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  2. Ifrane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ifrane

    Ifrane, the house of Lake Dayet Iffer is also a popular altitude training destination. [3] The first permanent settlement of the area dates to the 16th century, when the Sharif Sîdî 'Abd al-Salâm established his community in the Tizguit Valley, seven km downstream from the present town. Ifrane is a colonial "hill station", and a "garden city ...

  3. Ifrane National Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ifrane_National_Park

    Ifrane National Park is one of the ways that the Moroccan state came up with in order to demonstrate the importance of its forests and ecosystems. The park initially covered an area of 53,800 ha (133,000 acres), and was enlarged in April 2008 [ 6 ] to encompasses some of the most ecologically sensitive areas such as wetlands and high-altitude ...

  4. Ifrane Province - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ifrane_Province

    Ifrane (Arabic: افران) is a province in the Moroccan region of Fès-Meknès. Its population in 2013 was 156,038 [1] The major cities and towns are: Ain Leuh; Azrou; Had Oued Ifrane; Ifrane; Sidi Addi; Timahdite

  5. Ifrane Atlas-Saghir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ifrane_Atlas-Saghir

    Ifrane Atlas-Saghir was an ancient home to a 2,000-year-old Jewish population, the oldest in Morocco, until 1958 when they left as a group to settle in Israel. [2] Today an important Jewish pilgrimage site is located there, being the site of a mass suicide of the 1700s, undertaken in the face of a brutal persecution by a local sorcerer.

  6. Yafran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yafran

    Watch tower near Yefren. Yafran / ˈ j ɑː f r ən / (Arabic: يفرن), also spelled Jefren, Yefren, Yifran, Yifrin or Ifrane, is a city in northwestern Libya, in the Jabal al Gharbi District in the western Nafusa Mountains. Before 2007, Yafran was the administrative seat of the Yafran District. [3]

  7. Azrou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azrou

    The town was long neglected by the Moroccan authorities since independence in 1956 to the detriment of the nearby town of Ifrane. Although it is the true capital of the Middle Atlas and a town that has given Morocco many leaders and intellectuals, the town still does not officially rank as provincial capital, although it is in practice.