Coordinates: 35°48′N 0°16′W / 35.800°N 0.267°W / 35.800; -0.267

Bethioua

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Bethioua District within Algeria's Oran Province

Bethioua (Arabic: بطيوة), formerly Arsenaria, Portus Magnus, Arzew (أرزيو, ʾArzyu), Vieil Arzew ("Old Arzew"), and Saint Leu, is a port town and district near Arzew in Oran Province in northwestern Algeria. It has a gas port, petrochemical facilities and desalination plant.

History

Bethioua is located on the ruins of the ancient Roman settlement of Arsenaria or Portus Magnus.

The region itself belonged to the Battiwa (Ibeṭṭiwen), a group of Berber clans which arrived from the Rif mountains, mainly Ait Said and Temsaman tribe. They were composed of clans from Zegzawa (Izegzawen), the Ait Mait and their Maraboutic leader Sidi Amar Ben Ahmed whose mausoleum lies facing the sea.[1] Originally settled in Mazagran near the city of Mostaganem, the Ibeṭṭiwen and Battiwa the bey of Mascara gave them coastal territory a little further west[clarification needed] in 1784. Under French occupation, the Battiwa took refuge in Mazagran again.[clarification needed] Most of them were given back their land by the authorities.[who?][clarification needed][when?][2] Today only elders can still really speak the tribe language.[clarification needed][3]

When the Anglo-Americans invaded Algeria in November 1941 (Operation Torch), the American troops who captured Oran landed at Beach Z,[4] which was the strip of coastline between Arzew and Bethioua.[5]

References

  1. ^ Hart, David M. (2014), "Ibettiwen and Bettiwa in Arzew, Riffian Diasporic Communities", Tribe and Society in Rural Morocco, p. 163.
  2. ^ Emile Janier Les Bettiwa de Saint Leu - Revue Africaine 1945, pp. 238–241, Lire en ligne Archived 2018-10-15 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Betiwa 1 | PDF".
  4. ^ Colin Smith, England's Last War Against France: Fighting Vichy 1940-1942, ISBN, 0297852183, 2009
  5. ^ "Algeria-French Morocco". www.history.army.mil. Archived from the original on 2008-01-04.

35°48′N 0°16′W / 35.800°N 0.267°W / 35.800; -0.267

Bibliography