Santa Cruz de la Mar Pequeña
Santa Cruz de la Mar Pequeña (literally Holy Cross of the Little Sea) was a 15th century Spanish settlement close to Akhfennir, in the Tarfaya Province, in Morocco.
History
[edit]Founded by the Canary Islands lord Diego de Herrera in 1478 as a trading and fishing post with a fortress. It was located close to a mouth bar (hence its name) across Lanzarote. The importance of the settlement was derived from its position in the trans-Saharan slave trade, and captives were shipped to sugar plantations on the Canary Islands. The Saadi dynasty raided the place and the Spanish eventually left Santa Cruz, being completely abandoned by 1524.[1]
The exact location of what used to be Santa Cruz de la Mar Pequeña was forgotten.[2] After the Treaty Between France and Spain Regarding Morocco (1912), in 1916 the Spanish gained control of the Cape Juby Strip which included the place. It was renamed officially Puerto Cansado, as that was the name given by the Canarian fishermen.
On the other hand, in the mid-nineteenth century, after the Hispano-Moroccan War (1859–1860), the Sultanate of Morocco agreed to hand the place (of uncertain location) to Spain in the 1860 Treaty of Wad Ras. In the wake of the visit of a Spanish delegation to Fez in 1877, a joint Hispano-Moroccan committee was created in order to determine the location of Santa Cruz de la Mar Pequeña.[3] This committee eventually misidentified Santa Cruz de la Mar Pequeña with Ifni,[3] actually located about 480 kilometers north of the real fortress.
(Note: 480 km distance must be a mistake. Ifni (Sidi Ifni) is about 240 km from Akhfennir and about 270 km from Khenifiss National Park(distance by air), even if one meant distance by car it'd still only be about 330 km distance.)
The Moroccan sultan accepted the identification in 1883, even if the border delimitation did not take place at the time and the effective Spanish occupation did not take place until 1934.[3]
Description
[edit]Located on the north bank of the Naila lagoon in the Khenifiss National Park. The only remains of the 15th century settlement are the foundations of an 8-meter side square fortified tower of Santa Cruz de la Mar Pequeña. In 2011 local archaeologists excavated the Sahara desert's sands in order to identify the tower, which is currently under the sand and called Foum Agoutir.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Cervantes, Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de. "Santa Cruz de Mar Pequeña". Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-12-26.
- ^ [revistas.ucm.es https://revistas.ucm.es › articlePDF La falacia histórica sobre la colonia de Ifni The Historical Fallacy on the Ifni "La falacia histórica de la colonia de Ifni. Autor: Guadalupe Pérez García. Historia y Comunicación Social 2003 8"].
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value (help) - ^ a b c Torres García, Ana (2016–2017). "La negociación de la retrocesión de Ifni: contribución a su estudio" [The negotiation of the retrocession of Ifni: contribution to its study] (PDF). Norba: Revista de historia (in Spanish) (29–30): 183–184. ISSN 0213-375X.
External links
[edit]- (in Spanish) En busca de la torre perdida
28°3′N 12°13′W / 28.050°N 12.217°W