Country, North Africa.
Officially Kingdom of Morocco
Area: 177,117 sq mi (458,730 sq km). Population (2002 est.): 29,632,000. Capital: Rabat. Arabized Berbers are the country's largest ethnolinguistic group; there are French, Spanish, and Bedouin minorities. Languages: Arabic (official), Berber, French. Religion: Islam (official), mostly Sunnite. Currency: dirham.
Morocco is a mountainous country with an average elevation of 2,600 ft (800 m) above sea level. A mountain chain known as the Rif runs along the northern coast; the Atlas Mountains rise in the country's centre and include Mount Toubkal (13,665 ft [4,165 m]), the country's highest point of elevation. The area is a zone of severe seismic activity, and earthquakes are frequent. Its fertile lowlands support agriculture; major crops include barley, wheat, and sugar beets. Morocco is one of the world's largest suppliers of phosphate. Its industrial centre is Casablanca, the largest city. It is a constitutional monarchy with two legislative houses; its chief of state and head of government is the king, assisted by the prime minister. The Berbers entered Morocco near the end of the 2nd millennium BC. Phoenicians established trading posts along the Mediterranean coast during the 12th century BC, and Carthage had settlements along the Atlantic coast in the 5th century BC. After the fall of Carthage, the region's leaders became loyal allies of Rome, and in 46 AD it was annexed by the Romans as part of the province of Mauretania. It was invaded by Muslims in the 7th century. The Almoravid dynasty conquered it and the Muslim areas of Spain in the mid-11th century; in the 12th century the Almohad dynasty overthrew the Almoravids. They in turn were conquered by the Marinid dynasty in the 13th century. After the fall of the Marinids in the mid-15th century, the Sa'di dynasty ruled for a century, beginning c. 1550. Attacks by pirates from the states of the Barbary Coast compelled Europeans to enter the area: the French fought Morocco over the boundary with Algeria, Britain obtained trading rights in 1856, and the Spanish seized part of Moroccan territory in 1859. Morocco was a French protectorate from 1912 until its independence in 1956. In the late 1970s it reasserted claim to the Spanish Sahara (see Western Sahara), and in 1976 Spanish troops withdrew from the region, leaving behind the Algerian-supported Saharan guerrillas of the Polisario movement. Relations with Mauritania and Algeria deteriorated, and fighting over the region continued. Attempts at mediation by the international community met with little success.
Morocco has a rich culture and civilization. Each region possesses its own specificities, contributing, thus, to the making of national culture and to the civilization legacy. Morocco has set among its top priorities to protect all forms of its legacy and preserve its historical monuments.
Since its independence, Morocco has witnessed deep socio-cultural mutations like all other countries in the second half of the XX century. It is within these changes that arts are being organized for several decades.
It was also decided to allocate 1% of the local councils budget to the building in each prefecture or province of a culture compound, that comprises a theater, and to the sponsorship of artists. It is likewise projected to create in each region, two drama companies that local councils will finance and supply with the appropriate means.
Morocco has two institutes :
-The higher archeology institutes, created in 1986;
-The national institute of drama arts and cultural entertainment, created in 1987.
Museums
- The Oudaya museum in Rabat
- The Batha museum in Fes
- The "Dar El Jamii" museum in Meknes
- The "Bab El Alqa" museum in Tetouan
- The "Sidi Mohammed Ben Abdellah" museum in Essaouira
- The "Dar Si Said" museum in Marrakesh
- The museum of Chefchaouen
- The archaeologic museum of Rabat
- The archaeologic museum of Larache
- The archaeologic museum of Tetouan
- The "Nour" weapons museum in Fes
- The national earthenware museum in Safi
- The museum of contemporary arts in Tangiers
- The Kasba museum in Tangiers
- The "Dar Belghazi" museum in Rabat (private)