Asilah

Morocco
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Also known as: Arcila, Arzīlah
Also called:
Arzīlah
Spanish:
Arcila

Asilah, city on the Atlantic coast of northwestern Morocco, south of Tangier. While some attribute its founding to the Phoenicians, others believe its origins date back to the Roman period; perhaps each account refers to a slightly different location on this busy coastal strip not far from Europe. Descendants of Mawlāy Idrīs I settled in Asilah. It was later taken over by the rulers of Córdoba, who remained until the 13th century. It was in this period that the city became an important commercial outpost, visited by Genoese, Catalan, and Majorcan traders. In 1471 the Portuguese occupied Asilah, and in 1578, after the Battle of the Three Kings, it became a Spanish possession. It did not return to Moroccan hands until 1589, after an agreement between the Spanish ruler Philip II and the Moroccan Sultan Aḥmad al-Manṣūr, of the Saʿdī dynasty. In 1911 the Spaniards reoccupied the city, and it remained part of Spanish Morocco until it was returned to the Moroccan kingdom in 1956. Asilah is now a fishing port, a summer resort town, and a trading centre for cereals, cattle, and sheep. Pop. (2004) 28,217.