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Fez, Morocco

Fez or Fes (/fɛz/; Arabic: فاس, romanizedfās; Standard Moroccan Tamazight: ⴼⵉⵣⴰⵣ, romanized: fizaz; French: Fès) is a city in northern inland Morocco and the capital of the Fès-Meknès administrative region. It is the second largest city in Morocco, with a population of 1.11 million according to the 2014 census.[2] Located to the north west of the Atlas Mountains, Fez is linked to several important cities of different regions; it is 206 km (128 mi) from Tangier to the northwest, 246 km (153 mi) from Casablanca, 189 km (117 mi) from Rabat to the west, and 387 km (240 mi) from Marrakesh to the southwest. It is surrounded by hills and the old city is centered around the Fez River (Oued Fes) flowing from west to east.

Fez
From the top down:
Al-Qarawiyyin Mosque/University, gates of the Royal Palace, and Fes el Bali a.k.a. the Medina of Fez.
Fez
Location of Fez within Morocco
Fez
Fez (Africa)
Coordinates: 34°02′36″N 05°00′12″W / 34.04333°N 5.00333°W / 34.04333; -5.00333Coordinates: 34°02′36″N 05°00′12″W / 34.04333°N 5.00333°W / 34.04333; -5.00333
Country Morocco
RegionFès-Meknès
Founded789
Founded byIdrisid dynasty
Government
 • MayorAbdeslam Bekkali
 • GovernorSaid Zniber
Area
 • Urban
320 km2 (120 sq mi)
Elevation414 m (1,358 ft)
Population
 (2014)[2]
 • City1,112,072
 • Rank2nd in Morocco
 • Demonym
Fassi
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
Area code+212 (53)
Official nameMedina of Fez
TypeCultural
Criteriaiii, iv
Designated1981
Reference no.[3]
RegionArab States

Fez was founded under Idrisid rule during the 8th-9th centuries CE. It initially consisted of two autonomous and competing settlements. Successive waves of mainly Arab immigrants from Ifriqiya (Tunisia) and al-Andalus (Spain/Portugal) in the early 9th century gave the nascent city its Arab character. After the downfall of the Idrisid dynasty, other empires came and went until the 11th century when the Almoravid Sultan Yusuf ibn Tashfin united the two settlements into what is today's Fes el-Bali quarter. Under Almoravid rule, the city gained a reputation for religious scholarship and mercantile activity.

Fez reached its zenith in the Marinid era (13th-15th centuries), regaining its status as political capital. Numerous new madrasas and mosques were constructed, many of which survive today, while other structures were restored. These buildings are counted among the hallmarks of Moorish and Moroccan architectural styles. In 1276 the Marinid sultan Abu Yusuf Yaqub also founded the royal administrative district of Fes Jdid, where the Royal Palace (Dar al-Makhzen) is still located today, to which extensive gardens were later added. During this period the Jewish population of the city grew and the Mellah (Jewish quarter) was formed on the south side of this new district. After the overthrow of the Marinid dynasty, Fez declined and subsequently competed with Marrakesh for political and cultural influence. It became the capital again under the 'Alawi (Alaouite) dynasty up until 1912.

Today, the city consists of two old medina quarters, Fes el-Bali and Fes Jdid, and the much larger modern urban Ville Nouvelle area founded during the French colonial era. The medina of Fez is listed as a World Heritage Site and is thought to be one of the world's largest urban pedestrian zones (car-free areas).[4][5][6] It contains the University of Al-Qarawiyyin which was founded in 857 and is considered by some to be the oldest continuously functioning institute of higher education in the world. It also contains the Chouara Tannery from the 11th century, one of the oldest tanneries in the world. The city has been called the "Mecca of the West" and the "Athens of Africa."[7][8][9] It is also considered the spiritual and cultural capital of Morocco.[10][11][12]: 17–18 

Etymology

Fez (American English), Fes (British English), Fès (French) or Fas (Direct translation) was derived from the Arabic word فأس Faʾs which means pickaxe. Various different legends have been reported to explain this etymology. One myth tells the story of a gold pickaxe on site during the city's construction, while another claims that Idris I used a silver and gold pickaxe to dig alongside his workers.[12]: 26 [13][14] Another account reported by Ibn Abi Zar claims that an ancient city named "Sef" had previously existed on the site and that Idris I reversed the letters of this name to create the name "Fes".[12]: 26–27 [13]

During the rule of the Idrisid dynasty (788 to 974), Fez consisted of two cities: Fas, founded by Idris I,[15] and al-ʿĀliyá, founded by his son, Idris II. During this period the capital city was known as al-ʿĀliyá, with the name Fas being reserved for the separate site on the other side of the river; no Idrisid coins have been found with the name Fez, only al-ʿĀliyá and al-ʿĀliyá Madinat Idris. It is not known whether the name al-ʿĀliyá ever referred to both urban areas. The two cities were united in 1070 and the name Fas was used for the combined site.[16]

History

Foundation and the Idrisids

 
View of Fes el-Bali and the minaret of the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II, which commemorates Idris II, one of the founders of Fez

The city was first founded in 789 as Madinat Fas on the southeast bank of the Jawhar River (now known as the Fez River) by Idris I, founder of the Idrisid dynasty. His son, Idris II,[17] built a settlement called Al-'Aliya on the opposing river bank in 809 and moved his capital here from Walili (Volubilis).[18]: 35 [19]: 35 [20]: 83  The early population was composed mostly of Berbers, along with hundreds of Arab warriors from Kairouan who made up Idris II's entourage.[18]: 35, 41 [20]: 82 

Arab emigration to Fez increased afterwards. Andalusi families of mixed Arab and Iberian descent,[21] who were expelled from Córdoba after a rebellion in 817–818 against al-Hakam I, were one major component of this. These families mainly settled in Madinat Fas.[18]: 46–47  Additionally, Arab families banned from Kairouan (in present-day Tunisia) after a rebellion there in around 825 also arrived and were settled in Al-'Aliya.[18]: 47  These two waves of immigrants gave the city its Arabic character and would subsequently give their name to the districts of 'Adwat Al-Andalus [ar] and 'Adwat al-Qarawiyyin [ar].[22]: 51  The city also had a strong Jewish community, probably consisting of Zenata Berbers who had previously converted to Judaism, as well as a small remaining Christian population for a time. The Jews were especially concentrated in a northeastern district of Al-'Aliya, known as Funduq el-Yihoudi (near the present-day Bab Guissa gate).[18]: 42–44 

Following the death of Idris II in 828 the region was divided among his sons. The eldest, Muhammad, received Fez, but some of his brothers attempted to break away from his leadership, resulting in an internecine conflict. Although the Idrisid realm was eventually reunified and enjoyed a period of peace under Ali ibn Muhammad and Yahya ibn Muhammad, it fell into decline again in the late 9th century.[23] According to one of the major early sources on this period, the Rawd al-Qirtas by Ibn Abi Zar, in this period the Al-Qarawiyyin Mosque was founded in 859 by Fatima al-Fihri, the daughter of a wealthy merchant. Her sister, Mariam, is likewise reputed to have founded the Al-Andalusiyyin Mosque the same year.[24]: 7–8 [18]: 48 

In the 10th century, the city was contested by the Umayyad Caliphate of Córdoba and the Fatimid Caliphate of Ifriqiya (Tunisia), who ruled the city through a host of Zenata clients.[20]: 88–91 [23][25]: 63–64, 74–75  The Fatimids took the city in 927 and expelled the Idrisids definitively, after which their Miknasa (one of the Zenata tribes) were installed there. The city, along with much of northern Morocco, continued to change hands between the proxies of Córdoba and the proxies of the Fatimids for many decades. Following another successful invasion by Buluggin ibn Ziri in 979 and a brief period of Fatimid control, the forces of Al-Mansur of Cordoba managed to retake the region again, expelling the Fatimids permanently.[23] From 980 (or from 986[26][18]), Fez was ruled by a Zenata dynasty from the Maghrawa tribe, who were allies of the Caliphate of Córdoba. They maintained this control even after the Caliphate's collapse in the early 11th century and until the arrival of the Almoravids.[19]: 16 [26][20]: 91 

Fez continued to grow under Zenata control, even though conflicts between its two settlements, Madinat Fas and Al-'Aliya, flared up during periods of political rivalry. Ziri ibn Atiyya, the first ruler of the new dynasty, had a troubled reign.[18]: 50  However, Ibn Atiyya's descendant Dunas ibn Hamama, ruling between 1037 and 1049, was responsible for improving the city's infrastructure.[27] He developed much of Fez's water supply system, which has largely survived up to the present day.[27][28] Other structures built in his time included hammams (bathhouses), mosques, and the first bridges over the Oued Bou Khrareb (mostly rebuilt in later eras).[18]: 51 [27][29][30] The two cities became increasingly integrated: the open space between the two was filled up by new houses and up to six bridges across the river allowed for easier passage between them.[12]: 36  A decade after Dunas, between 1059 and 1061, the two cities were ruled separately by two rival Zenata emirs who fought with each other: Al-'Aliya was controlled by an emir named Al-Gisa and Madinat Fas was controlled by Al-Fetouh. Both brothers fortified their respective shores, and their names have been preserved in two of the city's gates to this day: Bab Guissa (or Bab Gisa) in the north and Bab Ftouh in the south.[31]: 31 [18]: 50, 53, 110 

Golden age: under the Almoravids, Almohads, and Marinids

In 1069–1070 (or possibly a few years later[26]), Fez was conquered by the Almoravids under Yusuf ibn Tashfin. In the same year of this conquest, Yusuf ibn Tashfin unified Madinat Fas and Al-'Aliya into one city. The walls dividing them were destroyed, bridges connecting them were built or renovated, and a new circuit of walls was constructed that encompassed both cities. A kasbah (citadel) was built at the western edge of the city (just west of Bab Bou Jeloud today) to house the city's governor and garrison.[18]: 53 [28] Under Almoravid patronage, the largest expansion and renovation of the Great Mosque of al-Qarawiyyin took place (1135–1143).[32]: 18–20  Although the capital was moved to Marrakesh under the Almoravids, Fez acquired a reputation for Maliki legal scholarship and remained an important centre of trade and industry.[18]: 52–54 [19]: 17–18  Almoravid impact on the city's structure was such that Yusuf ibn Tashfin is sometimes considered to be the second founder of Fez.[33]

 
Remains of the city walls on the north side of Fes el-Bali, which were rebuilt during the Almohad period (12th-13th century)

In 1145 the Almohad leader Abd al-Mu'min besieged and conquered the city during the Almohad overthrow of the Almoravids. Due to the ferocious resistance they encountered from the local population, the Almohads demolished the city's fortifications.[18]: 55 [28] However, due to Fez's continuing economic and military importance, the Almohad caliph Ya'qub al-Mansur ordered the reconstruction of the ramparts.[31]: 36 [28]: 606  Since the city had grown in the meantime, the new Almohad perimeter of walls was larger than that of the former Almoravid ramparts.[28]: 607  The walls were completed by his successor Muhammad al-Nasir in 1204,[31]: 36  giving them their definitive shape and establishing the perimeter of Fes el-Bali to this day.[18]: 56 [28][34]: 19  The Almohads built the Kasbah Bou Jeloud on the site of the former Almoravid kasbah[18]: 56  and also built the first kasbah occupying the site of the current Kasbah an-Nouar.[12]: 72 [31]: 109  Not all the land within the city walls was densely inhabited; much of it was still relatively open and was occupied by crops and gardens used by the inhabitants.[34]: 19  During the 12th century, the city was one of the largest in the world, with an estimated population of 200,000.[35]

 
The Bou Inania Madrasa, the most important madrasa built by the Marinids in Fes (14th century)

In 1250, Fez regained its status as the capital under the Marinid dynasty. The city reached its golden age in the Marinid period.[36]: 16 [18]: 61–78 [19]: 20  In 1276, an anti-Marinid revolt resulted in a massacre of the Jewish community that was stopped by the intervention of the ruler Abu Yusuf Ya'qub.[37][38] Following the revolt, Abu Yusuf Yaqub founded Fes Jdid as the new administrative and military centre. Under the Marinids, many of the principal monuments in the medina were built and the city established its reputation as an important intellectual centre.[18]: 61–78 [39] Between 1271 and 1357 seven madrasas were built, which are among the best examples of Moroccan architecture and some of the most richly decorated monuments in Fez.[40]: 285–289, 291–293 [41][42]: 312–314 

 
Jews of Fez in the 1900s. The Mellah was the traditional Jewish quarter of the city since the 15th century.

The Jewish quarter of Fez, the Mellah, was created in Fes Jdid at some point during the Marinid period. The exact date and circumstances of its formation are not firmly established,[43][38] but many scholars date the transfer of the Jewish population from Fes el-Bali to the new Mellah to the 15th century, a period of political tension and instability. In particular, Jewish sources describe the transfer as a consequence of the "rediscovery" of Idris II's body in the heart of the city in 1437, which caused the surrounding area – if not the entire city – to acquire a "holy" (haram) status, requiring that non-Muslims be removed from the area.[43][44][45][46] The Jewish community had initially consisted of indigenous local Jews (known as the Toshavim) but these were joined by Sephardic Jews from the Iberian Peninsula (known as the Megorashim) in subsequent generations, especially after the 1492 expulsion of Jews from Spain.[47]

The 1465 Moroccan revolt overthrew the last Marinid sultan. In 1472 the Wattasids, another Zenata dynasty which had previously served as viziers under the Marinid sultans, succeeded as rulers of Morocco from Fez.[25]: 114–115 [48] They perpetuated the structure of the Marinid state and continued its policies, but were unable to control all of Morocco.[36]: 15 [25]: 207–209  They did not contribute significantly to the physical fabric of Fez.[49]

Sharifian rule: under the Saadians and Alaouites

 
Borj Nord, a Saadian fortress built in the 16th century overlooking Fez from the north

In the 16th century the Saadis, a dynasty claiming prophetic heritage, rose to power in southern Morocco and challenged the Wattasids. Around the same time, the Ottoman Empire came close to Fez after its conquest of Algeria. In January 1549, the Saadi sultan Mohammed ash-Sheikh took Fez and ousted the last Wattasid sultan Ali Abu Hassun. The Wattasids later retook the city in 1554 with Ottoman support, but this reconquest was short-lived and later that same year the Wattasids were decisively defeated by the Saadis.[22]: 157  The Ottomans attempted to invade Morocco after the assassination of Mohammed ash-Sheikh in 1558, but were stopped by his son Abdallah al-Ghalib at the Battle of Wadi al-Laban north of Fez.[22]: 158  After the death of Abdallah al-Ghalib a new power struggle emerged. Abd al-Malik, Abdallah's brother, captured Fez with Ottoman support and ousted his nephew Abu Abdullah from the throne. The latter fled to Portugal where he asked king Sebastian of Portugal for help to regain his throne, while Abd al-Malik accepted Ottoman suzerainty. This led to the Battle of Wadi al-Makhazin (also known as Battle of the Three Kings) in which Abd al-Malik's army defeated the invading Portuguese army, ensuring Moroccan independence. Abd al-Malik was killed during the battle and was succeeded by Ahmad al-Mansur (r. 1578–1603).[50]

The Saadians, who used Marrakesh again as their capital, did not lavish much attention on Fez, with the exception of the ornate ablutions pavilions added to the Qarawiyyin Mosque's courtyard during their time.[32]: 70  Perhaps as a result of persistent tensions with the city's inhabitants, the Saadians built a number of new forts and bastions around the city which appear to have been aimed at keeping control over the local population.[a]

After the long reign of Ahmad al-Mansur, the Saadian state fell into civil war between his sons and potential successors. Fez became a rival seat of power for a number of brothers vying against other family members ruling from Marrakesh. Both cities changed hands multiple times until the internecine conflict finally ended in 1627.[50][52] Despite the reunification of the realm after 1627, the Saadians were in full decline and Fez had already suffered considerably from the repeated conquests and reconquests during the conflict.[26] In 1641, Muhammad al-Haj of the Sanhaja Amazigh Dilā' Sufi order occupied Fes.[53]: 88  The time was particularly difficult for Fessi Jews.[53]: 88 

 
Patio of Moulay Rashid (17th century) inside the Royal Palace of Fez (photo from 1922)

It was only when the founder of the Alaouite dynasty, Moulay Rashid, took Fez in 1666 that the city saw a revival and became the capital again, albeit briefly.[34]: 25  Moulay Rashid set about restoring the city after a long period of neglect. He built the Kasbah Cherarda (also known as the Kasbah al-Khemis) to the north of Fes Jdid in order to house a large part of his tribal troops.[18]: 84 [34]: 25  He also restored or rebuilt what became known as the Kasbah an-Nouar, which became the living quarters of his followers from the Tafilalt region (the Alaouite dynasty's ancestral home). For this reason, the kasbah was also known as the Kasbah Filala ("Kasbah of the people from Tafilalt").[18]: 84 [12]: 72–73  Moulay Rashid also built a large new madrasa, the Cherratine Madrasa, in 1670.[41] After his death Fez underwent another dark period. Moulay Isma'il, his successor, apparently disliked the city – possibly due to a rebellion there in his early reign – and chose nearby Meknès as his capital instead.[18]: 84  Although he did restore or rebuild some major monuments in the city, such as the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II, he also frequently imposed heavy taxes on the city's inhabitants and sometimes even forcibly transferred parts of its population to repopulate other cities in the country.[18]: 84–85  After his death, Morocco was plunged into anarchy and decades of conflict between his sons who vied to succeed him. Fez suffered particularly from repeated conflicts with the Udayas (or Oudayas), a guich tribe (vassal tribe serving as a garrison and military force) previously installed in the Kasbah Cherarda by Moulay Isma'il. Sultan Moulay Abdallah, who reigned intermittently during this period and used Fez as a capital, was initially welcomed in 1728–29 as an enemy of the Udayas, but relations between him and the city's population quickly soured due to his choice of governor. He immediately built a separate fortified palace in the countryside, Dar Dbibegh, where he resided instead. For nearly three more decades the city remained in more or less perpetual conflict with both the Udayas and the Alaouite sultans.[18]: 85–86 

Starting with the reign of Moulay Muhammad ibn Abdallah, between 1757 and 1790, the country stabilized and Fez finally regained its fortunes. Although its status was partly shared with Marrakesh, it remained the capital of Morocco for the rest of the Alaouite period up to the 20th century.[18]: 88 [19]: 25–26  There was a brief period of disorder under Moulay Yazid (ruled 1790–1792) and Moulay Slimane (ruled 1792–1822), with the sultans in Fez losing control of most of the rest of Morocco between 1790 and 1795.[22]: 241–242  However, the city benefitted from a long era of relative peace and remained a major economic center even during short periods of conflict.[18]: 88–89  The Alaouites continued to rebuild or restore various monuments and undertook a series of extensions to the Royal Palace.[41][54] The sultans and their entourages also became more and more closely associated with the elites of Fez and other urban centers, with the ulama (religious scholars) of Fez being particularly influential. After Moulay Slimane's death, powerful Fassi families became the main players of the country's political and intellectual scene.[22]: 242–247 

The Tijani Sufi order, started by Ahmad al-Tijani (d. 1815), has had its spiritual center in Fez since al-Tijani moved here from Algeria in 1789.[22]: 244  The order spread quickly among the literary elite of North West Africa and its ulama had significant religious, intellectual, and political influence in Fez and beyond.[55] Until the 19th century the city was the only source of fezzes (also known as the tarboosh).[17]

 
The New Mechouar, created by Moulay Hassan I in the late 19th century at the northern entrance to Fes Jdid and the Royal Palace; on the left is the entrance to the Dar al-Makina, dating from the same time

The last major change to Fez's topography before the 20th century was made during the reign of Moulay Hassan I (1873-1894), who finally connected Fes Jdid and Fes el-Bali by building a walled corridor between them.[18]: 89 [34]: 25–26  New gardens and summer palaces, used by the royals and the capital's high society, were built within the corridor, such as the Jnan Sbil Gardens and the Dar Batha palace.[18]: 89–90 [54] Moulay Hassan also expanded the old Royal Palace itself, extending its entrance up to the current location of the Old Mechouar while adding the New Mechouar, along with the Dar al-Makina, to the north. The expansion separated the Moulay Abdallah neighbourhood to the northwest from the rest of Fes Jdid.[54]

Fez played a central role in the Hafidhiya, the brief civil war that erupted when Abdelhafid challenged his brother Abdelaziz for the throne. The ulama of Fez, led by the Sufi modernist Muhammad Bin Abdul-Kabir Al-Kattani, offered their conditioned support to Abd al-Hafid, which turned the tide of the conflict.[56][57] Abdelaziz was defeated in the Battle of Marrakesh in 1908.[56]: 76–78  Abdelhafid's reign soon deteriorated and in early 1911 the sultan was besieged in Fez by the tribes of the Middle Atlas. Abdelhafid appealed for French help and a French force under Colonel Charles Émile Moinier [fr] arrived in Fez on May 21 and established a command centre at Dar Dbibegh.[26][22]: 313 [56]: 78 

Colonial rule

 
The abdication of Abd al-Hafid, Sultan of Morocco in 1912

In 1912, French colonial rule was instituted over Morocco following the Treaty of Fes. One immediate consequence was the 1912 riots in Fez, a popular uprising which included deadly attacks targeting Europeans as well as native Jewish inhabitants in the Mellah, followed by an even deadlier repression.[58][59] The first French resident general, Hubert Lyautey, decided to move the administrative capital of the Protectorate to Rabat in 1912–1913, which has remained the capital ever since.[60]: 149 [61][62]

A number of social and physical changes took place during this period and across the 20th century. Starting under Lyautey, one important policy with long-term consequences was the decision to largely forego redevelopment of existing historic walled cities in Morocco and to intentionally preserve them as sites of historic heritage, still known today as "medinas". Instead, the French administration built new modern cities (the Villes Nouvelles) just outside the old cities, where European settlers largely resided with modern Western-style amenities. This was part of a larger "policy of association" adopted by Lyautey which favoured various forms of indirect colonial rule by preserving local institutions and elites, in contrast with other French colonial policies that had favoured "assimilation".[63][64][65] The Ville Nouvelle also became known as Dar Dbibegh by Moroccans, as the former palace of Moulay Abdallah was located in the same area.[26]

 
A street in the modern Ville Nouvelle ("New City") of Fez

The creation of the separate French Ville Nouvelle to the west had a wider impact on the entire city's development.[65] While new colonial policies preserved historic monuments, it also had other consequences in the long-term due to stalling urban development in these heritage areas.[63] Scholar Janet Abu-Lughod has argued that these policies created a kind of urban "apartheid" between the indigenous Moroccan urban areas, who were forced to remain stagnant in terms of urban development and architectural innovation, and the new, mainly European-inhabited planned cities, which expanded to occupy lands formerly used by Moroccans outside the city.[66][67]: 165–166 [63] This separation was partly softened, however, by wealthy Moroccans who started moving into the Ville Nouvelles during this period.[68][19]: 26  By contrast, the old city (medina) of Fez was increasingly settled by poorer rural migrants from the countryside.[19]: 26 

Fez also played a role in the Moroccan nationalist movement and in protests against the French colonial regime. Many Moroccan nationalists received their education at the Al-Qarawiyyin University and some of their informal political networks were established thanks to this shared educational background.[69]: 140, 146  In July 1930, the students and other inhabitants protested against the Berber Dahir, decreed by the French authorities in May of that year.[70][69]: 143–144  In 1937, the Al-Qarawiyyin Mosque and R'cif Mosque were rallying points for demonstrations against a violent crackdown on Moroccan protesters in the nearby city of Meknes, which ended with French troops being deployed across Fes el-Bali, including at the mosques themselves.[25]: 387–389 [69]: 168  Towards the end of World War II, Moroccan nationalists gathered in Fez to draft a demand for independence which they submitted to the Allies on January 11, 1944. This resulted in the arrest of nationalist leaders followed by the violent suppression of protests across many cities, including Fez.[71][69]: 255 

Independence and present day

After Morocco regained its independence in 1956 many of the trends begun under colonial rule continued and accelerated during the second half of the 20th century. Much of Fez's bourgeois classes moved to the growing metropolises of Casablanca and the capital, Rabat.[19]: 26 [72]: 40  The Jewish population was particularly depleted, either moving to Casablanca or emigrating to countries like France, Canada, and Israel. Although the population of the city grew, it did so only slowly up until the late 1960s, when the pace of growth finally accelerated.[71]: 216  Throughout this period (and up to today) Fez nonetheless remained the country's third largest urban center.[19]: 26 [71]: 216  Between 1971 and 2000, the population of the city roughly tripled from 325,000 to 940,000.[20]: 376  The Ville Nouvelle became the locus of further development, with new peripheral neighbourhoods–with inconsistent housing quality–spreading outwards around it.[71] In 1963 the University of Al-Qarawiyyin was reorganized as a state university,[73] while a new public university, Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University, was founded in 1975 in the Ville Nouvelle.[74] In 1981, the old city, consisting of Fes el-Bali and Fes Jdid, was classified as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[10]

Social inequalities and economic precarity were accentuated during the repressive reign of King Hassan II and the period known as the Years of Lead (roughly 1975–1990).[56]: 170  Fez was strongly affected by unemployment and lack of housing. Austerity measures led to several riots and uprisings across other cities during the 1980s. On December 14, 1990, a general strike was called and led to protests and rioting by university students and youths in Fez. Buildings were burned and looted, including the Hôtel des Mérinides, a luxury hotel overlooking Fes el-Bali and dating to the time of Lyautey. Thousands were arrested and at least five were killed. The government promised to investigate and raise wages, though some of these measures were dismissed by the opposition.[20]: 377 [75][76][77]

Today Fez remains a regional capital and one of Morocco's most important cities. Many of the former notable families of Fez still make up a large part of the country's political elite.[78] It is also a major tourism destination due to its historical heritage. In recent years efforts have been underway to restore and rehabilitate the old medina, ranging from the restoration of individual monuments to attempts to rehabilitate the Fez River.[79][80][81][82]

Geography

Location

 
The walled district of Fes el-Bali.

The city is divided between its historic medina (the two walled districts of Fes el-Bali and Fes Jdid) and the now much larger Ville Nouvelle (New City) along with several outlying modern neighbourhoods. The old city is located in a valley along the banks of the Oued Fes (Fez River) just above its confluence with the larger Sebou River to the northeast.[18]: 32 [17] The Fez River takes its sources from the south and west and is split into various small canals which provide the historic city with water. These in turn empty into the Oued Bou Khrareb, the stretch of the river which passes through the middle of Fes el-Bali and separates the Qarawiyyin quarter from the Andalusian quarter.[18]: 232–235 

The new city occupies a plateau on the edge of the Saïs plain. The latter stretches out to the west and south and is occupied largely by farmland. Roughly 15 km south of Fes el-Bali is the region's main airport, Fes-Saïs. Further south is the town of Sefrou, while the city of Meknes, the next largest city in the region, is located to the southwest.[83][84]

Climate

Northwest of the Middle Atlas mountains, Fez has a hot-summer Mediterranean climate (Köppen climate classification Csa) with a strong continental influence, shifting from relatively cool and wet in the winter to dry and hot days in the summer months between June and September. Rainfall can reach up to 800 mm (31 in) in good years. The winter highs typically reach around 15 °C (59 °F) in December–January. Frost is not uncommon during the winter period. The highest and lowest temperatures ever recorded in the city are 46.7 °C (116 °F) and −8.2 °C (17 °F), respectively. Snowfall on average occurs once every 3 to 5 years. Fez recorded snowfall in three straight years in 2005, 2006 and 2007.[85][86][87][88]

Climate data for Fez (Fès–Saïs Airport), altitude: 579 m (1,900 ft) 1981–2010
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 25.0
(77.0)
30.5
(86.9)
33.3
(91.9)
37.0
(98.6)
41.3
(106.3)
44.0
(111.2)
46.7
(116.1)
44.4
(111.9)
41.7
(107.1)
37.5
(99.5)
31.2
(88.2)
27.0
(80.6)
46.7
(116.1)
Average high °C (°F) 15.4
(59.7)
17.0
(62.6)
19.8
(67.6)
21.2
(70.2)
25.0
(77.0)
30.4
(86.7)
34.7
(94.5)
34.2
(93.6)
30.3
(86.5)
25.4
(77.7)
19.9
(67.8)
16.5
(61.7)
24.1
(75.4)
Daily mean °C (°F) 9.3
(48.7)
10.7
(51.3)
13.1
(55.6)
14.5
(58.1)
17.8
(64.0)
22.4
(72.3)
26.1
(79.0)
25.9
(78.6)
22.8
(73.0)
18.7
(65.7)
13.9
(57.0)
10.8
(51.4)
17.2
(63.0)
Average low °C (°F) 3.2
(37.8)
4.5
(40.1)
6.3
(43.3)
7.8
(46.0)
10.7
(51.3)
14.4
(57.9)
17.5
(63.5)
17.6
(63.7)
15.4
(59.7)
11.9
(53.4)
8.0
(46.4)
5.1
(41.2)
10.2
(50.4)
Record low °C (°F) −8.2
(17.2)
−4.9
(23.2)
−2.5
(27.5)
−0.5
(31.1)
0.0
(32.0)
4.9
(40.8)
8.5
(47.3)
9.2
(48.6)
5.9
(42.6)
0.0
(32.0)
−1.4
(29.5)
−5.0
(23.0)
−8.2
(17.2)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 55.7
(2.19)
55.8
(2.20)
52.3
(2.06)
57.2
(2.25)
33.9
(1.33)
10.6
(0.42)
1.0
(0.04)
4.5
(0.18)
18.9
(0.74)
50.1
(1.97)
61.2
(2.41)
69.2
(2.72)
470.4
(18.52)
Average rainy days 12.1 13.2 13.5 13.5 10.2 5.3 1.6 1.8 4.7 9.1 12.7 12.1 109.8
Average snowy days 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2
Mean monthly sunshine hours 210.6 201.1 244.0 246.5 278.0 315.0 338.0 320.4 282.5 245.5 205.2 199.8 3,086.6
Percent possible sunshine 60 55 58 62 64 71 79 77 75 64 60 60 65
Source 1: World Meteorological Organization,[89] NOAA (precipitation days 1961–1990)[90]
Source 2: Meoweather.com,[88] Voodoo skies for extremes[87] Weather Atlas[91]
Climate data for Fez
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily daylight hours 10.0 11.0 12.0 13.0 14.0 14.0 14.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 10.0 10.0 12.0
Average Ultraviolet index 3 4 6 8 9 10 11 10 8 6 4 3 6.8
Source: Weather Atlas [91]

Demographics

 
Men at a Café, Fez

According to the 2014 national census, the population of the city of Fez was 1,112,072,[2] which includes the municipalities of Fez proper and Méchouar Fès Jdid (New Fès). Most of this population was Moroccan, but it also included 3515 resident foreigners. The majority of the population lives in the Ville Nouvelle region and other modern-day neighbourhoods outside the historic walled city.

Language

Moroccan Arabic (Darija)

The main spoken language in Fes is Arabic Darija (الدارجة المغربية lit. "the Moroccan vernacular"), a vernacular variety of Arabic. Like the inhabitants of other historical urban centers in Morocco, Ahl Fes (أهل فاس "the people of Fes," referring especially to old elite families) speak their own distinct dialect of Darija.[92] This Fessi dialect has traditionally been regarded as a prestige dialect over other forms of Moroccan Darija—particularly those seen as rural or 'arūbi (عروبي "of the rural Arabs")—due to its "association with the socio-economic power and dominance that its speakers enjoy at the national level," in the words of Mohammed Errihani.[92][93]

The Fessi dialect has traditionally had distinctive linguistic features. On the phonological level, these include the stereotypical use of a postalveolar approximant (like the American pronunciation of /ɹ/ in the word "red") in the place of a trilled [r] for /ر/, or a pharyngealized glottal stop or voiceless uvular plosive in the place of a voiced velar plosive ([g]) for /ق/.[92] On the morphosyntactic level, gender distinction in pronouns and verb inflections is neutralized in the second person singular.[92]

Many of these features were shared with the other "pre-Hilalian" dialects in the region.[94]: 5, 24 [b] However, due to social and demographic changes that started in the 20th century such as mass rural migration into the city and the departure of most of the city's old urban elites to Casablanca, these old linguistic features are no longer dominant in the speech of Arabic speakers in Fez today.[95][94]: 5, 24  Prior to the departure of most Jewish residents in the second half of the 20th century, the Jewish community in Fez also spoke an Arabic dialect similar to the rest of city.[94]: 24 [c]

Official and foreign languages

Modern Standard Arabic and Berber (Tamazight) are Morocco's two official state languages, although French is also widespread as a language of government and law.[96][97] The primary language of the literary traditions of Fes is Arabic.[98] While the daily spoken language is Darija (the Moroccan Arabic dialect), many people also speak French fluently. English is increasingly being learned by younger generations. Berber dialects are commonly spoken in the countryside around the city.[99]

Economy

 
Produce peddler in the Old Medina of Fes

Historically, the city was one of Morocco's main centers of trade and craftsmanship. The tanning industry, for example, still embodied by tanneries of Fes el-Bali today, was a major source of exports and economic sustenance since the city's early history.[100] Up until the late 19th century, the city was the only place in the world which fabricated the fez hat.[17] The city's commerce was concentrated along its major streets, like Tala'a Kebira, and around the central bazaar known as the Kissariat al-Kifah from which many other souqs (markets) branched off.[18]: 112, 122–129 [19]: 52–56  The crafts industry continues to this day and is still focused in the old city, though largely reliant on tourism.[17]

Today, the city's surrounding countryside, the fertile Saïss plains, is an important source of agricultural activity producing primarily cereals, beans, olives, and grapes, as well as raising livestock.[17][101] Tourism is also a major industry due to the city's UNESCO-listed historic medina.[17] Religious tourism is also present due to the old city's many major zawiyas (Islamic shrines), such as the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II and the Zawiya of Sidi Ahmed al-Tijani, which attract both Moroccan and international (especially West African) pilgrims.[102] The city and the region still struggle with unemployment and economic precarity.[103]

Government

Two municipalities (Arabic: جماعتين حضريتين, French: communes) in the Fez Prefecture [ar] (Arabic: عمالة فاس) make up the city of Fez. Most of Fez is administered as the municipality of Fez, while the neighborhood of Fes Jdid is administered separately as the municipality of Méchouar Fès Jdid. Outside of the city, there are also three rural municipalities in the prefecture, Aïn Bida, Oulad Tayeb, and Sidi Harazem.[104]

The municipality of Fez has an area of 94 square kilometres (36 sq mi) and recorded a population of 1,091,512 in the 2014 Moroccan census.[105] It is divided into six arrondissements (مقاطعات):

Arrondissements of the municipality of Fez
Arrondissement Area[106] Population
(2014)[105]
Population
(2004)[106]
Change Population density
(2014)
Agdal 21.0 km2 (8.1 sq mi) 142,407 144,064 −1.2% 6,781/km2 (17,560/sq mi)
El Mariniyine 13.5 km2 (5.2 sq mi) 209,494 191,093 +9.6% 15,520/km2 (40,190/sq mi)
Fès-Médina 2.2 km2 (0.85 sq mi) 70,592 91,473 −22.8% 32,100/km2 (83,100/sq mi)
Jnan El Ouard 16.3 km2 (6.3 sq mi) 201,011 174,226 +15.4% 12,330/km2 (31,940/sq mi)
Saiss 20.5 km2 (7.9 sq mi) 207,345 156,590 +32.4% 10,114/km2 (26,200/sq mi)
Zouagha 20.5 km2 (7.9 sq mi) 260,663 163,291 +59.6% 12,413/km2 (32,150/sq mi)

The municipality of Fez is governed by a 91-member council, elected by direct universal suffrage every six years.[107][108] The arrondissements of Zouagha and Marininyine elect 17 councillors each; Jnane El Ward and Saiss elect 16 councillors each; Agdal elects 13, and Fès-Médina elects 12.[109] Executive power is wielded by a president and ten vice-presidents, which are elected by the council.[110] In 2021, Abdeslam Bekkali, a member of the National Rally of Independents (RNI), succeeded Driss Azami El Idrissi as the new president of the municipality of Fez.[111]

The municipality of Méchouar Fès Jdid consists of the neighborhood of Fes Jdid in the old city and forms an enclave within the municipality of Fez. Established in 1992, it is only 1.6 square kilometres (0.62 sq mi) in extent,[112] and recorded a population of 20,560 in the 2014 census.[105] The municipality possesses a special administrative status as the location of a royal palace (the Dar al-Makhzen or méchouar), one of four such municipalities (French: communes des méchouars) in Morocco. The other three are located in Casablanca, Marrakesh, and Rabat. These four municipalities are governed by special provisions that do not apply to ordinary municipalities.[106][113]

The subdivisions of Fez Prefecture are grouped into two electoral districts, North Fez and South Fez, each of which elects four members to the House of Representatives. North Fez consists of the arrondissements of El Mariniyine, Fès-Médina, and Zouagha and the municipality of Méchouar Fès Jdid. South Fez consists of the other three arrondissements of Agdal, Jnan El Ouard, and Saiss, and the three rural municipalities outside the city of Fez.[114][115]

Landmarks

Medina of Fez

The historic city of Fez consists of Fes el-Bali, the original city on both shores of the Oued Fes (River of Fez), and the smaller Fez Jdid, founded on higher ground to the west in the 13th century. It is distinct from Fez's now much larger Ville Nouvelle (new city). Fes el-Bali is the site of the famous Qarawiyyin University and the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II, the most important religious and cultural sites, while Fez el-Jdid is the site of the 195 acre Royal Palace,[116] still used by the King of Morocco today. These two historic cities are linked together and are usually referred to together as the "medina" of Fez, though this term is sometimes applied more restrictively to Fes el-Bali only.[d]

Fez is becoming an increasingly popular tourist destination and many non-Moroccans are now restoring traditional houses (riads and dars) as second homes in the medina. In 1981, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) designated Medina of Fez a World Heritage site, describing it as "one of the most extensive and best conserved historic towns of the Arab-Muslim world."[10] It was the first site in Morocco to be granted this status.[118]

 
Panoramic view of Fes el-Bali

Places of worship

 
Interior of the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II in Fes el-Bali
 
Interior of the Al Fassiyin Synagogue in the Mellah

There are numerous historic mosques in the medina, some of which are part of a madrasa or zawiya. Among the oldest still standing today are the Mosque of al-Qarawiyyin, founded in 857 and subsequently expanded,[32][119] the Mosque of the Andalusians founded in 859–860,[120][121]: 7  the Bou Jeloud Mosque from the late 12th century,[122] and possibly the Mosque of the Kasbah en-Nouar (which may have existed in the Almohad period but was likely rebuilt much later[12][18]). The very oldest mosques of the city, dating back to its first years, were the Mosque of the Sharifs (or Shurafa Mosque) and the Mosque of the Sheikhs (or al-Anouar Mosque); however, they no longer exist in their original form. The Mosque of the Sharifs was the burial site of Idris II and evolved into the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II that exists today, while the al-Anouar Mosque has left only minor remnants.[18]: 33 

A number of mosques from the important Marinid era, when Fes Jdid was created to be the capital of Morocco, include the Great Mosque of Fez el-Jdid from 1276, the Abu al-Hasan Mosque from 1341,[123] the Chrabliyine Mosque from 1342,[124] and the al-Hamra Mosque from around the same period.[125]: 92  The Bab Guissa Mosque was also founded in the reign of Abu al-Hasan (1331-1351), but modified in later centuries.[41] Other major mosques from the more recent Alaouite period are the Moulay Abdallah Mosque, built in the early to mid-18th century with the tomb of Sultan Moulay Abdallah,[40]: 391  and the R'cif Mosque, built in the reign of Moulay Slimane (1793-1822).[126] The Zawiya of Moulay Idris II and the Zawiya of Sidi Ahmed al-Tijani include mosque areas as well, as do several other prominent zawiyas in the city.[12]: 118–131 [127][18]: 132–133  The Ville Nouvelle also includes many modern mosques, the largest of which is the Imam Malik Mosque which opened in 1994.[128][129][130]

Elsewhere, the Jewish quarter (Mellah) is the site of the 17th-century Al-Fassiyin Synagogue and Ibn Danan Synagogue, as well multiple other lesser-known synagogues, though none of them are functioning today.[45][131] According to the World Jewish Congress there are only 150 Moroccan Jews remaining in Fes.[132] The Church of Saint Francis of Assisi, the only Catholic church in Fez, was established in 1919 or 1920, during the French colonial period. The current building was constructed in 1928 and expanded in 1933. Today it is part of the Archdiocese of Rabat, and it was most recently restored in 2005.[133][134][135]

Madrasas

 
Al-Attarine Madrasa built in 1323–1325 in Fes el-Bali

The Madrasa (or University) of al-Qarawiyyin was established in 857 by Fatima al-Fihri, originally as a mosque.[24]: 9 [136]: 40  It is the oldest existing and continually operating degree-awarding educational institution in the world according to UNESCO and Guinness World Records.[137][10] The Marinid dynasty devoted great attention to the construction of madrasas following the Maliki orthodoxy, resulting in the unprecedented prosperity of the city's religious institutions. The first madrasa built during the Marinid era was the Saffarin Madrasa in Fes el-Bali by Sultan Abu Yusuf in 1271.[42]: 312  Sultan Abu al-Hasan was the most prolific patron of madrasa construction, completing the Al-Attarine, Mesbahiyya and Sahrij Madrasas. His son Abu Inan Faris built the Bou Inania Madrasa, and by the time of his death, every major city in the Marinid Empire had at least one madrasa.[138] The library of al-Qarawiyyin, which holds a large collection of manuscripts from the medieval era, was also established under Marinid rule around 1350.[12]: 148  The largest madrasa in the medina is Cherratine Madrasa, which was commissioned by the Alaouite sultan Al-Rashid in 1670 and is the only major non-Marinid foundation besides the Madrasa of al-Qarawiyyin.[139]

Tombs and mausoleums

 
Interior of the mausoleum of Ahmad al-Tijani (d. 1815) in the Zawiya of Sidi Ahmed al-Tijani in Fes el-Bali

Located in the heart of Fes el-Bali, the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II is a zawiya (a shrine and religious complex; also spelled zaouia), dedicated to and containing the tomb of Idris II (or Moulay Idris II when including his sharifian title) who is considered the main founder of the city of Fez.[140][141]: 51  Another well-known and important zawiya is the Zawiyia of Sidi Ahmed al-Tijani, which commemorates Sidi Ahmed al-Tijani, the founder of Tijaniyyah tariqa from the 18th century.[142] A number of zawiyas are scattered elsewhere across the city, many containing the tombs of important Sufi saints or scholars, such as the Zawiya of Sidi Abdelkader al-Fassi, the Zawiya of Sidi Ahmed esh-Shawi, and the Zawiya of Sidi Taoudi Ben Souda.[143]: 579 [144]: 62, 149 

The old city contains several major historic cemeteries which stand outside the walls of Fes el-Bali, namely the cemeteries of Bab Ftouh (the most significant), Bab Mahrouk, and Bab Guissa. Some include marabouts or domed structures, containing the tombs of local Muslim saints (often considered Sufis), for example the Marabout of Sidi Harazem in the Bab Ftouh Cemetery.[18]: 114, 468, 604  The ruins of the Marinid Tombs, built during the 14th century as a necropolis for the Marinid sultans, are close to the Bab Guissa Cemetery.[19]: 8 

Fortifications

 
City walls of Fez (northern section).

The entire medina of Fez was heavily fortified with crenelated walls with watchtowers and gates, a pattern of urban planning which can be seen in Salé and Chellah as well.[138] The oldest sections of the walls today, on the north side of Fes el-Bali, date back to the Almohad period.[19]: 36  The gates of Fez, scattered along the circuit of walls, were guarded by the military detachments and shut at night.[138] Some of the main gates have existed, in different forms, since the earliest years of the city.[18]: 40–58  The oldest gates today, and historically the most important ones of Fes el-Bali, are Bab Mahrouk (in the west), Bab Guissa (in the northeast), and Bab Ftouh (in the southeast).[18]: 56, 109, 123, 126, 138, 142 [19]: 36–41  The main gates of Fes Jdid include Bab Dekkakin, Bab Semmarine, and Bab al-Amer.[54] In modern times, the function of gates became more ceremonial rather than defensive, as reflected by the 1913 construction of the decorative Bab Bou Jeloud gate at the western entrance of Fes el-Bali by the French colonial administration.[19]: 42 

Several forts were constructed along the defensive perimeters of the medina during different time periods. A "kasbah" in the context of Maghrebi region is the traditional military structure for fortification, military preparation, command and control. Some of them were occupied as well by citizens, certain tribal groups, and merchants. Throughout the city's history, 13 kasbahs were constructed.[145] Among them is the Kasbah an-Nouar, the Kasbah Tamdert, and the Kasbah Cherarda.[19]: 36–37 [18]: 105–108  The Saadis also built a number of bastions and forts in the late 16th century including Borj Nord and its sister fort, Borj Sud.[146][18]: 84, 105 

Tanneries

 
Leather tanning in Chouara Tannery

Since the city's foundation, the tanning industry has been continually operating in Fez and is considered one of the main tourist attractions. There are three tanneries in the city, largest among them is Chouara Tannery near the Saffarin Madrasa along the river. The tanneries are packed with the round stone wells filled with dye or white liquids for softening the hides. The leather goods produced in the tanneries are exported around the world.[147][148][149] The two other major tanneries are the Sidi Moussa Tannery to the west of the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II and the Ain Azliten Tannery in the neighbourhood of the same name on the northern edge of Fes el-Bali.[18]: 220 

 
Gates of the Alaouite Royal Palace (Dar al-Makhzen)

Historic palaces and residences

Many old private residences have also survived to this day, in various states of conservation. The typical traditional house (dar) is centered around an internal courtyard. Some of these houses also had internal gardens known as a riad.[150]: 55–75 [18]: 495–496  Such private houses include the Dar al-Alami,[151] the Dar Saada (now a restaurant), Dar 'Adiyil, Dar Belghazi, and others. Larger and richer mansions, such as the Dar Mnebhi, Dar Moqri, and Jamai Palace, have also been preserved.[19]: 103–156  Numerous traditional houses, popularly known as "riads", are now utilized as hotels for the tourism industry.[152] The Jamai Palace was converted into a luxury hotel, known as Palais Jamaï, in the early 20th century.[153][19]: 116  The lavish former mansion of the Glaoui clan, known as the Dar Glaoui, is partly open to visitors but still privately owned.[154]

As a former capital, the city contains several royal palaces as well. Dar Batha is a former palace completed by the Alaouite Sultan Abdelaziz. In 1915 it was turned into a museum of historical art and artifacts, containing around 6,000 pieces.[155] A large area of Fes Jdid is also taken up by the 80-hectare Royal Palace, or Dar al-Makhzen. Its ornate gates built in 1969-71 are the main feature visible to the public. Its grounds are not open to the public, as they are still used by the King of Morocco when visiting the city.[156]: 148 [83]

Gardens

The Jnane Sbile Garden, between Fes Jdid and Fes el-Bali, is the oldest surviving garden in Fez and was created as a royal park and garden in the 19th century by Sultan Moulay Hassan I.[19]: 296 [18]: 100 [157] Many bourgeois and aristocratic mansions also had private gardens, especially in the southwestern part of Fes el-Bali.[18]: 124, 482  Other gardens also exist within the grounds of the historic royal palaces of the city, such as the Agdal and Lalla Mina Gardens in the Royal Palace or the gardens of the Dar el-Beida (originally attached to Dar Batha).[18]: 90, 97 [19]: 154, 294–296 [156]: 150 

Funduqs (historic merchant buildings)

The old city of Fez includes more than a hundred funduqs or foundouks (traditional inns, or urban caravanserais). These commercial buildings housed the workshops of artisans or provided lodging for merchants and travelers.[18]: 318  They also frequently served as venues for other commercial activities such as markets and auctions.[18]: 190–191, 280, 307–308  The Funduq al-Najjarin was built in the 18th century by Amin Adiyil to provide accommodation and storage for merchants and now houses the Nejjarine Museum of Wooden Arts & Crafts.[158][18]: 134  Other major important examples include the Funduq Shamma'in (also spelled Foundouk Chemmaïne) and the Funduq Staouniyyin (or Funduq of the Tetouanis), both dating from the Marinid era or earlier, and the Funduq Sagha which is contemporary with the Funduq al-Najjariyyin.[18][41][159][160][161]

Hammams (bathhouses)

 
Rooftop view of the domes of the Saffarin Hammam,[162] located at Place Seffarine

Fez is also notable for having preserved a great many of its historic hammams (public bathhouses in the Muslim world) which continue to be used by local people.[163][164][165] Examples, all dating from around the 14th century, include the Hammam as-Saffarin, the Hammam al-Mokhfiya, and the Hammam Ben Abbad.[166][163][164] They were generally built next to a well or natural spring which provided water, while the sloping topography of the city allowed for easy drainage.[163] The layout of the traditional hammam in the region was inherited from the Roman bathhouse model, consisting of a changing room, a cold room, a warm room, and a hot room.[163][164] Though their architecture can be very functional, some of them, like the Hammam as-Saffarin and the Hammam al-Mokhfiya, feature more decoration. The hammams are identifiable from the exterior by the domes and vaults above their main chambers.[163]

Ville Nouvelle

 
Avenue Hassan II in the Ville Nouvelle (New City)

The Ville Nouvelle is centered around Avenue Hassan II, a wide street laid out by the French colonial administration after 1912 and known then as Avenue de France.[167]: 139  A tree-lined park area runs along its middle between the lanes for car traffic. At the avenue's northeastern end is Place de la Résistance (originally called Place Gambetta), a large roundabout with a fountain at its center.[168][169]: 82  Further south along the same avenue is Place Florence (originally Place Lyautey), a wide plaza planted with trees and originally designed as a public garden.[170][171][169]: 82  At the southwest end of the avenue is Place Ahmed El Mansour (originally Place Galliéni).[169]: 82 

During the colonial period the main public buildings of the city were erected along and around this main avenue.[167]: 139  Buildings from this period were constructed in a mix of mauresque (neo-Moorish or Moroccan), Art Deco, and Neoclassical styles.[167]: 172–192  On the south side of Place Florence is the Bank al-Maghrib building, built between 1928 and 1931 by architect René Canu.[167]: 181  Nearby, on the east side of Avenue Hassan II, is the Central Post Office building. The first post office here was built in 1925 and 1927 by architect Edmond Pauty, but it was rebuilt and expanded in its current form by architect Emile Toulon in 1946–1947.[167]: 433  The Court of Appeals building, located southwest of the post office, was constructed in 1934-1936 by architects Adrien Laforgue and Antoine Marchisio and it originally housed the Court of First Instance (Tribunal de première instance).[167]: 181 

Culture

Literature

 
A copy of Muhammad al-Jazuli's Sufi text Dala'il al-Khayrat, a book of prayers first written in Fes in the 15th century.[172][173]

Up until the 19th century, the al-Qarawiyyin dominated the intellectual life of the city and of the country around it. Literature was focused on religious scholarship, philosophy, and poetry.[18]: 475–476  The city's largest library was located at the Qarawiyyin Mosque, while others were attached to other major mosques. Under Sultan Abd al-Rahman (r. 1822–1859a) a new library was created inside the Royal Palace and later in the 19th century the city's wealthy elites began creating their own privates libraries.[18]: 472–473  The city is also one of the historical centers of Moroccan Sufism and a significant body of written works were devoted to its many Sufi walis ("saints" or teachers). This type of literature established itself as one of the main literary genres of Morocco by the late 14th century and Sufi written works from Fez are especially abundant from the 17th to 20th centuries.[174]: 54, 108  A study by Ruggero Vimercati Sanseverino describes the rise of the Zawiya al-Fasiyya, a Sufi order founded in 1581 by Abu l-Mahasin Yusuf al-Fasi, as the impetus for the development of a tradition of Sufi literature particular to Fez.[174]: 109, 297  This literature was a diverse mix of hagiographies (religious biographies), genealogies, and historiographies whose conventions evolved over time. Writers sought to establish a continuity between the teachings of contemporary Sufi masters and those that came before them, with the city of Fez portrayed as the center of this spiritual heritage.[174] Towards the beginning of the 20th century Moroccan literature began to diversify, with polemic or political works becoming more common at this time. For example, there were Muhammad Bin Abdul-Kabir Al-Kattani's anti-colonial periodical at-Tā'ūn (الطاعون The Plague), and his uncle Muhammad ibn Jaqfar al-Kattani's popular Nasihat ahl al-Islam (“Advice to the People of Islam”), published in Fez in 1908, both of which called on Moroccans to unite against European encroachment.[56]: 68, 86 

 
Table of calculations from a copy of the Sefer Abudraham printed in Fez in 1516, the first book printed in Africa[175]

Fez, along with Cordoba, was one of the centers of a Jewish intellectual and cultural renaissance that took place in the 10th and 11th centuries in Morocco and al-Andalus.[176][47] Jewish literary figures associated with Fez include the poet Dunash Ben Labrat (d. circa 990), the grammarian Judah ben David Hayyuj (d. circa 1012), the Talmudist Isaac al-Fasi (d. 1103), and the scholar Joseph ben Judah ibn Aknin (d. circa 1220), who were all born in Fez or spent time there.[47][177] Maimonides (d. 1204), one of the most important Jewish intellectuals of his era, also lived in Fez from 1159 to 1165 after fleeing al-Andalus.[178][176] The first book printed on the African continent was printed in Fez. A copy of Sefer Abudarham (ספר אבודרהם) was printed in Hebrew in 1516 by Samuel ben Isaac Nedivot and his son, who were Jewish refugees from Lisbon.[179][180][181] The press was short-lived and printed 15 copies, one of which is now preserved at the Library of Congress.[182][183][184]: 99 

Printing in Arabic was introduced to Morocco in 1864–65, on the initiative of a man named Muhammad at-Tayyib ar-Rudani [ar], an Islamic scholar and judge originally from the Sous region. In 1864 Ar-Rudani, while returning from his Hajj pilgrimage, bought an Arabic printing press in Cairo and contracted an Egyptian operator, bringing both back with him to Morocco. The press appears to have been confiscated by the Moroccan authorities when it arrived at port and sent to Meknes, where Sultan Muhammad IV was residing at the time. The first book in Arabic was thus printed in Meknes in June 1865, before the press was moved again to Fez in that same year, where it continued to operate until the 1940s.[184]: 110–115  The press was installed in a central neighbourhood of Fes el-Bali and was managed by the government, which printed traditional scholarly books and made some of the productions available to the Qarawiyyin University free of charge. After 1871 the government transferred management of the press to private citizens and the applications of printing widened.[184]: 119–128, 140  After 1897 it became a regulated industry overseen by officials in Fez.[184]: 134–139  By 1908 there were at least four printing establishments in Fez, while two other Moroccan printers were in Tangier.[184]: 139  Hebrew printing presses were reintroduced to Morocco in the 1890s in Tangier and were more firmly established across the country in the 1920s.[185][183]

Music

 
A painting of the 17th century expulsion of the Moriscos from Valencia.

Fes is associated with the tarab al-āla [ar] (طرب الآلة lit. "joy of the instrument") musical style, a result of a large migration of Muslims from Valencia to Fes.[186] The Fessi āla style utilizes the Moroccan forms of the Andalusi nubah melodical arrangements.[187] While this musical style is sometimes popularly referred to as Andalusi music, those who have studied it reject this naming: Mohamed El Fassi intentionally chose the name āla (آلة "instrument") to differentiate it from the Sufi tradition of samā', which is purely vocal, while Idrīs Bin Jellūn at-Twīmī [fr], in his study of Mohammed al-Haik's Kunash al-Haik, described the appelation "Andalusi music" as an unprecedented colonial invention "meant to detract from [the musical form's] Arabness and [Moroccans'] intellectual and artistic abilities."[188]

Art

 
The Sufi calligrapher and scholar Muhammad Bin Al-Qāsim al-Qundūsi (d. 1861) developed his unique calligraphic style in Fes.[189]

Maghrebi Arabic script is an important part of the history of visual art in Fes.[190] While some aspects of Maghrebi script are codified and prescribed, there have also been innovations, such as those by the 19th century calligrapher Muhammad al-Qandusi.[191]

The modernist artist Jilali Gharbaoui studied at the Académie des Arts in Fes.[192]

Cultural venues and institutions

The city's main museums are housed in historic monuments mentioned above, including the Nejjarine Museum, the Dar Batha Museum, and the Arms Museum in Borj Nord.[83][193] The Al Houria Cultural Complex, opened in 2005, is a cultural center in the Ville Nouvelle that includes a theatre, a media library, and exhibition spaces.[194][195][196] Several language institutes in Fez also organize cultural activities in addition to offering courses. The French Institute and the Cervantes Institute have branches in Fez which promote French and Spanish, respectively.[197][198] The American Language Center and the Arabic Language Institute in Fez, sister organizations that share the same location in the Ville Nouvelle, offer courses in English and Arabic, respectively.[199][200][201]

Festivals

 
Performance at the World Sacred Music Festival in 2012 (Bab Dekkakin in the background)

Fez hosts the annual World Sacred Music Festival, which started in 1994 and showcases religious music from around the world. The festival occurs in May or June and concerts take place at multiple venues across the city, including at historic sites such as Bab Makina (the New Mechouar) in Fes Jdid.[202][203] The annual Festival of Amazigh Culture, which started in 2005, normally takes place in July and hosts performances from Amazigh (Berber) musicians and artists from across Morocco.[204][205][206] The annual Festival of Sufi Culture hosts a conference with discussions and debates on Sufism as well as Sufi musical performances and rituals such as haḍras.[207][208] The Festival of Malhoun Art features performances of malhun music and poetry from across the country.[209][210]

Multiple moussems (Sufi religious festivals) have traditionally taken place every year in honour of local Muslim saints and are typically sponsored by one or more of the city's guilds. The most important moussem in the city, and one of the most important in Morocco, is the Moussem of Moulay Idris II. This festival has taken place for hundreds of years[e] and is sponsored by all the guilds in he city, who march through the city together in a procession that culminates at the mausoleum of Idris II. Each guild donates gifts to the zawiya, one of which is a keswa, a large textile decorated with Qur'anic verses that is draped over Idris II's catafalque. The week of the moussem is also marked by other cultural events and entertainment.[211][12]: 86, 130 [212][213][18]: 301–302 

Education

 
University of al-Qarawiyyin

Universities

The university of al-Qarawiyyin is considered by some to be the oldest continually-operating university in the world.[214][10] The university was first founded as a mosque by Fatima al-Fihri in 859 which subsequently became one of the leading spiritual and educational centers of the historic Muslim world.[73] It became a state university in 1963, and remains an important institution of learning today.[215]

Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University is a public university founded in 1975 and is the largest in the city by attendance, counting over 86,000 students in 2020.[74][216][217] It has 12 faculties with sites across the city, with two main campuses known as Dhar El Mehraz and Sais.[216] Another public university, the Euromed University of Fez, was created in 2012 and is certified by the Union for the Mediterranean.[218][219]

The city's first private university, the Private University of Fez, was created in 2013 out of the École polytechnique de Technologie founded 5 years earlier.[220] Its main focus is its engineering school,[221] though it also offers diplomas in architecture, business, and law.[222]

Transport

 
Gare de Fes, train station in the modern urban area of Fez

The city is served by the region's main international airport, Fès–Saïs, located roughly 15 km south of the city center.[83] A new terminal was added to the airport in 2017 which expanded the airport's capacity to 2.5 million visitors a year.[223]

The city's main train station, operated by ONCF, is located a short distance from the downtown area of the Ville Nouvelle and is connected to the rail lines running east to Oujda and west to Tangier and Casablanca.[224][83] The main intercity bus terminal (or gare routière) is located just north of Bab Mahrouk, on the outskirts of the old medina, although CTM also operates a terminal off Boulevard Mohammed V in the Ville Nouvelle. Intercity taxis (also known as grands taxis) depart from and arrive at several spots including the Bab Mahrouk bus station (for western destinations like Meknes and Rabat), Bab Ftouh (for eastern destinations like Sidi Harazem and Taza), and another lot in the Ville Nouvelle (for southern destinations like Sefrou).[83][225]

The city operates a public transit system with various bus routes.[226]

Sport

Fez has two football teams, MAS Fez (Fés Maghrebi)[227] and Wydad de Fès (WAF).[228] They both play in the Botola the highest tier of the Moroccan football system and play their home matches at the 45,000 seat Complexe Sportif de Fès stadium.[229]

The MAS Fez basketball team competes in the Nationale 1, Morocco's top basketball division.[230][231]

International relations

Fez is twinned with:[232]

Notable people

Notes

  1. ^ They were located on higher ground overlooking Fes el-Bali, from which they would have been easily able to bombard the city with canons. These include the Kasbah Tamdert, just inside the city walls near Bab Ftouh, the fortressess of Borj Nord to the north and Borj Sud to the south, and the bastions of Borj Sheikh Ahmed, Borj Twil, and Borj Sidi Bou Nafa' to the west. These fortifications were mostly built by Sultan Ahmad al-Mansur in the late 16th century. Their design is influenced by European (probably Portuguese) military architecture in the gunpowder age.[18]: 79–80 [34]: 37 [51]: 92 
  2. ^ "Pre-Hilalian" in this context refers to dialects believed to descend from the Arabic spoken in the region prior to the arrival of the Banu Hilal and the Banu Ma'qil tribes that began in the 12th century. After this event, "Hilalian" dialects became dominant in the rural regions of central Morocco and are a major component of wider Moroccan Arabic today.[94]: 2–10 
  3. ^ There are competing theories about the historical roots of Moroccan Jewish dialects of Arabic. Some scholars argue that they were strongly influenced by Andalusi Arabic dialects (which were similar to North African dialects) brought by Jewish refugees from Spain after 1492, while other scholars argue that these same refugees mostly spoke Judeo-Spanish when they arrived and eventually adopted existing Arabic dialects in the cities.[94]: 10–12 
  4. ^ Medina is the Arabic word for "city", which in former French colonies in North Africa is also used to refer to the old part of a city, as the French largely generally built new cities (Ville Nouvelles) next to them and left the historic cities intact.[117]
  5. ^ The veneration of Idris II as a patron saint began in the 15th century and so the moussem developed some time after this.[18]: 301–302, 599 

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Further reading

  • Le Tourneau, Roger (1974) [1961]. Fez in the Age of the Marinides. Translated by Besse Clement. Oklahoma University. ISBN 0-8061-1198-4.
  • Vigo, Julian (2006). "The Renovation of Fes' medina qdima and the (re)Creation of the Traditional". Writing the City, Transforming the City. New Delhi: Katha. pp. 44–58.

External links

  • ArchNet - "Fès" (Contains catalogue of monuments, pictures, and explanatory text)

morocco, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, arabic, فاس, romanized, fās, standard, moroccan, tamazight, ⴼⵉⵣⴰⵣ, romanized, fizaz, french, fès, city, northern, inland, morocco, capital, fès, meknès, administrative, region, second, largest, city, moroc. Fes redirects here For other uses see FES disambiguation Fez or Fes f ɛ z Arabic فاس romanized fas Standard Moroccan Tamazight ⴼⵉⵣⴰⵣ romanized fizaz French Fes is a city in northern inland Morocco and the capital of the Fes Meknes administrative region It is the second largest city in Morocco with a population of 1 11 million according to the 2014 census 2 Located to the north west of the Atlas Mountains Fez is linked to several important cities of different regions it is 206 km 128 mi from Tangier to the northwest 246 km 153 mi from Casablanca 189 km 117 mi from Rabat to the west and 387 km 240 mi from Marrakesh to the southwest It is surrounded by hills and the old city is centered around the Fez River Oued Fes flowing from west to east Fez فاس Arabic ⴼⵉⵣⴰⵣ Standard Moroccan Tamazight CityFrom the top down Al Qarawiyyin Mosque University gates of the Royal Palace and Fes el Bali a k a the Medina of Fez FlagFezLocation of Fez within MoroccoShow map of MoroccoFezFez Africa Show map of AfricaCoordinates 34 02 36 N 05 00 12 W 34 04333 N 5 00333 W 34 04333 5 00333 Coordinates 34 02 36 N 05 00 12 W 34 04333 N 5 00333 W 34 04333 5 00333Country MoroccoRegionFes MeknesFounded789Founded byIdrisid dynastyGovernment MayorAbdeslam Bekkali GovernorSaid ZniberArea Urban320 km2 120 sq mi Elevation 1 414 m 1 358 ft Population 2014 2 City1 112 072 Rank2nd in Morocco DemonymFassiTime zoneUTC 1 CET Area code 212 53 UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameMedina of FezTypeCulturalCriteriaiii ivDesignated1981Reference no 3 RegionArab StatesFez was founded under Idrisid rule during the 8th 9th centuries CE It initially consisted of two autonomous and competing settlements Successive waves of mainly Arab immigrants from Ifriqiya Tunisia and al Andalus Spain Portugal in the early 9th century gave the nascent city its Arab character After the downfall of the Idrisid dynasty other empires came and went until the 11th century when the Almoravid Sultan Yusuf ibn Tashfin united the two settlements into what is today s Fes el Bali quarter Under Almoravid rule the city gained a reputation for religious scholarship and mercantile activity Fez reached its zenith in the Marinid era 13th 15th centuries regaining its status as political capital Numerous new madrasas and mosques were constructed many of which survive today while other structures were restored These buildings are counted among the hallmarks of Moorish and Moroccan architectural styles In 1276 the Marinid sultan Abu Yusuf Yaqub also founded the royal administrative district of Fes Jdid where the Royal Palace Dar al Makhzen is still located today to which extensive gardens were later added During this period the Jewish population of the city grew and the Mellah Jewish quarter was formed on the south side of this new district After the overthrow of the Marinid dynasty Fez declined and subsequently competed with Marrakesh for political and cultural influence It became the capital again under the Alawi Alaouite dynasty up until 1912 Today the city consists of two old medina quarters Fes el Bali and Fes Jdid and the much larger modern urban Ville Nouvelle area founded during the French colonial era The medina of Fez is listed as a World Heritage Site and is thought to be one of the world s largest urban pedestrian zones car free areas 4 5 6 It contains the University of Al Qarawiyyin which was founded in 857 and is considered by some to be the oldest continuously functioning institute of higher education in the world It also contains the Chouara Tannery from the 11th century one of the oldest tanneries in the world The city has been called the Mecca of the West and the Athens of Africa 7 8 9 It is also considered the spiritual and cultural capital of Morocco 10 11 12 17 18 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Foundation and the Idrisids 2 2 Golden age under the Almoravids Almohads and Marinids 2 3 Sharifian rule under the Saadians and Alaouites 2 4 Colonial rule 2 5 Independence and present day 3 Geography 3 1 Location 3 2 Climate 4 Demographics 4 1 Language 4 1 1 Moroccan Arabic Darija 4 1 2 Official and foreign languages 5 Economy 6 Government 7 Landmarks 7 1 Medina of Fez 7 2 Places of worship 7 3 Madrasas 7 4 Tombs and mausoleums 7 5 Fortifications 7 6 Tanneries 7 7 Historic palaces and residences 7 8 Gardens 7 9 Funduqs historic merchant buildings 7 10 Hammams bathhouses 7 11 Ville Nouvelle 8 Culture 8 1 Literature 8 2 Music 8 3 Art 8 4 Cultural venues and institutions 8 5 Festivals 9 Education 9 1 Universities 10 Transport 11 Sport 12 International relations 13 Notable people 14 Notes 15 References 15 1 Citations 16 Further reading 17 External linksEtymology EditFez American English Fes British English Fes French or Fas Direct translation was derived from the Arabic word فأس Faʾs which means pickaxe Various different legends have been reported to explain this etymology One myth tells the story of a gold pickaxe on site during the city s construction while another claims that Idris I used a silver and gold pickaxe to dig alongside his workers 12 26 13 14 Another account reported by Ibn Abi Zar claims that an ancient city named Sef had previously existed on the site and that Idris I reversed the letters of this name to create the name Fes 12 26 27 13 During the rule of the Idrisid dynasty 788 to 974 Fez consisted of two cities Fas founded by Idris I 15 and al ʿAliya founded by his son Idris II During this period the capital city was known as al ʿAliya with the name Fas being reserved for the separate site on the other side of the river no Idrisid coins have been found with the name Fez only al ʿAliya and al ʿAliya Madinat Idris It is not known whether the name al ʿAliya ever referred to both urban areas The two cities were united in 1070 and the name Fas was used for the combined site 16 History EditMain article History of Fez See also Timeline of Fez Foundation and the Idrisids Edit View of Fes el Bali and the minaret of the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II which commemorates Idris II one of the founders of Fez The city was first founded in 789 as Madinat Fas on the southeast bank of the Jawhar River now known as the Fez River by Idris I founder of the Idrisid dynasty His son Idris II 17 built a settlement called Al Aliya on the opposing river bank in 809 and moved his capital here from Walili Volubilis 18 35 19 35 20 83 The early population was composed mostly of Berbers along with hundreds of Arab warriors from Kairouan who made up Idris II s entourage 18 35 41 20 82 Arab emigration to Fez increased afterwards Andalusi families of mixed Arab and Iberian descent 21 who were expelled from Cordoba after a rebellion in 817 818 against al Hakam I were one major component of this These families mainly settled in Madinat Fas 18 46 47 Additionally Arab families banned from Kairouan in present day Tunisia after a rebellion there in around 825 also arrived and were settled in Al Aliya 18 47 These two waves of immigrants gave the city its Arabic character and would subsequently give their name to the districts of Adwat Al Andalus ar and Adwat al Qarawiyyin ar 22 51 The city also had a strong Jewish community probably consisting of Zenata Berbers who had previously converted to Judaism as well as a small remaining Christian population for a time The Jews were especially concentrated in a northeastern district of Al Aliya known as Funduq el Yihoudi near the present day Bab Guissa gate 18 42 44 Following the death of Idris II in 828 the region was divided among his sons The eldest Muhammad received Fez but some of his brothers attempted to break away from his leadership resulting in an internecine conflict Although the Idrisid realm was eventually reunified and enjoyed a period of peace under Ali ibn Muhammad and Yahya ibn Muhammad it fell into decline again in the late 9th century 23 According to one of the major early sources on this period the Rawd al Qirtas by Ibn Abi Zar in this period the Al Qarawiyyin Mosque was founded in 859 by Fatima al Fihri the daughter of a wealthy merchant Her sister Mariam is likewise reputed to have founded the Al Andalusiyyin Mosque the same year 24 7 8 18 48 In the 10th century the city was contested by the Umayyad Caliphate of Cordoba and the Fatimid Caliphate of Ifriqiya Tunisia who ruled the city through a host of Zenata clients 20 88 91 23 25 63 64 74 75 The Fatimids took the city in 927 and expelled the Idrisids definitively after which their Miknasa one of the Zenata tribes were installed there The city along with much of northern Morocco continued to change hands between the proxies of Cordoba and the proxies of the Fatimids for many decades Following another successful invasion by Buluggin ibn Ziri in 979 and a brief period of Fatimid control the forces of Al Mansur of Cordoba managed to retake the region again expelling the Fatimids permanently 23 From 980 or from 986 26 18 Fez was ruled by a Zenata dynasty from the Maghrawa tribe who were allies of the Caliphate of Cordoba They maintained this control even after the Caliphate s collapse in the early 11th century and until the arrival of the Almoravids 19 16 26 20 91 Fez continued to grow under Zenata control even though conflicts between its two settlements Madinat Fas and Al Aliya flared up during periods of political rivalry Ziri ibn Atiyya the first ruler of the new dynasty had a troubled reign 18 50 However Ibn Atiyya s descendant Dunas ibn Hamama ruling between 1037 and 1049 was responsible for improving the city s infrastructure 27 He developed much of Fez s water supply system which has largely survived up to the present day 27 28 Other structures built in his time included hammams bathhouses mosques and the first bridges over the Oued Bou Khrareb mostly rebuilt in later eras 18 51 27 29 30 The two cities became increasingly integrated the open space between the two was filled up by new houses and up to six bridges across the river allowed for easier passage between them 12 36 A decade after Dunas between 1059 and 1061 the two cities were ruled separately by two rival Zenata emirs who fought with each other Al Aliya was controlled by an emir named Al Gisa and Madinat Fas was controlled by Al Fetouh Both brothers fortified their respective shores and their names have been preserved in two of the city s gates to this day Bab Guissa or Bab Gisa in the north and Bab Ftouh in the south 31 31 18 50 53 110 Golden age under the Almoravids Almohads and Marinids Edit In 1069 1070 or possibly a few years later 26 Fez was conquered by the Almoravids under Yusuf ibn Tashfin In the same year of this conquest Yusuf ibn Tashfin unified Madinat Fas and Al Aliya into one city The walls dividing them were destroyed bridges connecting them were built or renovated and a new circuit of walls was constructed that encompassed both cities A kasbah citadel was built at the western edge of the city just west of Bab Bou Jeloud today to house the city s governor and garrison 18 53 28 Under Almoravid patronage the largest expansion and renovation of the Great Mosque of al Qarawiyyin took place 1135 1143 32 18 20 Although the capital was moved to Marrakesh under the Almoravids Fez acquired a reputation for Maliki legal scholarship and remained an important centre of trade and industry 18 52 54 19 17 18 Almoravid impact on the city s structure was such that Yusuf ibn Tashfin is sometimes considered to be the second founder of Fez 33 Remains of the city walls on the north side of Fes el Bali which were rebuilt during the Almohad period 12th 13th century In 1145 the Almohad leader Abd al Mu min besieged and conquered the city during the Almohad overthrow of the Almoravids Due to the ferocious resistance they encountered from the local population the Almohads demolished the city s fortifications 18 55 28 However due to Fez s continuing economic and military importance the Almohad caliph Ya qub al Mansur ordered the reconstruction of the ramparts 31 36 28 606 Since the city had grown in the meantime the new Almohad perimeter of walls was larger than that of the former Almoravid ramparts 28 607 The walls were completed by his successor Muhammad al Nasir in 1204 31 36 giving them their definitive shape and establishing the perimeter of Fes el Bali to this day 18 56 28 34 19 The Almohads built the Kasbah Bou Jeloud on the site of the former Almoravid kasbah 18 56 and also built the first kasbah occupying the site of the current Kasbah an Nouar 12 72 31 109 Not all the land within the city walls was densely inhabited much of it was still relatively open and was occupied by crops and gardens used by the inhabitants 34 19 During the 12th century the city was one of the largest in the world with an estimated population of 200 000 35 The Bou Inania Madrasa the most important madrasa built by the Marinids in Fes 14th century In 1250 Fez regained its status as the capital under the Marinid dynasty The city reached its golden age in the Marinid period 36 16 18 61 78 19 20 In 1276 an anti Marinid revolt resulted in a massacre of the Jewish community that was stopped by the intervention of the ruler Abu Yusuf Ya qub 37 38 Following the revolt Abu Yusuf Yaqub founded Fes Jdid as the new administrative and military centre Under the Marinids many of the principal monuments in the medina were built and the city established its reputation as an important intellectual centre 18 61 78 39 Between 1271 and 1357 seven madrasas were built which are among the best examples of Moroccan architecture and some of the most richly decorated monuments in Fez 40 285 289 291 293 41 42 312 314 Jews of Fez in the 1900s The Mellah was the traditional Jewish quarter of the city since the 15th century The Jewish quarter of Fez the Mellah was created in Fes Jdid at some point during the Marinid period The exact date and circumstances of its formation are not firmly established 43 38 but many scholars date the transfer of the Jewish population from Fes el Bali to the new Mellah to the 15th century a period of political tension and instability In particular Jewish sources describe the transfer as a consequence of the rediscovery of Idris II s body in the heart of the city in 1437 which caused the surrounding area if not the entire city to acquire a holy haram status requiring that non Muslims be removed from the area 43 44 45 46 The Jewish community had initially consisted of indigenous local Jews known as the Toshavim but these were joined by Sephardic Jews from the Iberian Peninsula known as the Megorashim in subsequent generations especially after the 1492 expulsion of Jews from Spain 47 The 1465 Moroccan revolt overthrew the last Marinid sultan In 1472 the Wattasids another Zenata dynasty which had previously served as viziers under the Marinid sultans succeeded as rulers of Morocco from Fez 25 114 115 48 They perpetuated the structure of the Marinid state and continued its policies but were unable to control all of Morocco 36 15 25 207 209 They did not contribute significantly to the physical fabric of Fez 49 Sharifian rule under the Saadians and Alaouites Edit Borj Nord a Saadian fortress built in the 16th century overlooking Fez from the north In the 16th century the Saadis a dynasty claiming prophetic heritage rose to power in southern Morocco and challenged the Wattasids Around the same time the Ottoman Empire came close to Fez after its conquest of Algeria In January 1549 the Saadi sultan Mohammed ash Sheikh took Fez and ousted the last Wattasid sultan Ali Abu Hassun The Wattasids later retook the city in 1554 with Ottoman support but this reconquest was short lived and later that same year the Wattasids were decisively defeated by the Saadis 22 157 The Ottomans attempted to invade Morocco after the assassination of Mohammed ash Sheikh in 1558 but were stopped by his son Abdallah al Ghalib at the Battle of Wadi al Laban north of Fez 22 158 After the death of Abdallah al Ghalib a new power struggle emerged Abd al Malik Abdallah s brother captured Fez with Ottoman support and ousted his nephew Abu Abdullah from the throne The latter fled to Portugal where he asked king Sebastian of Portugal for help to regain his throne while Abd al Malik accepted Ottoman suzerainty This led to the Battle of Wadi al Makhazin also known as Battle of the Three Kings in which Abd al Malik s army defeated the invading Portuguese army ensuring Moroccan independence Abd al Malik was killed during the battle and was succeeded by Ahmad al Mansur r 1578 1603 50 The Saadians who used Marrakesh again as their capital did not lavish much attention on Fez with the exception of the ornate ablutions pavilions added to the Qarawiyyin Mosque s courtyard during their time 32 70 Perhaps as a result of persistent tensions with the city s inhabitants the Saadians built a number of new forts and bastions around the city which appear to have been aimed at keeping control over the local population a After the long reign of Ahmad al Mansur the Saadian state fell into civil war between his sons and potential successors Fez became a rival seat of power for a number of brothers vying against other family members ruling from Marrakesh Both cities changed hands multiple times until the internecine conflict finally ended in 1627 50 52 Despite the reunification of the realm after 1627 the Saadians were in full decline and Fez had already suffered considerably from the repeated conquests and reconquests during the conflict 26 In 1641 Muhammad al Haj of the Sanhaja Amazigh Dila Sufi order occupied Fes 53 88 The time was particularly difficult for Fessi Jews 53 88 Patio of Moulay Rashid 17th century inside the Royal Palace of Fez photo from 1922 It was only when the founder of the Alaouite dynasty Moulay Rashid took Fez in 1666 that the city saw a revival and became the capital again albeit briefly 34 25 Moulay Rashid set about restoring the city after a long period of neglect He built the Kasbah Cherarda also known as the Kasbah al Khemis to the north of Fes Jdid in order to house a large part of his tribal troops 18 84 34 25 He also restored or rebuilt what became known as the Kasbah an Nouar which became the living quarters of his followers from the Tafilalt region the Alaouite dynasty s ancestral home For this reason the kasbah was also known as the Kasbah Filala Kasbah of the people from Tafilalt 18 84 12 72 73 Moulay Rashid also built a large new madrasa the Cherratine Madrasa in 1670 41 After his death Fez underwent another dark period Moulay Isma il his successor apparently disliked the city possibly due to a rebellion there in his early reign and chose nearby Meknes as his capital instead 18 84 Although he did restore or rebuild some major monuments in the city such as the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II he also frequently imposed heavy taxes on the city s inhabitants and sometimes even forcibly transferred parts of its population to repopulate other cities in the country 18 84 85 After his death Morocco was plunged into anarchy and decades of conflict between his sons who vied to succeed him Fez suffered particularly from repeated conflicts with the Udayas or Oudayas a guich tribe vassal tribe serving as a garrison and military force previously installed in the Kasbah Cherarda by Moulay Isma il Sultan Moulay Abdallah who reigned intermittently during this period and used Fez as a capital was initially welcomed in 1728 29 as an enemy of the Udayas but relations between him and the city s population quickly soured due to his choice of governor He immediately built a separate fortified palace in the countryside Dar Dbibegh where he resided instead For nearly three more decades the city remained in more or less perpetual conflict with both the Udayas and the Alaouite sultans 18 85 86 Starting with the reign of Moulay Muhammad ibn Abdallah between 1757 and 1790 the country stabilized and Fez finally regained its fortunes Although its status was partly shared with Marrakesh it remained the capital of Morocco for the rest of the Alaouite period up to the 20th century 18 88 19 25 26 There was a brief period of disorder under Moulay Yazid ruled 1790 1792 and Moulay Slimane ruled 1792 1822 with the sultans in Fez losing control of most of the rest of Morocco between 1790 and 1795 22 241 242 However the city benefitted from a long era of relative peace and remained a major economic center even during short periods of conflict 18 88 89 The Alaouites continued to rebuild or restore various monuments and undertook a series of extensions to the Royal Palace 41 54 The sultans and their entourages also became more and more closely associated with the elites of Fez and other urban centers with the ulama religious scholars of Fez being particularly influential After Moulay Slimane s death powerful Fassi families became the main players of the country s political and intellectual scene 22 242 247 The Tijani Sufi order started by Ahmad al Tijani d 1815 has had its spiritual center in Fez since al Tijani moved here from Algeria in 1789 22 244 The order spread quickly among the literary elite of North West Africa and its ulama had significant religious intellectual and political influence in Fez and beyond 55 Until the 19th century the city was the only source of fezzes also known as the tarboosh 17 The New Mechouar created by Moulay Hassan I in the late 19th century at the northern entrance to Fes Jdid and the Royal Palace on the left is the entrance to the Dar al Makina dating from the same time The last major change to Fez s topography before the 20th century was made during the reign of Moulay Hassan I 1873 1894 who finally connected Fes Jdid and Fes el Bali by building a walled corridor between them 18 89 34 25 26 New gardens and summer palaces used by the royals and the capital s high society were built within the corridor such as the Jnan Sbil Gardens and the Dar Batha palace 18 89 90 54 Moulay Hassan also expanded the old Royal Palace itself extending its entrance up to the current location of the Old Mechouar while adding the New Mechouar along with the Dar al Makina to the north The expansion separated the Moulay Abdallah neighbourhood to the northwest from the rest of Fes Jdid 54 Fez played a central role in the Hafidhiya the brief civil war that erupted when Abdelhafid challenged his brother Abdelaziz for the throne The ulama of Fez led by the Sufi modernist Muhammad Bin Abdul Kabir Al Kattani offered their conditioned support to Abd al Hafid which turned the tide of the conflict 56 57 Abdelaziz was defeated in the Battle of Marrakesh in 1908 56 76 78 Abdelhafid s reign soon deteriorated and in early 1911 the sultan was besieged in Fez by the tribes of the Middle Atlas Abdelhafid appealed for French help and a French force under Colonel Charles Emile Moinier fr arrived in Fez on May 21 and established a command centre at Dar Dbibegh 26 22 313 56 78 Colonial rule Edit The abdication of Abd al Hafid Sultan of Morocco in 1912 In 1912 French colonial rule was instituted over Morocco following the Treaty of Fes One immediate consequence was the 1912 riots in Fez a popular uprising which included deadly attacks targeting Europeans as well as native Jewish inhabitants in the Mellah followed by an even deadlier repression 58 59 The first French resident general Hubert Lyautey decided to move the administrative capital of the Protectorate to Rabat in 1912 1913 which has remained the capital ever since 60 149 61 62 A number of social and physical changes took place during this period and across the 20th century Starting under Lyautey one important policy with long term consequences was the decision to largely forego redevelopment of existing historic walled cities in Morocco and to intentionally preserve them as sites of historic heritage still known today as medinas Instead the French administration built new modern cities the Villes Nouvelles just outside the old cities where European settlers largely resided with modern Western style amenities This was part of a larger policy of association adopted by Lyautey which favoured various forms of indirect colonial rule by preserving local institutions and elites in contrast with other French colonial policies that had favoured assimilation 63 64 65 The Ville Nouvelle also became known as Dar Dbibegh by Moroccans as the former palace of Moulay Abdallah was located in the same area 26 A street in the modern Ville Nouvelle New City of FezThe creation of the separate French Ville Nouvelle to the west had a wider impact on the entire city s development 65 While new colonial policies preserved historic monuments it also had other consequences in the long term due to stalling urban development in these heritage areas 63 Scholar Janet Abu Lughod has argued that these policies created a kind of urban apartheid between the indigenous Moroccan urban areas who were forced to remain stagnant in terms of urban development and architectural innovation and the new mainly European inhabited planned cities which expanded to occupy lands formerly used by Moroccans outside the city 66 67 165 166 63 This separation was partly softened however by wealthy Moroccans who started moving into the Ville Nouvelles during this period 68 19 26 By contrast the old city medina of Fez was increasingly settled by poorer rural migrants from the countryside 19 26 Fez also played a role in the Moroccan nationalist movement and in protests against the French colonial regime Many Moroccan nationalists received their education at the Al Qarawiyyin University and some of their informal political networks were established thanks to this shared educational background 69 140 146 In July 1930 the students and other inhabitants protested against the Berber Dahir decreed by the French authorities in May of that year 70 69 143 144 In 1937 the Al Qarawiyyin Mosque and R cif Mosque were rallying points for demonstrations against a violent crackdown on Moroccan protesters in the nearby city of Meknes which ended with French troops being deployed across Fes el Bali including at the mosques themselves 25 387 389 69 168 Towards the end of World War II Moroccan nationalists gathered in Fez to draft a demand for independence which they submitted to the Allies on January 11 1944 This resulted in the arrest of nationalist leaders followed by the violent suppression of protests across many cities including Fez 71 69 255 Independence and present day Edit After Morocco regained its independence in 1956 many of the trends begun under colonial rule continued and accelerated during the second half of the 20th century Much of Fez s bourgeois classes moved to the growing metropolises of Casablanca and the capital Rabat 19 26 72 40 The Jewish population was particularly depleted either moving to Casablanca or emigrating to countries like France Canada and Israel Although the population of the city grew it did so only slowly up until the late 1960s when the pace of growth finally accelerated 71 216 Throughout this period and up to today Fez nonetheless remained the country s third largest urban center 19 26 71 216 Between 1971 and 2000 the population of the city roughly tripled from 325 000 to 940 000 20 376 The Ville Nouvelle became the locus of further development with new peripheral neighbourhoods with inconsistent housing quality spreading outwards around it 71 In 1963 the University of Al Qarawiyyin was reorganized as a state university 73 while a new public university Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University was founded in 1975 in the Ville Nouvelle 74 In 1981 the old city consisting of Fes el Bali and Fes Jdid was classified as a UNESCO World Heritage Site 10 Social inequalities and economic precarity were accentuated during the repressive reign of King Hassan II and the period known as the Years of Lead roughly 1975 1990 56 170 Fez was strongly affected by unemployment and lack of housing Austerity measures led to several riots and uprisings across other cities during the 1980s On December 14 1990 a general strike was called and led to protests and rioting by university students and youths in Fez Buildings were burned and looted including the Hotel des Merinides a luxury hotel overlooking Fes el Bali and dating to the time of Lyautey Thousands were arrested and at least five were killed The government promised to investigate and raise wages though some of these measures were dismissed by the opposition 20 377 75 76 77 Today Fez remains a regional capital and one of Morocco s most important cities Many of the former notable families of Fez still make up a large part of the country s political elite 78 It is also a major tourism destination due to its historical heritage In recent years efforts have been underway to restore and rehabilitate the old medina ranging from the restoration of individual monuments to attempts to rehabilitate the Fez River 79 80 81 82 Geography EditLocation Edit The walled district of Fes el Bali The city is divided between its historic medina the two walled districts of Fes el Bali and Fes Jdid and the now much larger Ville Nouvelle New City along with several outlying modern neighbourhoods The old city is located in a valley along the banks of the Oued Fes Fez River just above its confluence with the larger Sebou River to the northeast 18 32 17 The Fez River takes its sources from the south and west and is split into various small canals which provide the historic city with water These in turn empty into the Oued Bou Khrareb the stretch of the river which passes through the middle of Fes el Bali and separates the Qarawiyyin quarter from the Andalusian quarter 18 232 235 The new city occupies a plateau on the edge of the Sais plain The latter stretches out to the west and south and is occupied largely by farmland Roughly 15 km south of Fes el Bali is the region s main airport Fes Sais Further south is the town of Sefrou while the city of Meknes the next largest city in the region is located to the southwest 83 84 Climate Edit Northwest of the Middle Atlas mountains Fez has a hot summer Mediterranean climate Koppen climate classification Csa with a strong continental influence shifting from relatively cool and wet in the winter to dry and hot days in the summer months between June and September Rainfall can reach up to 800 mm 31 in in good years The winter highs typically reach around 15 C 59 F in December January Frost is not uncommon during the winter period The highest and lowest temperatures ever recorded in the city are 46 7 C 116 F and 8 2 C 17 F respectively Snowfall on average occurs once every 3 to 5 years Fez recorded snowfall in three straight years in 2005 2006 and 2007 85 86 87 88 Climate data for Fez Fes Sais Airport altitude 579 m 1 900 ft 1981 2010Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 25 0 77 0 30 5 86 9 33 3 91 9 37 0 98 6 41 3 106 3 44 0 111 2 46 7 116 1 44 4 111 9 41 7 107 1 37 5 99 5 31 2 88 2 27 0 80 6 46 7 116 1 Average high C F 15 4 59 7 17 0 62 6 19 8 67 6 21 2 70 2 25 0 77 0 30 4 86 7 34 7 94 5 34 2 93 6 30 3 86 5 25 4 77 7 19 9 67 8 16 5 61 7 24 1 75 4 Daily mean C F 9 3 48 7 10 7 51 3 13 1 55 6 14 5 58 1 17 8 64 0 22 4 72 3 26 1 79 0 25 9 78 6 22 8 73 0 18 7 65 7 13 9 57 0 10 8 51 4 17 2 63 0 Average low C F 3 2 37 8 4 5 40 1 6 3 43 3 7 8 46 0 10 7 51 3 14 4 57 9 17 5 63 5 17 6 63 7 15 4 59 7 11 9 53 4 8 0 46 4 5 1 41 2 10 2 50 4 Record low C F 8 2 17 2 4 9 23 2 2 5 27 5 0 5 31 1 0 0 32 0 4 9 40 8 8 5 47 3 9 2 48 6 5 9 42 6 0 0 32 0 1 4 29 5 5 0 23 0 8 2 17 2 Average rainfall mm inches 55 7 2 19 55 8 2 20 52 3 2 06 57 2 2 25 33 9 1 33 10 6 0 42 1 0 0 04 4 5 0 18 18 9 0 74 50 1 1 97 61 2 2 41 69 2 2 72 470 4 18 52 Average rainy days 12 1 13 2 13 5 13 5 10 2 5 3 1 6 1 8 4 7 9 1 12 7 12 1 109 8Average snowy days 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2Mean monthly sunshine hours 210 6 201 1 244 0 246 5 278 0 315 0 338 0 320 4 282 5 245 5 205 2 199 8 3 086 6Percent possible sunshine 60 55 58 62 64 71 79 77 75 64 60 60 65Source 1 World Meteorological Organization 89 NOAA precipitation days 1961 1990 90 Source 2 Meoweather com 88 Voodoo skies for extremes 87 Weather Atlas 91 Climate data for FezMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearMean daily daylight hours 10 0 11 0 12 0 13 0 14 0 14 0 14 0 13 0 12 0 11 0 10 0 10 0 12 0Average Ultraviolet index 3 4 6 8 9 10 11 10 8 6 4 3 6 8Source Weather Atlas 91 Demographics Edit Men at a Cafe Fez According to the 2014 national census the population of the city of Fez was 1 112 072 2 which includes the municipalities of Fez proper and Mechouar Fes Jdid New Fes Most of this population was Moroccan but it also included 3515 resident foreigners The majority of the population lives in the Ville Nouvelle region and other modern day neighbourhoods outside the historic walled city Language Edit Moroccan Arabic Darija Edit The main spoken language in Fes is Arabic Darija الدارجة المغربية lit the Moroccan vernacular a vernacular variety of Arabic Like the inhabitants of other historical urban centers in Morocco Ahl Fes أهل فاس the people of Fes referring especially to old elite families speak their own distinct dialect of Darija 92 This Fessi dialect has traditionally been regarded as a prestige dialect over other forms of Moroccan Darija particularly those seen as rural or arubi عروبي of the rural Arabs due to its association with the socio economic power and dominance that its speakers enjoy at the national level in the words of Mohammed Errihani 92 93 The Fessi dialect has traditionally had distinctive linguistic features On the phonological level these include the stereotypical use of a postalveolar approximant like the American pronunciation of ɹ in the word red in the place of a trilled r for ر or a pharyngealized glottal stop or voiceless uvular plosive in the place of a voiced velar plosive g for ق 92 On the morphosyntactic level gender distinction in pronouns and verb inflections is neutralized in the second person singular 92 Many of these features were shared with the other pre Hilalian dialects in the region 94 5 24 b However due to social and demographic changes that started in the 20th century such as mass rural migration into the city and the departure of most of the city s old urban elites to Casablanca these old linguistic features are no longer dominant in the speech of Arabic speakers in Fez today 95 94 5 24 Prior to the departure of most Jewish residents in the second half of the 20th century the Jewish community in Fez also spoke an Arabic dialect similar to the rest of city 94 24 c Official and foreign languages Edit Modern Standard Arabic and Berber Tamazight are Morocco s two official state languages although French is also widespread as a language of government and law 96 97 The primary language of the literary traditions of Fes is Arabic 98 While the daily spoken language is Darija the Moroccan Arabic dialect many people also speak French fluently English is increasingly being learned by younger generations Berber dialects are commonly spoken in the countryside around the city 99 Economy Edit Produce peddler in the Old Medina of Fes Historically the city was one of Morocco s main centers of trade and craftsmanship The tanning industry for example still embodied by tanneries of Fes el Bali today was a major source of exports and economic sustenance since the city s early history 100 Up until the late 19th century the city was the only place in the world which fabricated the fez hat 17 The city s commerce was concentrated along its major streets like Tala a Kebira and around the central bazaar known as the Kissariat al Kifah from which many other souqs markets branched off 18 112 122 129 19 52 56 The crafts industry continues to this day and is still focused in the old city though largely reliant on tourism 17 Today the city s surrounding countryside the fertile Saiss plains is an important source of agricultural activity producing primarily cereals beans olives and grapes as well as raising livestock 17 101 Tourism is also a major industry due to the city s UNESCO listed historic medina 17 Religious tourism is also present due to the old city s many major zawiyas Islamic shrines such as the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II and the Zawiya of Sidi Ahmed al Tijani which attract both Moroccan and international especially West African pilgrims 102 The city and the region still struggle with unemployment and economic precarity 103 Government EditTwo municipalities Arabic جماعتين حضريتين French communes in the Fez Prefecture ar Arabic عمالة فاس make up the city of Fez Most of Fez is administered as the municipality of Fez while the neighborhood of Fes Jdid is administered separately as the municipality of Mechouar Fes Jdid Outside of the city there are also three rural municipalities in the prefecture Ain Bida Oulad Tayeb and Sidi Harazem 104 The municipality of Fez has an area of 94 square kilometres 36 sq mi and recorded a population of 1 091 512 in the 2014 Moroccan census 105 It is divided into six arrondissements مقاطعات Arrondissements of the municipality of Fez Arrondissement Area 106 Population 2014 105 Population 2004 106 Change Population density 2014 Agdal 21 0 km2 8 1 sq mi 142 407 144 064 1 2 6 781 km2 17 560 sq mi El Mariniyine 13 5 km2 5 2 sq mi 209 494 191 093 9 6 15 520 km2 40 190 sq mi Fes Medina 2 2 km2 0 85 sq mi 70 592 91 473 22 8 32 100 km2 83 100 sq mi Jnan El Ouard 16 3 km2 6 3 sq mi 201 011 174 226 15 4 12 330 km2 31 940 sq mi Saiss 20 5 km2 7 9 sq mi 207 345 156 590 32 4 10 114 km2 26 200 sq mi Zouagha 20 5 km2 7 9 sq mi 260 663 163 291 59 6 12 413 km2 32 150 sq mi The municipality of Fez is governed by a 91 member council elected by direct universal suffrage every six years 107 108 The arrondissements of Zouagha and Marininyine elect 17 councillors each Jnane El Ward and Saiss elect 16 councillors each Agdal elects 13 and Fes Medina elects 12 109 Executive power is wielded by a president and ten vice presidents which are elected by the council 110 In 2021 Abdeslam Bekkali a member of the National Rally of Independents RNI succeeded Driss Azami El Idrissi as the new president of the municipality of Fez 111 The municipality of Mechouar Fes Jdid consists of the neighborhood of Fes Jdid in the old city and forms an enclave within the municipality of Fez Established in 1992 it is only 1 6 square kilometres 0 62 sq mi in extent 112 and recorded a population of 20 560 in the 2014 census 105 The municipality possesses a special administrative status as the location of a royal palace the Dar al Makhzen or mechouar one of four such municipalities French communes des mechouars in Morocco The other three are located in Casablanca Marrakesh and Rabat These four municipalities are governed by special provisions that do not apply to ordinary municipalities 106 113 The subdivisions of Fez Prefecture are grouped into two electoral districts North Fez and South Fez each of which elects four members to the House of Representatives North Fez consists of the arrondissements of El Mariniyine Fes Medina and Zouagha and the municipality of Mechouar Fes Jdid South Fez consists of the other three arrondissements of Agdal Jnan El Ouard and Saiss and the three rural municipalities outside the city of Fez 114 115 Landmarks EditMain article Architecture of Fez Medina of Fez Edit Main articles Fes el Bali and Fes Jdid The historic city of Fez consists of Fes el Bali the original city on both shores of the Oued Fes River of Fez and the smaller Fez Jdid founded on higher ground to the west in the 13th century It is distinct from Fez s now much larger Ville Nouvelle new city Fes el Bali is the site of the famous Qarawiyyin University and the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II the most important religious and cultural sites while Fez el Jdid is the site of the 195 acre Royal Palace 116 still used by the King of Morocco today These two historic cities are linked together and are usually referred to together as the medina of Fez though this term is sometimes applied more restrictively to Fes el Bali only d Fez is becoming an increasingly popular tourist destination and many non Moroccans are now restoring traditional houses riads and dars as second homes in the medina In 1981 the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO designated Medina of Fez a World Heritage site describing it as one of the most extensive and best conserved historic towns of the Arab Muslim world 10 It was the first site in Morocco to be granted this status 118 Panoramic view of Fes el Bali Places of worship Edit Interior of the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II in Fes el Bali Interior of the Al Fassiyin Synagogue in the Mellah There are numerous historic mosques in the medina some of which are part of a madrasa or zawiya Among the oldest still standing today are the Mosque of al Qarawiyyin founded in 857 and subsequently expanded 32 119 the Mosque of the Andalusians founded in 859 860 120 121 7 the Bou Jeloud Mosque from the late 12th century 122 and possibly the Mosque of the Kasbah en Nouar which may have existed in the Almohad period but was likely rebuilt much later 12 18 The very oldest mosques of the city dating back to its first years were the Mosque of the Sharifs or Shurafa Mosque and the Mosque of the Sheikhs or al Anouar Mosque however they no longer exist in their original form The Mosque of the Sharifs was the burial site of Idris II and evolved into the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II that exists today while the al Anouar Mosque has left only minor remnants 18 33 A number of mosques from the important Marinid era when Fes Jdid was created to be the capital of Morocco include the Great Mosque of Fez el Jdid from 1276 the Abu al Hasan Mosque from 1341 123 the Chrabliyine Mosque from 1342 124 and the al Hamra Mosque from around the same period 125 92 The Bab Guissa Mosque was also founded in the reign of Abu al Hasan 1331 1351 but modified in later centuries 41 Other major mosques from the more recent Alaouite period are the Moulay Abdallah Mosque built in the early to mid 18th century with the tomb of Sultan Moulay Abdallah 40 391 and the R cif Mosque built in the reign of Moulay Slimane 1793 1822 126 The Zawiya of Moulay Idris II and the Zawiya of Sidi Ahmed al Tijani include mosque areas as well as do several other prominent zawiyas in the city 12 118 131 127 18 132 133 The Ville Nouvelle also includes many modern mosques the largest of which is the Imam Malik Mosque which opened in 1994 128 129 130 Elsewhere the Jewish quarter Mellah is the site of the 17th century Al Fassiyin Synagogue and Ibn Danan Synagogue as well multiple other lesser known synagogues though none of them are functioning today 45 131 According to the World Jewish Congress there are only 150 Moroccan Jews remaining in Fes 132 The Church of Saint Francis of Assisi the only Catholic church in Fez was established in 1919 or 1920 during the French colonial period The current building was constructed in 1928 and expanded in 1933 Today it is part of the Archdiocese of Rabat and it was most recently restored in 2005 133 134 135 Madrasas Edit Al Attarine Madrasa built in 1323 1325 in Fes el Bali The Madrasa or University of al Qarawiyyin was established in 857 by Fatima al Fihri originally as a mosque 24 9 136 40 It is the oldest existing and continually operating degree awarding educational institution in the world according to UNESCO and Guinness World Records 137 10 The Marinid dynasty devoted great attention to the construction of madrasas following the Maliki orthodoxy resulting in the unprecedented prosperity of the city s religious institutions The first madrasa built during the Marinid era was the Saffarin Madrasa in Fes el Bali by Sultan Abu Yusuf in 1271 42 312 Sultan Abu al Hasan was the most prolific patron of madrasa construction completing the Al Attarine Mesbahiyya and Sahrij Madrasas His son Abu Inan Faris built the Bou Inania Madrasa and by the time of his death every major city in the Marinid Empire had at least one madrasa 138 The library of al Qarawiyyin which holds a large collection of manuscripts from the medieval era was also established under Marinid rule around 1350 12 148 The largest madrasa in the medina is Cherratine Madrasa which was commissioned by the Alaouite sultan Al Rashid in 1670 and is the only major non Marinid foundation besides the Madrasa of al Qarawiyyin 139 Tombs and mausoleums Edit Interior of the mausoleum of Ahmad al Tijani d 1815 in the Zawiya of Sidi Ahmed al Tijani in Fes el Bali Located in the heart of Fes el Bali the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II is a zawiya a shrine and religious complex also spelled zaouia dedicated to and containing the tomb of Idris II or Moulay Idris II when including his sharifian title who is considered the main founder of the city of Fez 140 141 51 Another well known and important zawiya is the Zawiyia of Sidi Ahmed al Tijani which commemorates Sidi Ahmed al Tijani the founder of Tijaniyyah tariqa from the 18th century 142 A number of zawiyas are scattered elsewhere across the city many containing the tombs of important Sufi saints or scholars such as the Zawiya of Sidi Abdelkader al Fassi the Zawiya of Sidi Ahmed esh Shawi and the Zawiya of Sidi Taoudi Ben Souda 143 579 144 62 149 The old city contains several major historic cemeteries which stand outside the walls of Fes el Bali namely the cemeteries of Bab Ftouh the most significant Bab Mahrouk and Bab Guissa Some include marabouts or domed structures containing the tombs of local Muslim saints often considered Sufis for example the Marabout of Sidi Harazem in the Bab Ftouh Cemetery 18 114 468 604 The ruins of the Marinid Tombs built during the 14th century as a necropolis for the Marinid sultans are close to the Bab Guissa Cemetery 19 8 Fortifications Edit Main article Fortifications of Fez City walls of Fez northern section The entire medina of Fez was heavily fortified with crenelated walls with watchtowers and gates a pattern of urban planning which can be seen in Sale and Chellah as well 138 The oldest sections of the walls today on the north side of Fes el Bali date back to the Almohad period 19 36 The gates of Fez scattered along the circuit of walls were guarded by the military detachments and shut at night 138 Some of the main gates have existed in different forms since the earliest years of the city 18 40 58 The oldest gates today and historically the most important ones of Fes el Bali are Bab Mahrouk in the west Bab Guissa in the northeast and Bab Ftouh in the southeast 18 56 109 123 126 138 142 19 36 41 The main gates of Fes Jdid include Bab Dekkakin Bab Semmarine and Bab al Amer 54 In modern times the function of gates became more ceremonial rather than defensive as reflected by the 1913 construction of the decorative Bab Bou Jeloud gate at the western entrance of Fes el Bali by the French colonial administration 19 42 Several forts were constructed along the defensive perimeters of the medina during different time periods A kasbah in the context of Maghrebi region is the traditional military structure for fortification military preparation command and control Some of them were occupied as well by citizens certain tribal groups and merchants Throughout the city s history 13 kasbahs were constructed 145 Among them is the Kasbah an Nouar the Kasbah Tamdert and the Kasbah Cherarda 19 36 37 18 105 108 The Saadis also built a number of bastions and forts in the late 16th century including Borj Nord and its sister fort Borj Sud 146 18 84 105 Tanneries Edit Leather tanning in Chouara TannerySince the city s foundation the tanning industry has been continually operating in Fez and is considered one of the main tourist attractions There are three tanneries in the city largest among them is Chouara Tannery near the Saffarin Madrasa along the river The tanneries are packed with the round stone wells filled with dye or white liquids for softening the hides The leather goods produced in the tanneries are exported around the world 147 148 149 The two other major tanneries are the Sidi Moussa Tannery to the west of the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II and the Ain Azliten Tannery in the neighbourhood of the same name on the northern edge of Fes el Bali 18 220 Gates of the Alaouite Royal Palace Dar al Makhzen Historic palaces and residences Edit Many old private residences have also survived to this day in various states of conservation The typical traditional house dar is centered around an internal courtyard Some of these houses also had internal gardens known as a riad 150 55 75 18 495 496 Such private houses include the Dar al Alami 151 the Dar Saada now a restaurant Dar Adiyil Dar Belghazi and others Larger and richer mansions such as the Dar Mnebhi Dar Moqri and Jamai Palace have also been preserved 19 103 156 Numerous traditional houses popularly known as riads are now utilized as hotels for the tourism industry 152 The Jamai Palace was converted into a luxury hotel known as Palais Jamai in the early 20th century 153 19 116 The lavish former mansion of the Glaoui clan known as the Dar Glaoui is partly open to visitors but still privately owned 154 As a former capital the city contains several royal palaces as well Dar Batha is a former palace completed by the Alaouite Sultan Abdelaziz In 1915 it was turned into a museum of historical art and artifacts containing around 6 000 pieces 155 A large area of Fes Jdid is also taken up by the 80 hectare Royal Palace or Dar al Makhzen Its ornate gates built in 1969 71 are the main feature visible to the public Its grounds are not open to the public as they are still used by the King of Morocco when visiting the city 156 148 83 Gardens Edit The Jnane Sbile Garden between Fes Jdid and Fes el Bali is the oldest surviving garden in Fez and was created as a royal park and garden in the 19th century by Sultan Moulay Hassan I 19 296 18 100 157 Many bourgeois and aristocratic mansions also had private gardens especially in the southwestern part of Fes el Bali 18 124 482 Other gardens also exist within the grounds of the historic royal palaces of the city such as the Agdal and Lalla Mina Gardens in the Royal Palace or the gardens of the Dar el Beida originally attached to Dar Batha 18 90 97 19 154 294 296 156 150 Funduqs historic merchant buildings Edit The old city of Fez includes more than a hundred funduqs or foundouks traditional inns or urban caravanserais These commercial buildings housed the workshops of artisans or provided lodging for merchants and travelers 18 318 They also frequently served as venues for other commercial activities such as markets and auctions 18 190 191 280 307 308 The Funduq al Najjarin was built in the 18th century by Amin Adiyil to provide accommodation and storage for merchants and now houses the Nejjarine Museum of Wooden Arts amp Crafts 158 18 134 Other major important examples include the Funduq Shamma in also spelled Foundouk Chemmaine and the Funduq Staouniyyin or Funduq of the Tetouanis both dating from the Marinid era or earlier and the Funduq Sagha which is contemporary with the Funduq al Najjariyyin 18 41 159 160 161 Hammams bathhouses Edit Rooftop view of the domes of the Saffarin Hammam 162 located at Place Seffarine Fez is also notable for having preserved a great many of its historic hammams public bathhouses in the Muslim world which continue to be used by local people 163 164 165 Examples all dating from around the 14th century include the Hammam as Saffarin the Hammam al Mokhfiya and the Hammam Ben Abbad 166 163 164 They were generally built next to a well or natural spring which provided water while the sloping topography of the city allowed for easy drainage 163 The layout of the traditional hammam in the region was inherited from the Roman bathhouse model consisting of a changing room a cold room a warm room and a hot room 163 164 Though their architecture can be very functional some of them like the Hammam as Saffarin and the Hammam al Mokhfiya feature more decoration The hammams are identifiable from the exterior by the domes and vaults above their main chambers 163 Ville Nouvelle Edit Avenue Hassan II in the Ville Nouvelle New City The Ville Nouvelle is centered around Avenue Hassan II a wide street laid out by the French colonial administration after 1912 and known then as Avenue de France 167 139 A tree lined park area runs along its middle between the lanes for car traffic At the avenue s northeastern end is Place de la Resistance originally called Place Gambetta a large roundabout with a fountain at its center 168 169 82 Further south along the same avenue is Place Florence originally Place Lyautey a wide plaza planted with trees and originally designed as a public garden 170 171 169 82 At the southwest end of the avenue is Place Ahmed El Mansour originally Place Gallieni 169 82 During the colonial period the main public buildings of the city were erected along and around this main avenue 167 139 Buildings from this period were constructed in a mix of mauresque neo Moorish or Moroccan Art Deco and Neoclassical styles 167 172 192 On the south side of Place Florence is the Bank al Maghrib building built between 1928 and 1931 by architect Rene Canu 167 181 Nearby on the east side of Avenue Hassan II is the Central Post Office building The first post office here was built in 1925 and 1927 by architect Edmond Pauty but it was rebuilt and expanded in its current form by architect Emile Toulon in 1946 1947 167 433 The Court of Appeals building located southwest of the post office was constructed in 1934 1936 by architects Adrien Laforgue and Antoine Marchisio and it originally housed the Court of First Instance Tribunal de premiere instance 167 181 Culture EditLiterature Edit See also Moroccan literature A copy of Muhammad al Jazuli s Sufi text Dala il al Khayrat a book of prayers first written in Fes in the 15th century 172 173 Up until the 19th century the al Qarawiyyin dominated the intellectual life of the city and of the country around it Literature was focused on religious scholarship philosophy and poetry 18 475 476 The city s largest library was located at the Qarawiyyin Mosque while others were attached to other major mosques Under Sultan Abd al Rahman r 1822 1859a a new library was created inside the Royal Palace and later in the 19th century the city s wealthy elites began creating their own privates libraries 18 472 473 The city is also one of the historical centers of Moroccan Sufism and a significant body of written works were devoted to its many Sufi walis saints or teachers This type of literature established itself as one of the main literary genres of Morocco by the late 14th century and Sufi written works from Fez are especially abundant from the 17th to 20th centuries 174 54 108 A study by Ruggero Vimercati Sanseverino describes the rise of the Zawiya al Fasiyya a Sufi order founded in 1581 by Abu l Mahasin Yusuf al Fasi as the impetus for the development of a tradition of Sufi literature particular to Fez 174 109 297 This literature was a diverse mix of hagiographies religious biographies genealogies and historiographies whose conventions evolved over time Writers sought to establish a continuity between the teachings of contemporary Sufi masters and those that came before them with the city of Fez portrayed as the center of this spiritual heritage 174 Towards the beginning of the 20th century Moroccan literature began to diversify with polemic or political works becoming more common at this time For example there were Muhammad Bin Abdul Kabir Al Kattani s anti colonial periodical at Ta un الطاعون The Plague and his uncle Muhammad ibn Jaqfar al Kattani s popular Nasihat ahl al Islam Advice to the People of Islam published in Fez in 1908 both of which called on Moroccans to unite against European encroachment 56 68 86 Table of calculations from a copy of the Sefer Abudraham printed in Fez in 1516 the first book printed in Africa 175 Fez along with Cordoba was one of the centers of a Jewish intellectual and cultural renaissance that took place in the 10th and 11th centuries in Morocco and al Andalus 176 47 Jewish literary figures associated with Fez include the poet Dunash Ben Labrat d circa 990 the grammarian Judah ben David Hayyuj d circa 1012 the Talmudist Isaac al Fasi d 1103 and the scholar Joseph ben Judah ibn Aknin d circa 1220 who were all born in Fez or spent time there 47 177 Maimonides d 1204 one of the most important Jewish intellectuals of his era also lived in Fez from 1159 to 1165 after fleeing al Andalus 178 176 The first book printed on the African continent was printed in Fez A copy of Sefer Abudarham ספר אבודרהם was printed in Hebrew in 1516 by Samuel ben Isaac Nedivot and his son who were Jewish refugees from Lisbon 179 180 181 The press was short lived and printed 15 copies one of which is now preserved at the Library of Congress 182 183 184 99 Printing in Arabic was introduced to Morocco in 1864 65 on the initiative of a man named Muhammad at Tayyib ar Rudani ar an Islamic scholar and judge originally from the Sous region In 1864 Ar Rudani while returning from his Hajj pilgrimage bought an Arabic printing press in Cairo and contracted an Egyptian operator bringing both back with him to Morocco The press appears to have been confiscated by the Moroccan authorities when it arrived at port and sent to Meknes where Sultan Muhammad IV was residing at the time The first book in Arabic was thus printed in Meknes in June 1865 before the press was moved again to Fez in that same year where it continued to operate until the 1940s 184 110 115 The press was installed in a central neighbourhood of Fes el Bali and was managed by the government which printed traditional scholarly books and made some of the productions available to the Qarawiyyin University free of charge After 1871 the government transferred management of the press to private citizens and the applications of printing widened 184 119 128 140 After 1897 it became a regulated industry overseen by officials in Fez 184 134 139 By 1908 there were at least four printing establishments in Fez while two other Moroccan printers were in Tangier 184 139 Hebrew printing presses were reintroduced to Morocco in the 1890s in Tangier and were more firmly established across the country in the 1920s 185 183 Music Edit A painting of the 17th century expulsion of the Moriscos from Valencia Fes is associated with the tarab al ala ar طرب الآلة lit joy of the instrument musical style a result of a large migration of Muslims from Valencia to Fes 186 The Fessi ala style utilizes the Moroccan forms of the Andalusi nubah melodical arrangements 187 While this musical style is sometimes popularly referred to as Andalusi music those who have studied it reject this naming Mohamed El Fassi intentionally chose the name ala آلة instrument to differentiate it from the Sufi tradition of sama which is purely vocal while Idris Bin Jellun at Twimi fr in his study of Mohammed al Haik s Kunash al Haik described the appelation Andalusi music as an unprecedented colonial invention meant to detract from the musical form s Arabness and Moroccans intellectual and artistic abilities 188 Art Edit The Sufi calligrapher and scholar Muhammad Bin Al Qasim al Qundusi d 1861 developed his unique calligraphic style in Fes 189 Maghrebi Arabic script is an important part of the history of visual art in Fes 190 While some aspects of Maghrebi script are codified and prescribed there have also been innovations such as those by the 19th century calligrapher Muhammad al Qandusi 191 The modernist artist Jilali Gharbaoui studied at the Academie des Arts in Fes 192 Cultural venues and institutions Edit The city s main museums are housed in historic monuments mentioned above including the Nejjarine Museum the Dar Batha Museum and the Arms Museum in Borj Nord 83 193 The Al Houria Cultural Complex opened in 2005 is a cultural center in the Ville Nouvelle that includes a theatre a media library and exhibition spaces 194 195 196 Several language institutes in Fez also organize cultural activities in addition to offering courses The French Institute and the Cervantes Institute have branches in Fez which promote French and Spanish respectively 197 198 The American Language Center and the Arabic Language Institute in Fez sister organizations that share the same location in the Ville Nouvelle offer courses in English and Arabic respectively 199 200 201 Festivals Edit Performance at the World Sacred Music Festival in 2012 Bab Dekkakin in the background Fez hosts the annual World Sacred Music Festival which started in 1994 and showcases religious music from around the world The festival occurs in May or June and concerts take place at multiple venues across the city including at historic sites such as Bab Makina the New Mechouar in Fes Jdid 202 203 The annual Festival of Amazigh Culture which started in 2005 normally takes place in July and hosts performances from Amazigh Berber musicians and artists from across Morocco 204 205 206 The annual Festival of Sufi Culture hosts a conference with discussions and debates on Sufism as well as Sufi musical performances and rituals such as haḍras 207 208 The Festival of Malhoun Art features performances of malhun music and poetry from across the country 209 210 Multiple moussems Sufi religious festivals have traditionally taken place every year in honour of local Muslim saints and are typically sponsored by one or more of the city s guilds The most important moussem in the city and one of the most important in Morocco is the Moussem of Moulay Idris II This festival has taken place for hundreds of years e and is sponsored by all the guilds in he city who march through the city together in a procession that culminates at the mausoleum of Idris II Each guild donates gifts to the zawiya one of which is a keswa a large textile decorated with Qur anic verses that is draped over Idris II s catafalque The week of the moussem is also marked by other cultural events and entertainment 211 12 86 130 212 213 18 301 302 Education Edit University of al Qarawiyyin Universities Edit The university of al Qarawiyyin is considered by some to be the oldest continually operating university in the world 214 10 The university was first founded as a mosque by Fatima al Fihri in 859 which subsequently became one of the leading spiritual and educational centers of the historic Muslim world 73 It became a state university in 1963 and remains an important institution of learning today 215 Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University is a public university founded in 1975 and is the largest in the city by attendance counting over 86 000 students in 2020 74 216 217 It has 12 faculties with sites across the city with two main campuses known as Dhar El Mehraz and Sais 216 Another public university the Euromed University of Fez was created in 2012 and is certified by the Union for the Mediterranean 218 219 The city s first private university the Private University of Fez was created in 2013 out of the Ecole polytechnique de Technologie founded 5 years earlier 220 Its main focus is its engineering school 221 though it also offers diplomas in architecture business and law 222 Transport Edit Gare de Fes train station in the modern urban area of Fez The city is served by the region s main international airport Fes Sais located roughly 15 km south of the city center 83 A new terminal was added to the airport in 2017 which expanded the airport s capacity to 2 5 million visitors a year 223 The city s main train station operated by ONCF is located a short distance from the downtown area of the Ville Nouvelle and is connected to the rail lines running east to Oujda and west to Tangier and Casablanca 224 83 The main intercity bus terminal or gare routiere is located just north of Bab Mahrouk on the outskirts of the old medina although CTM also operates a terminal off Boulevard Mohammed V in the Ville Nouvelle Intercity taxis also known as grands taxis depart from and arrive at several spots including the Bab Mahrouk bus station for western destinations like Meknes and Rabat Bab Ftouh for eastern destinations like Sidi Harazem and Taza and another lot in the Ville Nouvelle for southern destinations like Sefrou 83 225 The city operates a public transit system with various bus routes 226 Sport EditFez has two football teams MAS Fez Fes Maghrebi 227 and Wydad de Fes WAF 228 They both play in the Botola the highest tier of the Moroccan football system and play their home matches at the 45 000 seat Complexe Sportif de Fes stadium 229 The MAS Fez basketball team competes in the Nationale 1 Morocco s top basketball division 230 231 International relations EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Morocco Fez is twinned with 232 Bobo Dioulasso Burkina Faso 1982 Chengdu China 2015 233 Coimbra Portugal 234 Cordoba Spain 1990 235 East Jerusalem Palestine 1982 Florence Italy 1961 Jericho Palestine 2014 236 Kairouan Tunisia 1965 Krakow Poland 1985 Montpellier France 2003 Saint Louis Senegal 1979 Suwon South Korea 2003 Wuxi China 2011 237 Xi an China 2019 238 Notable people EditAbd al Hafid of Morocco Sultan of Morocco from 1909 to 1912 born in Fez 239 Abdelilah Bagui Former international goalkeeper who was born in Fez 240 Abdellatif Laabi Poet born in 1942 in Fez Morocco 241 Abdessalam Benjelloun Former international footballer born in Fez 242 Adel Taarabt Moroccan association football player from Fez 243 Ahmad Zarruq Prominent Islamic scholar 244 Akram Roumani Former international footballer born in Fez 245 Ali ibn Qasim al Zaqqaq Author in the field of Maliki common law 246 Anas Zniti Professional footballer born in Fez 247 Dunash ben Labrat Commentator and poet born in Fez 248 Hamid Chabat Moroccan politician and former mayor of Fez 249 Mehdi Bennani Moroccan professional racing driver born in Fez 250 Mohamed Chafik Leading figure in the Amazigh also known as Berber cultural movement born in Fez 251 Princess Lalla Salma of Morocco Princess consort of Morocco born in Fez 252 Roberto Lopez Ufarte Professional footballer from Fez 253 Samuel Pallache Merchant diplomat and pirate born in Fez 254 Soufiane El Bakkali Steeplechase runner born in Fez 255 Youssef En Nesyri International footballer born in Fez 256 Yves Lacoste French geographer and geopolitician born in Fez 257 Notes Edit They were located on higher ground overlooking Fes el Bali from which they would have been easily able to bombard the city with canons These include the Kasbah Tamdert just inside the city walls near Bab Ftouh the fortressess of Borj Nord to the north and Borj Sud to the south and the bastions of Borj Sheikh Ahmed Borj Twil and Borj Sidi Bou Nafa to the west These fortifications were mostly built by Sultan Ahmad al Mansur in the late 16th century Their design is influenced by European probably Portuguese military architecture in the gunpowder age 18 79 80 34 37 51 92 Pre Hilalian in this context refers to dialects believed to descend from the Arabic spoken in the region prior to the arrival of the Banu Hilal and the Banu Ma qil tribes that began in the 12th century After this event Hilalian dialects became dominant in the rural regions of central Morocco and are a major component of wider Moroccan Arabic today 94 2 10 There are competing theories about the historical roots of Moroccan Jewish dialects of Arabic Some scholars argue that they were strongly influenced by Andalusi Arabic dialects which were similar to North African dialects brought by Jewish refugees from Spain after 1492 while other scholars argue that these same refugees mostly spoke Judeo Spanish when they arrived and eventually adopted existing Arabic dialects in the cities 94 10 12 Medina is the Arabic word for city which in former French colonies in North Africa is also used to refer to the old part of a city as the French largely generally built new cities Ville Nouvelles next to them and left the historic cities intact 117 The veneration of Idris II as a patron saint began in the 15th century and so the moussem developed some time after this 18 301 302 599 References EditCitations Edit Fez Morocco Archived 2020 08 07 at the Wayback Machine Weatherbase a b c Note sur les premiers resultats du Recensement General de la Population et de l Habitat 2014 in French High Commission for Planning 20 March 2015 p 8 Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 9 October 2017 UNESCO World Heritage Centre Medina of Fez UNESCO World Heritage Centre Whc unesco org Archived from the original on 2017 09 19 Retrieved 2017 09 20 Zeunert Joshua 2017 Landscape Architecture and Environmental Sustainability Creating Positive Change Through Design Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 350 03382 5 Roquet Vincent Bornholdt Luciano Sirker Karen Lukic 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International Festival of Amazigh Culture Morocco World News Retrieved 2021 10 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Festival Amazigh Fes www festivalamazighfes com Retrieved 2021 10 21 FESTIVAL OF AMAZIGH CULTURE Regional Council of Tourism FEZ Retrieved 2021 10 21 Spotlight on Festival of Sufi Culture in Fez Morocco Lonely Planet Retrieved 2021 10 21 FEZ FESTIVAL OF SUFI CULTURE Regional Council of Tourism FEZ Retrieved 2021 10 21 Staff Writer Fes to Host 15th Annual Festival of Malhoun Art July 21 29 Morocco World News Retrieved 2021 10 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link MUSIC FESTIVAL EL MALHOUN Regional Council of Tourism FEZ Retrieved 2021 10 21 The Rough Guide to Morocco 12th ed Rough Guides 2019 pp 43 44 186 MOUSSEM OF MOULAY IDRISS Regional Council of Tourism FEZ Retrieved 2021 10 21 Fes Ouverture du Moussem annuel de Moulay Idriss Al Azhar LesEco ma in French 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1ere Universite Privee a Fes Reconnue par l Etat in French Archived from the original on 2019 03 16 Retrieved 2020 09 21 Tourism in Fez Meknes grows on the strength of religious and wellness visitors Oxford Business Group 2019 03 13 Archived from the original on 2020 10 01 Retrieved 2020 09 21 Oncf Oncf ma Archived from the original on 2009 02 28 Retrieved 2009 05 05 Transportation in Fez Morocco Lonely Planet Archived from the original on 2020 12 14 Retrieved 2020 09 21 Planet Lonely Bus in Fez Morocco Lonely Planet Archived from the original on 2021 09 03 Retrieved 2020 09 21 Site officiel du MAS MAS Retrieved 26 April 2020 Wydad Athletic Club de Fes SoccerWay Retrieved 2021 09 15 Stadiums Complexe sportif de Fes Goalzz Retrieved 2021 09 15 MAR Hope in Morocco basketball FIBA basketball Retrieved 2021 09 15 Moroccan Basketball News Teams Scores Stats Standings Awards afrobasket www afrobasket com Retrieved 2021 09 15 Twin Towns fescity com Fes City 8 January 2019 Archived from the original on 2020 11 16 Retrieved 2020 12 02 Profile of Sister Cities gochengdu cn Go Chengdu Archived from the original on 2020 12 05 Retrieved 2020 12 02 Cidades Geminadas cm coimbra pt in Portuguese Coimbra Archived from the original on 2020 10 24 Retrieved 2020 12 02 Las 12 hermanas de Cordoba diariocordoba com in Spanish Diario Cordoba 2020 02 10 Archived from the original on 2020 10 21 Retrieved 2020 12 02 العلاقات التي تربط مدينة أريحا بالمدن الأجنبية jericho city ps in Arabic Jericho Archived from the original on 2020 12 06 Retrieved 2020 12 02 Sister Cities wuxinews com cn Wuxi News Archived from the original on 2021 01 28 Retrieved 2020 12 02 Sister cities xa gov cn Xi an Archived from the original on 2019 05 27 Retrieved 2020 12 02 Abd al Hafid Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol I A Ak Bayes 15th ed Chicago IL Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2010 pp 14 ISBN 978 1 59339 837 8 Strack Zimmermann Benjamin Abdelilah Bagui Player National Football Teams Retrieved 2022 06 05 Abdellatif Laabi Victor W Reinking Anne O George The world s embrace selected poems Foreword by Ammiel Accalay p X XI Abdessalam Benjelloun Player Profile Football Eurosport Retrieved 2022 06 05 Adel Taarabt Ligue de Football Professionnel Archived from the original on 2 February 2009 Retrieved 30 October 2009 El Rouayheb Khaled 2015 07 08 Islamic Intellectual History in the Seventeenth Century Cambridge University Press p 248 ISBN 9781107042964 Akram Roumani Biography and Statistics Sports Reference com Archived from the original on 2020 04 18 Retrieved 2010 02 16 Al Lamiya de az Zaqqaq al Amal al Fasi de Abd ar Rahman al Fasi y al Amal al Mutlaq de as Siyilmasi by Henry Toledano International Journal of Middle East Studies vol 5 1974 Anas Zniti MAS goalkeeper in French Affaire Maroc Jose Martinez Delgado Dunash ben Labraṭ ha Levi in Encyclopedia of Jews in the Islamic World ed by Norman A Stillman and others Leiden Brill 2010 s v السيرة الذاتية للسيد حميد شباط Chabatonline net Retrieved 16 October 2012 Bennani Claims First WTCC Victory in Second Shanghai Race WTCC The Checkered Flag The Checkered Flag 2014 10 12 Retrieved 2017 12 16 Maddy Weitzman Bruce 2011 The Berber Identity Movement and the Challenge to North African States University of Texas Press Austin Morocco s Royal Family Celebrates Birthday of Princess Lalla Salma Morocco World News 10 May 2015 Retrieved 2022 06 05 Vazquez de Balmaseda Ignacio 5 May 2016 Leyendas de la Real Lopez Ufarte Real legends Lopez Ufarte in Spanish Vavel Retrieved 28 December 2016 A Man of Three Worlds Johns Hopkins University Press Books jhupbooks press jhu edu ISBN 9780801872259 Retrieved 2021 09 15 2014 African Championships in Athletics Results Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Marrakech2014 Retrieved on 19 August 2016 Okeleji Oluwashina 10 February 2019 Morocco s En Nesyri makes La Liga history BBC Sport Retrieved 2022 06 05 David Criekemans 20 February 2007 Geopolitiek geografisch geweten van de buitenlandse politiek Garant pp 544 546 ISBN 978 90 441 1969 5 Retrieved 12 January 2011 Further reading EditLe Tourneau Roger 1974 1961 Fez in the Age of the Marinides Translated by Besse Clement Oklahoma University ISBN 0 8061 1198 4 Vigo Julian 2006 The Renovation of Fes medina qdima and the re Creation of the Traditional Writing the City Transforming the City New Delhi Katha pp 44 58 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fes Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Fez Look up Fez in Wiktionary the free dictionary ArchNet Fes Contains catalogue of monuments pictures and explanatory text Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fez Morocco amp oldid 1133741699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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