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The countries that comprise the Maghreb include Libya, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, and Mauritania. These are what is considered the Maghreb region in modern times. Historically the area has seen many countries come and go.
Maghreb means west. The countries of the Maghreb region of Northwest Africa (which is sometimes called Maghrib)are Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Libya, and Mauritania. Traditionally the geographical region included only Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya. The Arab Mahgreb Union of 1989 included Mauritania in the economic group.
The countries that comprise the Maghreb include Libya, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, and Mauritania. These are what is considered the Maghreb region in modern times. Historically the area has seen many countries come and go.
As the Maghreb is the western region of North Africa, and includes six countries, Morocco, Western Sahara, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, and Mauritania. You can safely say that Casablanca is located in it.
Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia. Sometimes Libya is also included.
All of those countries are generally considered to be NORTH AFRICA. Often included in this designation are Sudan and Mauritania.If only Morocco, Western Sahara, Algeria, and Tunisia are considered, this smaller region is called the MAGHREB.
Maghreb covers much of northwest Africa to the west of Egypt. Egypt is therefore not part of Maghreb, which now includes Libya, Mauritania and the Western Sahara, as well as Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco.
Typically, they are referred to as "North Africa, since they are north of and including the Sahara Desert. The three westernmost African Arab countries: Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia, are often called the Maghreb region.
All of North Africa west of Egypt: Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco.
Egypt,Saudi Arabia. Libya, and he Maghreb mostly
The Region of Africa north of the Sahara and west of the Nile that includes the the Atlas Mountains, and the coastal plains of Tunisia, Morocco, Algeria and Libya, these countries situated entirely in the northwestern part of the African Continent are collectively known as Al-Maghreb in Arabian being their main language, and the Maghreb in English, and Le Maghreb in French being secondary languages used most in this region.In 1989 after the formation of the "Arab Maghreb Union" two more regions i.e. the disputed territories of Western Sahara mostly under Moroccan rule and Mauritania were included in this Maghreb-banner, the residents of these countries are known as the Maghrebis or Moors (a name given to the inhabitants of the western Islamic World by Christians that extend from Spain to Tunisia sharing a common homogeneous culture).
rural and urban lifestyles.