Compagnie Marocaine

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La Compagnie Marocaine
Company typeholding company
Industryinternational trade Edit this on Wikidata
Headquarters
France Edit this on Wikidata

La Compagnie Marocaine (the Moroccan Company) was a French colonial holding company founded in 1902 for the purpose of exploiting Morocco.[1]

History

In 1902, a group of industrialists led by Eugène Schneider II founded the company with the purpose of organizing commercial, industrial, and agricultural activities in Morocco.

Eugène Schneider II was its first president.

A man inspects the derailed Decauville locomotive belonging to La Compagnie Marocaine in 1907.

The

Bombardment of Casablanca in August 1907, marking the beginning of the French conquest of Morocco.[2]

Starting in 1911, in order to secure an increase in capital, the presidency went to a representative of the Banque de l'Union Parisienne.

It participated in the creation of the Compagnie des Chemins de Fer du Maroc (Railroad Company of Morocco) and become a main shareholder.

La Compagnie Marocaine was listed in the

Paris Bourse
in 1920.

Administration

List of presidents

  • 1903-1911: Eugène Schneider II
  • 1911-1914: Jules-Frédéric Lambert, marquis de Frondeville
  • 1914?-1922: Max Boucard
  • 1922-1923: Cornelis de Witt
  • 1923-1958: Jacques Feray

See also

References

  1. ^ "الشركة المغربية: أول الغزاة". زمان (in Arabic). 2018-02-06. Retrieved 2019-04-28.
  2. ^ Adam, André (1968). Histoire de Casablanca, des origines à 1914. Éditions Ophrys. p. 107.

Bibliography

  • Pierre Guillen, L'implatation de Schneider au Maroc, les débuts de la Compagnie marocaine (1902-1906), 1965
  • André Adam, Histoire de Casablanca: des origines à 1914, 1968
  • Mohamed Bouzidi, Histoire économique, le Maroc précolonial, 1981