Melilla
| Area - Total | 20 km² |
| Population - Total (2003) - Density | 69,184 3459.2/km² |
| Demonym - English - Spanish | --- melillense |
| Statute of Autonomy | March 14, 1995 |
| ES-ML | |
| Parliamentary representation - Congress seats - Senate seats | 1 |
| President | Juan José Imbroda Ortíz (PP) |
| Ciudad Autónoma de Melilla | |
Since independence from France and Spain, Morroco has always claimed Melilla, along with Ceuta and various small Spanish islands off the coast of Africa (Plazas de soberanía) and the Canary Islands, drawing comparisons with Spain's territorial claim to Gibraltar. The Spanish government rejects these comparisons (as do the inhabitants of the cities), on the grounds that both Ceuta and Melilla are integral parts of the Spanish state, whereas Gibraltar, a British overseas territory, is not and never has been part of the United Kingdom.
There is considerable pressure by African refugees to enter Melilla, a part of the European Union. The border is secured by the Melilla border fence, a three-meter-tall double fence with watch towers, yet refugees regularly manage to cross it illegally, avoiding the attempts by Spanish police to take them back to their home countries.
ISO 3166-1 reserves EA for Melilla and Ceuta.
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2 Architecture 3 See also 4 External links |
History
It was a Phoenician and later Punic establishment under the name of Rusadir. Later it became a part of the Roman province of Mauretania Tingitana. As centuries passed, it went through Vandal, Byzantine and Visigothic hands. Melilla was on the frontier of the Kingdom of Tlemcen and the Kingdom of Fes when the duke of Medina Sidonia commended its conquest it for Castile conquered in 1497 a few years after Spain had conquered the last Moorish kingdom of Al-Andalus.Architecture
Melilla sports the only Gothic arch of Africa.During the change from the 19th to the 20th century, Melilla enjoyed prosperity. The new bourgeois class expressed its new prestige in the architectural style en vogue in Spain, the Modernisme. The workshops inspired by Catalan architect Enrique Nieto continued in the style even after it was out of style elsewhere, making it the second concentration of Modernisme works after Barcelona.
See also
External links
- Official pages in Spanish
- Official Turism in English
- Melilla en Internet Journal in Spanish
- Monuments of Melilla Official in Spanish
- Spain's North African enclaves
- A Childhood Lost in the Cracks of Europe's Border
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