about 1909, Spain modernized Melilla's port and made the town into a garrison post for Spanish Morocco. In 1921 during the Rif War, Moroccan tribes under the leadership of Abd el-Krim almost captured the town. Melilla was the first Spanish town to rise against the Popular Front government in July 1936, thus helping precipitate the Spanish Civil War. Melilla was retained by Spain as an enclave when Morocco attained independence in 1956. In 1995 the Spanish government approved statutes of autonomy for Melilla, replacing the city council with an assembly similar to those of Spain's other autonomous communities. The modern quarter of the town spreads south and west on the mainland, while the old walled city is situated between the port and the new quarter. The port exports iron ore that is transported by rail from mines in the Rif of the adjacent (Moroccan) hinterland. Melilla is also the site of an important Spanish military base. Two-thirds of the enclave's population is Roman Catholic, while the remainder is mostly Muslim. Area 5 square miles (12 square km). Pop. (1991 prelim.) 56,497.

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