Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts
0 sources
Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts
Summary
Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts is an armed conflict[1]. It draws 285 Wikipedia views per month (armed_conflict category, ranking #61 of 213).[2]
Key Facts
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts's instance of is recorded as armed conflict[3].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts took place at Morocco[4].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts is part of Reconquista[5].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts comprises Conquest of Ceuta[6].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts comprises Aljazira Skirmish[7].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts comprises Good Friday Skirmish (1417)[8].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts comprises Escaramuça dos Gazulos (1418)[9].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts comprises Ransack of Larache (1419)[10].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts comprises First Siege of Ceuta[11].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts comprises Second Siege of Ceuta[12].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts comprises Jihad of Auderamem[13].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts comprises Ataque dos Gazulos[14].
- Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts comprises Skirmish on the eve of Santa Maria de September[15].
Body
Definition and Type
Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts's instance of is recorded as armed conflict[3].
Use and Application
Components include Conquest of Ceuta[6], a battle[16], in Marinid dynasty[17]; Aljazira Skirmish[7]; Good Friday Skirmish (1417)[8]; Escaramuça dos Gazulos (1418)[9]; Ransack of Larache (1419)[10]; and First Siege of Ceuta[11], a siege[18], in Kingdom of Portugal[19]. Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts is part of Reconquista[5].
Why It Matters
Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts draws 285 Wikipedia views per month (armed_conflict category, ranking #61 of 213).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]