After resigning from the position of Resident-general in 1925, Lyautey planned for his own burial in Rabat and in 1933 requested painter
Joseph de La Nézière to produce a sketch for his mausoleum as a traditional Muslim
Qubba. Following Lyautey's death in France on and his
state funeral at
Nancy Cathedral on , Resident-general
Henri Ponsot decided to locate his resting place on the Residence's grounds rather than in more iconic locations such as
Chellah or near the
Hassan Tower, which could have offended Muslim Moroccan sensitivities. Even so, the erection of a monument to Morocco's Christian colonizer was controversial and criticized by
Mohamed Belhassan Wazzani and other nationalist and Muslim leaders. Reflecting those misgivings, Sultan
Mohammed V of Morocco declined to attend the funeral on the Residence grounds on , when Lyautey's remains were eventually placed in the completed mausoleum, even though he participated in a ceremony earlier the same day at
Bab er-Rouah in downtown Rabat. The mausoleum building was designed by architect René Canu based on La Nézière's sketch. Lyautey's mausoleum was the theme of a Moroccan stamp in 1945, which emphasized the use of the
Cross of Lorraine in its interior decoration. Lyautey was born in
Nancy and was fond of his native region, thus the choice of ornamental motif by the mausoleum's designers. Meanwhile, the Cross of Lorraine had become the emblem of
Free France under
Charles de Gaulle, giving the stamp's image multiple meanings. Following Moroccan independence, French President
Charles de Gaulle and Mohammed V, by then the
King of Morocco, agreed to preempt the risk of incidents around the still controversial mausoleum and to repatriate Lyautey's remains, which were ceremoniously removed on and shipped to France via Casablanca. The mausoleum remained empty thereafter, ==Influence==