Camp-du-Maréchal was a colonial village created in lower Kabylia, became Tadmaït in 1963, just after the independence of Algeria On 14 June 1830, French troops land at Sidi-Ferruch, and enter Algiers on 5 July.
The indigenous population takes refuge at Mount Sidi Ali Bounab and is divided into Thouddar (hamlets).
It's immediately equipped with all the basic infrastructure: town hall, post office, school, church built by native workers.
The Marshal's Camp / Camp-du-Maréchal is best known for its vineyards and two wineries (for the production of wine), its orange groves and especially for its tobacco.
The " Green olives of Kabylia " produced by the Gayraud house, regularly awarded in the 1930s, were famous even on the European continent.
To cope with the new situation, military reinforcements are sent to the village and a barracks is built 500 meters west of Tadmaït.
To facilitate access to the maquis and track the mujahideen, roads are open to Mount Sidi Ali Bounab.
The building that housed the National Gendarmerie dating from the colonial era was blown up by a car bomb attack in the mid-1990s.
BEN RAMDANI Saâdia (Previously CEM Girls "Jesus-Marie" on colonial era) The commune of Tadmaït is located in the west of Tizi Ouzou.
It has a teaching capacity of 300 trainees, and a boarding capacity of 130 places; the center offers several types of training according to the levels: storekeeper, masonry, ladies hairstyles, carpentry of buildings, electricity of buildings, accounting, mechanical repair light vehicle, ready-to-wear, sanitary installation and gas, operator in computer science, filming, sculpture on wood.
In 2015, another team called Football Club Tadmait (FCT) in orange and green colors is created.