-
Cazaza was a
Spanish enclave on the
western coast of Cape
Three Forks, in what is
today Morocco,
around 18 km from Melilla. It was here that the exiled...
-
Mediterranean in exile,
departing in
October 1493 from Adra and
landing in
Cazaza. He
settled in Fes,
accompanied by an
entourage of 1,130
courtiers and servants...
-
repulsed by the guns of the
Spanish ships.
After the
conquest of Melilla,
Cazaza and
Mazalquivir fell in 1505, Peñón de Vélez de la
Gomera in 1508, Oran...
- to
pledge loyalty.
While the 1494
Treaty of
Tordesillas put
Melilla and
Cazaza,
until then
reserved to the Portuguese,
under the
sphere of Castile, the...
- Pequeña (1478)
Expansion to the
Maghreb (1493–1510) Djerba (1493) Melilla (1497)
Cazaza (1505) Mers-el-Kébir (1505) Mers-el-Kébir (1507) Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera (1508)...
- séptimo
duque de
Medina Sidonia, décimo
conde de Niebla,
quinto marqués de
Cazaza, señor de Sanlúcar de Barrameda, señor de Gibraleón,
caballero del Toisón...
- Vélez de la Gomera, 1508–1522 and
since 1564
Alhucemas Islands,
since 1559
Cazaza, 1505–1533 Melilla,
since 1497 Honaine,
briefly in 1534 Mers El Kébir (Mazalquivir)...
- in the present-day building. Boabdil, for example,
exiled from Adra to
Cazaza to
establish in Fes. One
early example is the
conversion of the "Almoravid...
- Sanlúcar, the
County of Niebla, the
Marquisate of Gibraltar, the
Marquisate of
Cazaza and the
Marquisate of Valverde. The
House of
Medina Sidonia was from its...
- Pequeña (1478)
Expansion to the
Maghreb (1493–1510) Djerba (1493) Melilla (1497)
Cazaza (1505) Mers-el-Kébir (1505) Mers-el-Kébir (1507) Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera (1508)...