The Ceuta reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Ceuta

Time you got around to sponsoring a child

Ciudad Autónoma de Ceuta
image:ccaa-ceuta.png
Area
 - total

28 km²
Population
 - Total (2003)
 - Density

76 152
2719.71/km²
Demonym
 - English
 - Spanish

---
ceutí
Statute of Autonomy March 14, 1995
ISO 3166-2ES-CE
Parliamentary
representation

 Congress seats
 Senate seats
 

1
2
PresidentJuan Jesús Vivas Lara (PP)
Ciudad Autónoma de Ceuta


Ceuta is a Spanish exclave in North Africa, surrounded by Morocco, on the Mediterranean coast near the Straits of Gibraltar. It is known in Arabic and French as Sebta. Its area is approximately 28 km2.

Ceuta over the centuries was subject successively to Carthaginian, Roman, Visigothic and Arab domination, until it was captured by the Portuguese on August 14, 1415.

Portugal yielded Ceuta to Spain on January 1, 1668, at the signing of a peace treaty at Lisbon between D. Afonso VI of Portugal and Carlos II of Spain, by mediation of Charles II of England.

Ceuta is known officially in Spanish as Ciudad Autónoma de Ceuta, the Autonomous City of Ceuta, having a rank between a standard Spanish city and an autonomous community. Before the Statute of Autonomy, Ceuta was administratively part of the Cádiz province.

It does not form part of the customs territory of the European Union. The city is a free port. As of 1994 its population was 71,926.

The government of Morocco has calls for the integration of Ceuta and Melilla, into its national territory, drawing comparisons with Spain's territorial claim to Gibraltar, but the Spanish government rejects these.

ISO 3166-1 reserves EA for Ceuta and Melilla

See also

External links


 
Autonomous Communities of Spain
Andalusia | Aragon | Asturias | Balearic Islands | Basque Country | Canary Islands | Cantabria | Castile-La Mancha | Castile-Leon | Catalonia | Extremadura | Galicia | La Rioja | Madrid | Murcia | Navarre | Valencia | Ceuta | Melilla | Plazas de soberanía