The Maghreb
- the region that today encompasses Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia & Libya
- is a region apart within the larger Muslim & Arab world. Today the focus of popular uprisings for democracy & participation, it underwent long periods of colonisation & anti-colonial nationalist resistance, both peaceful & militant. To understand the nature of today`s developments in North Africa we need fully to appreciate the tumultuous history of the region & how its four discrete countries followed different trajectories, some marked by a continuity of social & political structures in both the colonial era & as independent states, while others were marked by sharp ruptures & violent struggles. These historical differences are still visible in the current era & tell us much about the societies in question. This short history of the Maghreb surveys its development from the coming of Islam to the present day, but with greatest emphasis on the modern period from the early nineteenth century onwards. It follows the French protectorates, Morocco & Tunisia, & how their nationalist movements forged the independent states that followed; & it chronicles the wars of resistance & liberation in Algeria & Libya, & how these conflicts also marked their independence, with a long-running civil war in the former & the recent uprising against the Gaddafi regime in the latter.