Tham khảo Lịch_sử_Maroc

  1. “Moroccan dynasticshurfa'‐hood in two historical contexts: Idrisid cult and 'Alawid power”. The Journal of North African Studies 6 (2): 81–94. 2001. doi:10.1080/13629380108718436
  2. Hublin, Jean Jacques (2010). “Northwestern African middle Pleistocene hominids and their bearing on the emergence of Homo Sapiens” (PDF). Trong Barham, Lawrence. Human Roots: Africa and Asia in the middle Pleistocene. Bristol, England: Western Academic and Specialist Press. Bản gốc (PDF) lưu trữ ngày 24 tháng 9 năm 2015. Truy cập ngày 14 tháng 1 năm 2014. 
  3. Pennell 2003, p.5
  4. Pennell 2003, pp.7–9
  5. Pennell 2003, pp.9–11
  6. "tradition (...) reaches back to the origins of the modern Moroccan state in the ninth century Idrisid dynasty which founded the venerable city of. Fes", G Joffe, Morocco: Monarchy, legitimacy and succession, in: Third World Quarterly, 1988
  7. "The Idrisids, the founder dynasty of Fas and, ideally at least, of the modern Moroccan state (...)", Moroccan dynastic shurfa’‐hood in two historical contexts: idrisid cult and ‘Alawid power in: The Journal of North African Studies Volume 6, Issue 2, 2001
  8. "The CBS News Almanac", Hammond Almanac Inc., 1976, p.783: "The Alaouite dynasty (Filali) has ruled Morocco since the 17th century"
  9. Hans Groth & Alfonso Sousa-Poza, "Population Dynamics in Muslim Countries: Assembling the Jigsaw", Springer, 2012 (ISBN 9783642278815). p.229: "The Alaouite dynasty has ruled Morocco since the days of Mulai ar-Rashid (1664–1672)"
  10. Joseph L. Derdzinski, "Internal Security Services in Liberalizing States: Transitions, Turmoil, and (In)Security", Ashgate Publishing Ltd., 2013 (ISBN 9781409499015). p.47: "Hassan in 1961, after the death of his father Mohammed V, continued the succession of Alaouite rule in Morocco since the seventeenth century"