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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MIC-MOL |
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MOGADOR (Es-Sueira) , the most southern seaport on the Atlantic coast of Morocco, in 31 50' N., 9 2o' W., the capital of the province of HaM. Pop. (1908), about 20,000, of whom nearly a half are said to be Jews, and about loo Europeans. The town stands from io to 20 ft. above high water on a projecting ridge
wall
supply is carried by an overground conduit from a spring nearDiabat. The prosperity of Mogador is due to its commerce. The harbour is well sheltered from all winds except the south-west, but escape is difficult with the wind from that quarter, as the channel between the town and Mogador Island is narrow and hazardous. It is the best-built port of the sultanate and is generally second in point of trade, which is carried on mainly with Marseilles, London, Gibraltar and the Canaries, the principal exports being almonds, goat-skins, gums and olive-oil, and the principal imports cotton
A place called Mogador is marked in the 1351 Portulan of the Laurentian library, and the map in Hondius's Atlas minor shows the island of Mogador, I. Domegador; but the origin of the present town is much more recent
village
See A. H. Dye, " Les Ports du Maroc," in Bull. Soc. Geog. Comm. Paris (1908), xxx. 313 sqq., and British Consular reports. End of Article: MOGADOR (Es-Sueira) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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