"Chauen, Xauen o Chefchauen es un municipio y una ciudad de Marruecos, capital de la provincia del mismo nombre. Está situada en el noroeste del país, en las estribaciones de las montañas del Rif, cerca de Tetuán. Está en la región de Tánger-Tetuán.Según el censo del año 2004 cuenta con una población de 35.709 habitantes."
"Chefchaouen or Chaouen (Berber: , Ashawen, Arabic: /, Shafshwan (pronounced IPA: fwn), Spanish: Xauen, lit. "horns" in berber) is a city in northwest Morocco. It is the chief town of the province of the same name, and is noted for its buildings in shades of blue. Chefchaouen is situated in the Rif Mountains, just inland from Tangier and Tetouan. The city was founded in 1471, as a small fortress which still exists to this day, by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rached El Alami (a descendant of Ibn Machich and Idris I, and through them, of the Islamic prophet Muhammad) to fight the Portuguese invasions of northern Morocco. Along with the Ghomara tribes of the region, many Moriscos and Jews settled here after the Spanish Reconquista in medieval times. In 1920, the Spanish seized Chefchaouen to form part of Spanish Morocco. Spanish troops imprisoned Abd el-Krim in the kasbah from 1916 to 1917, after he talked with the German consul Dr. Walter Zechlin (18791962). (After defeating him with the help of the French, Abd el-Krim was deported to Réunion in 1926.) Spain returned the city after the independence of Morocco in 1956."