Portugalafa Mazagão widava ( Aljadida ) Portugalaf folkayeem ke Mazagan re tis pak ke Aljadida refa widava arte 90 km- getalte Casablanca ( Dar al-Bayda ), wetce folkafo boniaxo kene atlantikafa krimta teni XVI-eafa decemda zo vegeduyur. Boniaxo gan magribik bak 1769 zo dimnariyir. Folkayeem don lipteem is migexeem vas abditcafa tula ke sayakafa vegeduropa ke Dimblirugal tadler. Portugalafa kolna wan tid rowina tid lavak is Assunção uja ( kolnayana ton Manuel martig ). Mazagão portugalafa widava tiyir tano taneafo exonexo koe ronefa Afrika, ke portugalaf vestasik totas van India. Va burkafa vrutara va gamdasa turestara wal europafa araya isu magribafa nedir, tulon ton vegeduropa is ckaneopa is widavopa. ~ UNESCO : Aljadida
(en) Portuguese City of Mazagan (El Jadida) The Portuguese fortification of Mazagan, now part of the city of El Jadida, 90-km southwest of Casablanca, was built as a fortified colony on the Atlantic coast in the early 16th century. It was taken over by the Moroccans in 1769. The fortification with its bastions and ramparts is an early example of Renaissance military design. The surviving Portuguese buildings include the cistern and the Church of the Assumption, built in the Manueline style of late Gothic architecture. The Portuguese City of Mazagan - one of the early settlements of the Portuguese explorers in West Africa on the route to India - is an outstanding example of the interchange of influences between European and Moroccan cultures, well reflected in architecture, technology, and town planning. ~ UNESCO website, licence CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0