List of wars involving Algeria

This is a list of wars involving the People's Democratic Republic of Algeria and its predecessor states.

  Algerian defeat
  Algerian victory
  Another result (e.g: Treaty, status quo ante bellum, indecisive/stalemate/withdrawal etc... or indecisive)

Zayyanid Kingdom of Tlemcen (1235–1556)

Conflict Belligerents Result for Algeria and its Allies
Combatant 1 Combatant 2
Zayyanid–Almohad wars (1236–1248)   Kingdom of Tlemcen   Almohad Caliphate

  Marinid Sultanate

  Hafsid dynasty

Zayyanid Victory
  • Independence of the Zayyanid emirate secured
Zayyanid Capture of Sijilmasa (1264)

Location:Sijilmasa, Morocco

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid Victory
Siege of Tlemcen (1272)

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid Victory
  • The Marinids lift the siege of the city
Battle of Tafna (1281) [fr]

Location: Tafna, Algeria and Morocco

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Marinid Victory
  • Zayyanid withdrawal
Siege of Tlemcen (1290) [fr]

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid Victory
  • The Marinids lift the siege of the city
Siege of Nedroma (1296)

Location: Nedroma, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid Victory
  • The Marinids lift the siege of the city
Siege of Tlemcen (1299–1307)

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid Victory
  • The Marinids lift the siege of the city
Siege of Oujda (1314) [fr]

Location: Oujda, Morocco

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid Victory
  • The Marinids lift the siege of the city
Siege of Béjaïa (1326–1329)

Location: Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Hafsid dynasty Zayyanid Partial Victory
  • The Hafsids defeated in Temzezdekt and er-Rias
  • The Zayyanids lift the siege of the city
Capture of Tunis (1329)

Location:Tunis, Tunisia
  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Hafsid dynasty Zayyanid Victory
  • The Hafsids briefly become vassal to the Zayyanids
Siege of Béjaïa (1331–1332) [fr]
Location: Algeria
  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Hafsid dynasty

  Marinid Sultanate

Hafsid-Marinid Victory
  • The Zayyanids lift the siege of the city
Siege of Tlemcen (1335–1337)

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Marinid Victory
  • Beginning of the first Marinid Occupation (1337–1348)
Capture of Tlemcen (1352) [fr]

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Marinid Decisive Victory
  • Full annexation of the Zayyanid kingdom
Battle of Kairouan (1348) [fr] (April 1348)

Location: Kairouan, Tunisia

  Kingdom of Tlemcen

  Hafsid dynasty

  Banu Sulaym
Banu Hilal

  Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid-Hafsid Victory
  • Independence of Tlemcen
Siege of Oran (1348) [fr] (October 1348)

Location: Oran, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Inconclusive
Siege of Oran (1349) [fr] (27th July– August 1349)

Location: Oran, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid Victory
  • Oran is annexed by the Zayyanids
Battle of Oujda (1359) [fr]

Location: Oujda, Morocco

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid Victory
Campagne of Tlemcen (1360) [fr]

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid Victory
  • End of the second Marinid Occupation (1352–1359)
Siege of Oran (1360–1361) [fr] (1360–1361)

Location: Oran, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid Victory
  • Oran is re annexed by the Zayyanids
Capture of Tlemcen (1370) [fr]

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Marinid Decisive Victory
  • Brief occupation of the Zayyanid Kingdom
Capture of Tlemcen (1383) [fr]

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Marinid Victory
  • Tlemcen briefly occupied
Capture of Tlemcen (1389) [fr]

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Marinid Victory
  • Marinid client briefly placed on the throne
Barbary Crusade (July 1st – October 1st 1390) Location: Mahdia, Tunisia
 
The crusaders fleet on its way to Mahdia
  Kingdom of Tlemcen

  Hafsid dynasty

  Hafsid of Bejaia

  Kingdom of France

  Republic of Genoa

Zayyanid-Hafsid Victory
Capture of Tlemcen (1393) [fr]

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Marinid Victory
  • The Zayyanids recognize Marinid suzerainty until 1411
Zayyanid conquest of Fez (1423)


Location: Fez, Morocco

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Marinid Sultanate Zayyanid victory
  • Zayyanid client briefly installed on the Marinid throne
Attack on Mers-el-Kébir (1497) [fr]

Location: Mers-el-Kébir, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Spanish Empire Zayyanid Victory
  • Spanish expedition Failure
  • The Zayyanid navy continues to evacuate the Andalusians residents in Spain
Battle of Mers-el-Kébir (1501)


Location: Mers-el-Kébir, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Portuguese Empire Zayyanid Victory
  • Mers el Kébir defended from Portuguese invasion
Capture of Mers-el-Kébir (1505)


Location: Mers-el-Kébir, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Spanish Empire Spanish Victory
  • Mers-el-Kébir captured by Spain
Battle of Mers-el-Kébir (1507)


Location: Mers-el-Kébir, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Spanish Empire Zayyanid Victory
Spanish conquest of Oran (1509)
Location: Oran, Algeria
 
Cardinal Cisneros dismbarking at Oran after the successful capture of the city
  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Spanish Empire Spanish victory
Spanish expedition to Tlemcen (1535) (June – July 1535)

Location: Tlemcen, Algeria

  Kingdom of Tlemcen   Spanish Empire Zayyanid Victory
  • Spanish Failure to establish a vassal in Tlemcen

Regency of Algiers (1515-1830)

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result for Algeria and its Allies
Algiers Expedition (1516)
(1516)

Location:Algiers
  Barbarossa
  Kingdom of Kuku
  Spanish Empire Algerian victory
  • Spanish attack repulsed
Algiers Expedition (1519)
(1516)

Location:Algiers
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Spanish Empire Algerian victory
  • Spanish attack repulsed
Fall of Tlemcen
(1519)

Location:Tlemcen, Algeria
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Spanish Empire Spanish victory
Capture of Peñón of Algiers (1529)
(1529)

Part of the Algero-Spanish Wars, and the establishment of the Regency of Algiers

Location:Algiers
 
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Spanish Empire Beylerbeylikal victory
Campaign of Cherchell (1531)
(1531)

Location:Cherchell
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Empire of Charles V:

  Kingdom of France

Algerian victory
Ottoman–Venetian War
(1537–1540)

Part of the Ottoman–Venetian wars

Part of the Algero-Spanish Wars

Location: Mediterranean Sea
 

  Beylerbeylik of Algiers
  Holy League:
  Republic of Venice
  Spanish Empire

  Republic of Genoa
  Papal States
  Knights of Malta

Ottoman victory
  • A treaty or "Capitulation" was signed between Venice and the Ottoman Empire to end the war on 2 October 1540.
  • In the period between the start of the Second Ottoman–Venetian War in 1499 and the end of this war in 1540, the Ottoman Empire made significant advances in the Dalmatian hinterland – it didn't occupy the Venetian cities, but it took the Kingdom of Hungary's Croatian possessions between Skradin and Karin, eliminating them as a buffer zone between the Ottoman and Venetian territory.[1] The economy of the Venetian cities in Dalmatia, severely impacted by the Turkish occupation of the hinterland in the previous war, recovered and held steady even throughout this war.[2]
Algiers expedition
(1541)

Part of the Ottoman–Habsburg wars

Part of the Algero-Spanish Wars

Location: Algiers
 
Siege of Algiers in 1541. Engraving of 1555.
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Holy Roman Empire


  Spanish Empire


  Republic of Genoa
  Republic of Venice
  Duchy of Savoy
  Papal States

Algerine victory
 
Charles V was the leader of the Holy League for the conquest of Algiers

Italian War of 1542–1546
(1542–1546)

Part of the Anglo-French Wars & Italian Wars

Part of the Algero-Spanish War

Location: Western Europe
 
The siege of Nice by a Franco-Ottoman fleet in 1543 (drawing by Toselli, after an engraving by Aeneas Vico)
  Kingdom of France
  Ottoman Empire

  Beylerbeylik of Algiers

  Holy Roman Empire


  Spanish Empire
  Kingdom of England

Inconclusive
Expedition to Mostaganem (1543)
(1543)

Location:Mostaganem
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Spanish Empire Algerian victory
  • Spanish attack repulsed
Expedition to Mostaganem (1547)
(1547)

Location:Mostaganem
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Spanish Empire Algerian victory
  • Spanish attack repulsed
Campaign of Tlemcen (1551)
(1551)
Part of the Algero-Spanish Wars

Location: Tlemcen
 
The troops of the regency of Algiers allied to the kingdom of Beni Abbes marching towards Oranie (19th century engraving)
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers
Kingdom of Ait Abbas
  Spanish Empire
  Saadi sultanate
Algerian victory
  • The Moulouya river is set as the border
Campaign of Tlemcen (1552)
(1552)
Location: Tlemcen
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Saadi sultanate Algerian victory
The Moulouya river imposed as the border[3]
Capture of Fez (1554)
(1554)
Location: Fez, Morocco
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers
  Kingdom of Kuku
  Saadi sultanate Algerian victory
Campaign of Tlemcen (1557)
(1557)
Location: Tlemcen
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Saadi sultanate Algerian victory
Expedition to Mostaganem (1558)
(1558)

Location:Mostaganem
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Spanish Empire Algerian victory
Campaign of Tlemcen (1560)
(1560)
Location: Tlemcen
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Saadi sultanate Algerian victory[4][5]
Rebellion of the Alpujarras
(1568–1571)

Part of the Algero-Spanish War

Location: Spain
 
Principal centres of the Morisco Revolt
Muslims of Granada
  Beylerbeylik of Algiers
  Spanish Empire Spanish victory
  • Mass expulsion of most Muslims in Granada
  • Resettlement of Granada with Catholic settlers
Franco-Algerian war (1609–1628)   Beylerbeylik of Algiers   Kingdom of France

Algerian victory

Tunisian–Algerian War (1628)
Part of the Tunisian–Algerian Wars
Location: Algeria, Tunisia
  Pashalik of Algiers   Beylik of Tunis Algerian victory
  • The border continues to be fixed further by the wadi Mellègue.
Cretan War (1645–1669)
Part of:Ottoman–Venetian wars
Location: Candia,Crete,Dalmatia and Aegean Sea
  Ottoman Empire Ottoman victory
Djidjelli expedition
(1664)

Location: Jijel
 
Combat between French and Algerian ships
  Pashalik of Algiers
Kingdom of Ait Abbas
  Kingdom of Kuku
  Kingdom of France
  Knights Hospitaller
Algerian victory
  • France abandons Djidjelli

Deylikal period (1671-1830)

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result for Algeria and its Allies
French-Algerian War
(1681–1688)

Location: Algeria, Mediterranean Sea
 
Bombardment of Algiers by the fleet of Admiral Duquesne in 1682
  Deylik of Algiers   Kingdom of France
  Knights Hospitaller
Algerian victory
Morean War
(1684–1699)

Part of the Ottoman–Venetian wars

Location: Peloponnese, southern Epirus, Central Greece, Aegean Sea, Montenegro
 
View of the fortress and harbour of Modon in 1688
  Ottoman Empire
  Deylik of Algiers
  Republic of Venice
  Holy Roman Empire
  Knights of Malta
  Duchy of Savoy
  Papal States
 Knights of St. Stephen
 Greek rebels
  Montenegrin
Venetian victory
  • Morea ceded to Venice
  • Venetian gains in inland Dalmatia
Moulouya War
(1692)

Part of the Conflicts between the Regency of Algiers and Morocco

Location: Moulouya River, Morocco
 
Battle of Moulouya in 1692 involded Algeria and Morocco.[6]
  Deylik of Algiers   Sultanate of Morocco Algerian victory[7]
  • Oujda experiences more than 100 years of rule under the Regency of Algiers[8][9]
Siege of Oran (1693)
(1693)

Part of the Conflicts between the Regency of Algiers and Morocco

Location: Oran, Algeria
  Spanish Empire

  Deylik of Algiers

  Sultanate of Morocco Spanish-Algerian victory
Tunisian-Algerian War of 1694
(1694)

Part of the Tunisian–Algerian Wars

Location: Tunisia
 
The fronts and battles during the Tunisian-Algerian war (1694)
  Deylik of Algiers
  Tripolitania
  Tunisia Algerian-Tripolitanian victory
  • All of Tunisia occupied (until 1695).[10]
  • Moroccan-Tunisian alliance.[11]
Maghrebi war
(1699–1702)

Part of the Tunisian–Algerian Wars

Part of the Conflicts between the Regency of Algiers and Morocco

Location: Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia
  Deylik of Algiers   Tunisia
  Sultanate of Morocco
  Tripolitania
Algerian Victory
  • Moroccan and Tunisian forces routed
Tunisian–Algerian War of 1705
(1705)
Part of the Tunisian–Algerian Wars
Location: Tunisia
  Deylik of Algiers   Beylik of Tunis Inconclusive
Oran Expedition (1707)
(1707)

Part of the Conflicts between the Regency of Algiers and Morocco

Location: Oran, Algeria
  Deylik of Algiers   Sultanate of Morocco Algerian victory
Siege of Oran (1707–1708)
(1707–1708)

Part of the Algero-Spanish War

Location: Algeria
 
The statue of Our Lady of Santa Cruz on the Fort of Santa Cruz in Oran
  Deylik of Algiers   Spanish Empire Algerian victory
Spanish-Algerian War (1732)(1732) Location: Oran
 
  Deylik of Algiers   Spanish Empire Spanish victory
Tunisian–Algerian Wars 1735
(1735)

Part of the Tunisian–Algerian Wars

Location: Tunisia
  Deylik of Algiers   Beylik of Tunis Algerian victory
  • Abu l-Hasan Ali I proclaimed bey of Tunis
  • Tunisian commitment to pay an annual tribute of 50,000 piastres to Algiers
Tunisian–Algerian Wars 1756
(1756)

Part of the Tunisian–Algerian Wars

Location: Tunisia
  Deylik of Algiers
Loyalists of Muhammad
  Beylik of Tunis
  Knights Hospitaller
Algerian and loyalist victory
  • Muhammad I ar-Rashid proclaimed bey of Tunis
  • Bey's commitment to pay a tribute (oil to light the Algerian mosques)
Danish-Algerian War
(1769–1772)

Part of the Algeria-European War

Location: Mediterranean Sea
  Deylik of Algiers   Denmark–Norway Algerian victory
 
Christian VII of Denmark
Spanish-Algerian war (1775-1785)
(1775–1785)

Part of the Algero-Spanish War

Location: Algiers
 
Map of the Spanish attack on Algiers in 1775
  Deylik of Algiers   Spanish Empire
  Tuscany

 Kingdom of Sicily
  Kingdom of Naples
  Malta
  Portugal
Algerian victory
American–Algerian War (1785–1795)
Location: Mediterranean Sea and Atlantic Ocean
  Deylik of Algiers   United States Algerian victory
  • United States agrees to pay an annual tribute of $21,600 to Algiers
  • Establishment of the United States Navy
Russo-Turkish War
(1787–1792)

Part of the Algeria-European War

Part of the Russo-Ottoman Wars

Location: Eastern Europe
 
Siege of Ochakov 1788, by Polish painter January Suchodolski
  Ottoman Empire
  Deylik of Algiers
  Russian Empire
 
Black Sea Cossacks
 
Montenegro
 
Serbian Free Corps
Russian victory
  • No major repercussions in Algiers
Reconquest of Oran and Mers el-Kébir (1790-1792)
(1790–1792)
Part of the Algero-Spanish Wars

Location: Oran and Mers-el-Kébir
  Deylik of Algiers   Spanish Empire Algerian victory
  • Spain abandons Oran and Mers-el-Kébir
Tunisian–Algerian War (1807)
Part of: Tunisian–Algerian War
Location: Tunisia
  Deylik of Algiers   Beylik of Tunis Tunisian victory
  • Algerian victory in Constantine
  • Failure to innvade tunisia
Algerian-Tunsian naval war (1811)   Deylik of Algiers
  •   Algerian Navy
  Beylik of Tunis Algerian victory
Tunisian–Algerian War (1813)   Deylik of Algiers   Beylik of Tunis Peace Treaty
  • Tunisian Victory and the invasion repelled
  • Political instability in Tunisia after the death of Hammouda Pasha
  • Algerian Military Victory
Second Barbary war
(1815)
Location: Mediterranean Sea
  Deylik of Algiers   United States American victory
  • Freedom of movement in the Mediterranean for American ships
Bombardment of Algiers
(1816)
Location: Algiers
 
Bombardment of Algiers 1816, George Chambers
  Deylik of Algiers   British Empire
  Dutch Empire
Anglo-Dutch victory
 
Sketch showing the positions of the fleet during the bombardment
 
Bombardment of Algiers, painted by Martinus Schouman
Greek War of Independence
(1821–1829)

Location: Greece
 
Clockwise: The camp of Georgios Karaiskakis at Phaliro, the burning of an Ottoman frigate by a Greek fire ship, the Battle of Navarino and Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt at the Third Siege of Missolonghi
  Ottoman
  Deylik of Algiers
  Tripolitania
  Egypt
  Tunisia
1821:

After 1822:

Military support:

Diplomatic support:

Greek independence:
 
Map showing the original territory of the Kingdom of Greece as laid down in the Treaty of 1832 (in dark blue)

French Algeria (1830–1962)

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result for Algeria and its Allies
French conquest of Algeria
(1830–1903)

Part of the Algeria-European War

Location: Algeria
 
La prise de Constantine by Horace Vernet
  Regency of Algiers

  Emirate of Mascara
  Kingdom of Ait Abbas
Sultanate of Tuggurt
Kel Ahaggar
  Awlad Sidi Shaykh Support:
  Morocco (until 1844)

  Kingdom of France (1830–1848)
  French Second Republic (1848–1852)
  Second French Empire (1852–1870)
  French Third Republic (1870 onward)

Support:
  Morocco (1847)

French victory

Pacification of Algeria

 
Chronological map of French Algeria's evolution
Algerian War
(1954–1962)

Part of the Algeria-European War

Location: Algeria
 
Collage of the French war in Algeria
  FLN

  MNA
  PCA

  France Algerian independence

~1,500,000 total deaths (FLN estimate)
~700,000 total deaths (Horne's estimate)[23]
~350,000 total deaths (French estimate)

People's Democratic Republic of Algeria (1962-present)

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result for Algeria and its Allies
Sand War
(1963–1964)

Part of the Algeria-European War

Location: Algeria
 
Border Algeria and Morocco
  Algeria
  Egypt[26]
  Cuba[27]
  Morocco
Support:
  France
[28]
Inconclusive
  • The closing of the border south of Figuig, Morocco/Béni Ounif, Algeria.
  • Morocco abandoned its intentions to control Béchar and Tindouf after OAU mediation.
  • No territorial changes were made.
  • Demilitarized zone established
Yom Kippur War

(1973)

  United Arab Republic

  Expeditionary forces:

Supported by:

  Israel

Supported by:

Israeli military victory
Western Sahara War
(1975–1976)

Location: Western Sahara
 
Map of the Western Sahara; the red line is the military berm built by Morocco
 Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
  Algeria
  Morocco
  Mauritania
Inconclusive
  • Spanish withdrawal under the Madrid Accords (1976)
  • Mauritanian retreat and withdrawal of territorial claims
  • Military Stalemate[29][30][31]
  • Ceasefire agreed on between the Polisario Front and Morocco (1991)
Algerian Civil War
(1991–2002)

Location: Algeria
 
Military deployed in the streets of Algiers, after the military coup against the Islamists, who took up arms later
  Algeria


  Tunisia[33][34]
  European Union[35]
  France[34][35]
  Egypt[33][34]
  South Africa[36]
  Belarus (from 1997)[37]

  FIS loyalists

Support:
  Libya (until 1995)[34]
  Morocco (alleged)[34][38][39]
  Saudi Arabia (pre-war)[35]
  Iran (alleged)[35]
Saudi private donors[35]


GIA (from 1993)

Supported by:
  Sudan (alleged)[41][42][43]
  Iran (alleged)[41][42][43]
Finsbury Park Mosque[44][45]
Brandbergen Mosque[46][47]
  EIJ (until 1995)[48]

Government victory
Insurgency in the Maghreb (2002–present)
(2002–present)

Location: Maghreb, Sahara, Sahel
 
Map showing GSPC area of operations (pink), member states of the Pan Sahel Initiative (dark blue), and members of the Trans-Saharan Counterterrorism Initiative (dark and light blue)
  Algeria
  Mauritania
  Tunisia
  Libya
  Mali
  Niger[51]
  Chad[52]
  France[52][53][54]
  Morocco[55]
  GSPC (until 2007)
  AQIM (from 2007)
  Jama'at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin (from 2017)
  MOJWA (2011–13)
  Al-Mourabitoun (2013–17)
  Ansar Dine (2012–17)
  Ansar al-Sharia (Tunisia) (from 2011)[56]
  Uqba ibn Nafi Brigade (from 2012)[57]
  Ansar al-Sharia (Libya) (2012–17)
  Salafia Jihadia[55]
  Boko Haram (from 2006, partially aligned with ISIL since 2015)[58][59]
Ongoing
ISIL insurgency in Tunisia
(2015–2022)

Location: Tunisia
  Tunisia
  Algeria
  Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL)

  Ansar al-Sharia
(only in March 2016)[61]

Government victory
  • The armed insurgency was suppressed in 2022.[62]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ 1821
  2. ^ a b c From 1826
  3. ^ First nation to recognize the independence of Greece.

References

  1. ^ Bogumil Hrabak (September 1986). "Turske provale i osvajanja na području današnje severne Dalmacije do sredine XVI. stoleća". Journal – Institute of Croatian History (in Serbian). 19 (1). University of Zagreb, Faculty of Philosophy, Zagreb. ISSN 0353-295X. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
  2. ^ Raukar, Tomislav (November 1977). "Venecija i ekonomski razvoj Dalmacije u XV i XVI stoljeću". Journal – Institute of Croatian History (in Croatian). 10 (1). Zagreb, Croatia: Faculty of Philosophy, Zagreb: 218–221. ISSN 0353-295X. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
  3. ^ Recherches sur l'Algérie à l'époque ottomane: La course, mythes et réalités Lemnouar Merouche Bouchene,
  4. ^ The Last Crusaders: East, West and the Battle for the Centre of the World. Barnaby Rogerson. Hachette UK.
  5. ^ History of Islam: Classical period, 1206-1900 C.E. Masudul Hasan. Adam Publishers & Distributors.
  6. ^ "Estats et royaumes de Fez et Maroc, Dahra et Segelmesse tirés de Sanuto, de Marmol etc. / Par N. Sanson". 1655.
  7. ^ Galibert, Léon (1844). L'Algérie: ancienne et moderne depuis les premiers éstablissements des Carthaginois jusqu'à la prise de la Smalah d'Abd-el-Kader (in French). Furne.
  8. ^ Present-day Morocco - Osmund Hornby WarneAllen & Unwin, 1937 - Morocco - Pg 237
  9. ^ Bulletin économique et social du Maroc, Volume 21, Issues 73-76 Société d'études économiques, sociales, et statistiques, 1957 - Morocco - Pg 74
  10. ^ Plantet, Eugène (1893). "Correspondance des Beys de Tunis et des consuls de France avec la Cour: 1577-1830".
  11. ^ "Les Deys 2". exode1962.fr. Retrieved 2021-05-10
  12. ^ Windrow, Martin; Chappell, Mike (1997). The Algerian War 1954–62. Osprey Publishing. p. 11. ISBN 978-1-85532-658-3.
  13. ^ Introduction to Comparative Politics, by Mark Kesselman, Joel Krieger, William Joseph, page 108
  14. ^ Alexander Cooley, Hendrik Spruyt. Contracting States: Sovereign Transfers in International Relations. Page 63.
  15. ^ George Bernard Noble. Christian A. Herter: The American Secretaries of State and Their Diplomacy. Page 155.
  16. ^ Robert J. C. Young (12 October 2016). Postcolonialism: An Historical Introduction. Wiley. p. 300. ISBN 978-1-118-89685-3. the French lost their Algerian empire in military and political defeat by the FLN, just as they lost their empire in China in defeat by Giap and Ho Chi Minh.
  17. ^ R. Aldrich (10 December 2004). Vestiges of Colonial Empire in France. Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-230-00552-5. For the [French] nation as a whole, commemoration of the Franco-Algerian War is complicated since it ended in defeat (politically, if not strictly militarily) rather than victory.
  18. ^ Alec G. Hargreaves (2005). Memory, Empire, and Postcolonialism: Legacies of French Colonialism. Lexington Books. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-7391-0821-5. The death knell of the French empire was sounded by the bitterly fought Algerian war of independence, which ended in 1962.
  19. ^ "The French defeat in the war effectively signaled the end of the French Empire". Jo McCormack (2010). Collective Memory: France and the Algerian War (1954–1962).
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