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Emilio Bonelli

Spanish military officer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Emilio Bonelli
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Don Emilio Bonelli y Hernando (7 November 1854 in Zaragoza, Aragon 28 November 1926 in Madrid[1]) was a Spanish military officer, author, explorer, colonial administrator and Africanist.

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Biography

Bonelli entered the Spanish Army in 1875 and attended the Toledo Infantry Academy, achieving the rank of ensign in 1878.[2] He left the Army in 1882, and undertook an expedition through the interior of Morocco, crossing the territory between Fez, Meknes and Tangier.[3]

In 1884, Bonelli commanded an expedition to take the territory of Río de Oro (Oued Edhahab),[4] occupying the Atlantic coast between Cape Bojador (Ras Bujadur) and Cape Blanco (Ras Nouadhibou)[5] and founding Villa Cisneros (Dakhla).[4] On 26 December 1884, the Kingdom of Spain declared 'a protectorate of the African coast', and on 14 January 1885 officially informed the other great powers in writing,[6] thereby establishing Spanish Sahara. In July 1885, Bonelli was appointed by King Alfonso XII to the newly created position of Royal Commissioner on the West Coast of Africa[7] (which would later be renamed as Political and Military Subgovernor of Río de Oro),[8] managing to establish peace with tribes in the area.[9]

In 1913, Bonelli was a founding member of the Liga Africanista Española [es], of which he was vice president.[10]

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Works

Bonelli was the author of:[2]

  • El imperio de Marruecos y su constitución (1882)
  • El Sahara (1887)
  • Nuevos territorios españoles en África (1887)
  • El problema de Marruecos (1910)

References

Bibliography

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