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Historic house architecture in Morocco

Traditional houses in Morocco are usually centered around a large internal courtyard, the wast ad-dar, and are characterized by a focus on interior decoration rather than on external appearance. The houses of wealthy residents featured decoration typical of Moroccan architecture and medieval Moorish architecture, including carved and painted wood, carved stucco, and zellij (mosaic tilework). The center of larger houses could also be occupied by a riad garden (Arabic: رياض), particularly in places like Marrakesh where more space was available.

Restored historic apartment in the Mouassine Museum, Marrakesh, with examples of carved and painted decoration in wood and stucco

The oldest surviving houses and mansions in Morocco today are from the Marinid period (13th to 15th centuries) or the following Saadi period (16th and early 17th centuries), while a larger number of examples have survived from later centuries. In the context of modern tourism in Morocco, many traditional houses have been converted into hotels or guesthouses that are popularly referred to as "riads".

General characteristics edit

 
A courtyard house in Fes

Traditional Moroccan houses can be divided into two categories: the dar (Arabic: دار) and the riyad or riad (Arabic: رياض). Both are organized around a central courtyard or patio, known as the wast ad-dar (Arabic: وسط الدار, lit.'middle of the house'). The dar is usually a house where this central space is paved or unplanted, while the riyad is a house where the central space is primarily occupied by a garden.[1]: 55  In both cases, the central space is often surrounded by a gallery or portico. These galleries have an arcade along the inner side (facing the center of the courtyard) and walls on the outer side through which other rooms and sections branch off.[2][1]

 
Zellij tilework on a fountain in the Dar Adiyel in Fes

Houses are focused inward: even rich mansions are usually completely unadorned on the outside, with all decoration concentrated on the inside. There were few, if any, large windows on the outside. The entrance, which leads to the courtyard, is typically a bent entrance that prevents outsiders on the street from seeing directly into the house. As with other traditional Moroccan structures, the interior decoration includes carved stucco, sculpted and painted wood, and zellij tilework.[2][1]

The central patio/courtyard, the wast ad-dar, is thus the centerpiece of the house. The size and craftsmanship of this interior space was an indication of the status and wealth of its owners, rather than the house's external appearance.[1]: 54  In the riyad house this courtyard is occupied by an interior garden, often planted with trees. The garden courtyard is normally rectangular and divided into four parts along its central axes, with two straight paths intersecting in the middle, where a fountain is usually present.[1]: 55–58  In Morocco, riads became especially widespread in the palaces and mansions of Marrakesh, where the combination of available space and warm climate made them particularly appealing.[1]: 72–75 

Traditional Moroccan house architecture is also similar to that found in the rest of the Maghreb, such as in Algeria and Tunisia. However, Ottoman influence (from the 16th century onward) is more evident in the houses of cities like Algiers and Tunis. The differences also increase when comparing with traditional house architecture further east, in Cairo, Damascus, and other cities of the eastern Mediterranean.[1]: 74–75 

Origins edit

Courtyard houses, like those in Moroccan architecture, have historical antecedents in the houses and villas of the Greco-Roman Mediterranean world and even earlier in the ancient Middle East.[1]: 65  Riyad gardens, more specifically, probably originated in Persian architecture (where they're known as chahar bagh) and became a prominent feature in Moorish palaces in Spain (such Madinat al-Zahra, the Aljaferia and the Alhambra).[1]: 69–71  In Morocco, the earliest known example of a true riyad garden (with a symmetrical four-part division) was found in the Almoravid palace built by Ali ibn Yusuf in Marrakesh in the early 12th century, next to what is now the Kutubiyya Mosque.[1]: 71 [3]: 404 

The inward focus of Moroccan house architecture may have been partly encouraged by the values of Islamic society, which placed emphasis on privacy and encouraged a separation between private family spaces – where women generally lived and worked – and semi-public spaces where outside guests were received. Nonetheless, pre-Islamic traditions of domestic architecture in the Mediterranean and Africa were also at the origin of this model. These two factors likely contributed together to making the courtyard house the near-universal model of traditional Moroccan houses.[1]: 67–68  It is unclear to what extent Moroccan riads and houses were inspired by models imported by immigrants from al-Andalus (present-day Spain), where many early examples have also survived, or to what extent they developed locally in parallel with Andalusi versions.[1]: 66–67 [2]: 77–89  What is certain, however, is that there was historically a close cultural and geopolitical relationship between the two lands on either side of the Strait of Gibraltar, and that the palaces of Granada, for example, were thus similar to those of Fes in the same period.[4]: 13 [2]: 77–89 

House architecture up to the 16th century edit

 
Alfred Bel's sketch of one of the gallery facades of the courtyard of a 14th-century house, studied in 1914 right before its demolition. The house contained many classic elements of later Moroccan houses and its decoration was similar to that of Marinid madrasas of the time.

A number of historic bourgeois mansions have survived across the country, mostly from the 'Alawi era but some dating as far back as the Marinid or Saadi periods in Fes and Marrakesh.[2][1] In Fes, in the early 20th century, one richly decorated house from the beginning of the 14th century (the early Marinid period) was studied and documented by Alfred Bel before it was demolished by its owners.[5] Built in brick, its form and decoration bore very strong similarities with the Marinid madrasas built in Fes in the same period, revealing a shared ornamental repertoire and craftsmanship between madrasas and domestic architecture. Beyond this, the overall layout was also comparable to the Muslim houses of Granada and demonstrated many classic features of medieval Moroccan houses that are often repeated in later examples. It had a central square courtyard surrounded by a two-story gallery, from which rooms opened on every side on both stories. The rooms were wide but not very deep, so as to preserve the overall square floor plan of the building with the courtyard at its center. The main rooms opened through tall arched doorways with wooden double doors. Above these doorways on the ground floor were windows that allowed light from the courtyard to enter the rooms behind. While not completely symmetrical, each façade of the courtyard gallery consisted of a tall, wide central arch and two narrow side arches. This arrangement resulted in a cluster of three pillars at each corner of the courtyard. The top of the central arches in the lower-floor gallery consisted of a two-tiered or corbelled wooden lintel instead of a round arch, while the two smaller side arches were round and much shorter. The vertical spaces above the side arches were filled with ornate stucco decoration based on a sebka motif, similar to some of the decorated surfaces in the Marinid madrasas of the city. The lower parts of the brick pillars were covered in zellij tiles. In the upper-floor gallery, the central arches were round and their spandrels were filled with the same kind of stucco decoration. The two smaller arches to either side had a similar form. The wooden lintels above the arches were carved with vegetal motifs and floriated Kufic letters. Although the house is now gone, pieces of its stucco decoration have been preserved in the Dar Batha museum in Fes.[3]: 313–314 [2]

 
Rooftop view of Dar Demana (prior to recent restoration), a Marinid-era house with a menzeh or observation tower

After the demolition of this early documented medieval house, another Marinid-era house (probably 14th century), known as Dar Sfairia or Dar al-Fasiyin, was studied by Henri Terrasse and Boris Maslow, of similar form but more modest.[6][3]: 313–314  It too was demolished in the late 20th century. Several other houses possibly dating to the Marinid era or to the Saadi era have been studied since then by Jacques Revault, Lucien Golvin and Ali Amahan in their study of the houses of Fes.[2] They all feature variations on the same overall form as the house studied by Alfred Bel: a central square courtyard surrounded by rooms which opened through tall archway doors, sometimes with windows above the ground floor doorways, and often behind a two-story gallery. While most houses have a simpler arrangement of one pillar at the corners of the gallery, larger mansions such as Dar Lazreq (owned by the Lazreq family since the 19th century) and Dar Demana (built by the Ouazzani family) have clusters of three pillars at each corner (for twelve pillars in total), repeating the motif of a gallery with large central openings flanked by smaller arches.[2] Wooden lintels forming corbelled arches in the galleries is a common feature throughout, sometimes carved with vegetal or epigraphic decoration and sometimes supported by ornate stucco corbels. Dar Lazreq, which likely dates to the 15th or 16th century, features the same kind of sebka-based stucco decoration in the spaces above the small side arches of its courtyard gallery.[2] Dar Demana, which dates in style to the Marinid period but may have been founded earlier, is further distinguished by a short lookout tower (a menzeh) on its roof terrace, allowing its owners to enjoy a better view of the city.[2] This menzeh was a feature of some mansions in both Fes and Marrakesh.[1]: 269  It is also adjoined by a separate riad garden, a feature which was not previously common in the architecture of Fes.[2] Both Dar Demana and Dar Lazreq were recently restored in the 2010s.[7]

 
Dar Cherifa, a restored Saadi-era house in Marrakesh with similarities to earlier Marinid-era houses in Fes, with its arrangement of twelve pillars, stucco decoration, and wooden corbelled arches

The oldest surviving houses in Marrakesh date from the Saadi period during the 16th and early 17th centuries.[1][8] A number of such houses still stand today in various states of preservation. These include the Dar Cherifa (formerly known as Dar Ijimi), the Dar al-Mas'udiyyin (partly ruined), and the Dar al-Masluhiyyin (restored and now also known as Ksour Agafay).[8]: 272–293  The Mouassine Museum also contains an example of a restored Saadi-era douiria, or upper-floor guest apartment. Dar Cherifa and the Dar al-Mas'udiyyin in particular have very rich decoration which has strong similarities with the stucco and wood decoration of the Ben Youssef Madrasa, indicating that they were probably built around the same time (second half of the 16th century). They continue the traditional forms of earlier Marinid houses, with the twelve pillar-courtyard arrangement, carved wooden lintels in the galleries, and carved stucco decoration with sebka motifs around or above the arches. Unlike the Fes houses, however, the galleries consist of only one tall level. In some cases a second story of rooms is integrated behind the upper façades of the galleries. The large central openings of the galleries once again allow for unobstructed view of the tall decorated doorways leading to the surrounding rooms. In these Marrakesh houses, these formal doorways are even more ornate and consist of lambrequin arches with muqarnas-sculpted intrados.[8]: 272–293 

House architecture after the 16th century edit

Twentieth-century scholar George Marçais, in his overview of architecture in the region, divided the architecture of later Moroccan houses into three general categories: the houses of Fes, Meknes, and northern Morocco; the houses of Marrakesh and southern Morocco; and the houses of Rabat, Salé, and the western coastal cities.[3]: 398, 403 

Fes, Meknes, and northern Morocco edit

 
Traditional house in Fes (now a carpet shop), with a classic two-story gallery with large central openings flanked by smaller side arches

In Fes and Meknes, the architectural traditions established earlier continued. Houses were most commonly built in brick, though those with thicker walls were often built with rammed earth.[3]: 403 [2]: 19–39  More so than in other cities, the houses of Fes are tall and have narrower floor plans, with their internal patios having the semblance of a deep well or skylight rather than an open courtyard. In Meknès the same is true, though to a lesser extent. In the rich houses of these cities the central patios are among the most finely decorated in the country.[1]: 75  The lower parts of the walls and pillars are usually covered in zellij tiles, the upper surfaces are covered in carved stucco (or in smooth plaster for more modest houses), and the tops of the galleries were lined with heavy wooden lintels, forming corbelled arches as in earlier Marinid and Saadi examples. The wooden elements – including doors, ceilings, and the gallery lintels – were typically made of cedar wood and were richly carved and painted. Wealthier homes had reception rooms at ground level, opening off the patio, which were equally if not even more richly decorated, sometimes with elaborate wooden cupola ceilings. This style was in turn found in other cities in the region of the Moroccan north such as Ouazzane, Taza, and Moulay Idriss Zerhoun, though often in less lavish form.[3]: 403 

Marrakesh and southern Morocco edit

 
A large riad garden (Le Jardin Secret) in Marrakesh, part of a former private mansion rebuilt in the 19th century[9][10]

In Marrakesh the flat landscape and ample space within its city walls meant that houses could have larger courtyards and fewer stories, in contrast with those of Fez. Most older houses had only a ground floor, or at most an upper floor with a low ceiling used for storage. Larger and richer houses often contained riad gardens, which were more common in Marrakesh than in other cities. Houses were built in brick or rammed earth, with wood being used again for certain elements. Wooden corbelled arches seen in older houses became less common in more recent centuries and round or ogival brick arches were favoured instead. In turn, horseshoe arches became rarer after the 18th century. Walls were covered with plaster which historically had a rose, reddish, or yellowish colour, and sometimes enlivened with friezes of painted motifs. Zellij was used in reception rooms and around fountains. Window frames and doorframes are often highlighted with carved stucco. The carving of motifs into wood, on the other hand, became less common over time and by the late 19th century wooden decoration was limited to painted decoration. This painted decoration also evolved, however, increasing the use of floral motifs and typically employing a red background.[1]: 61–64 [3]: 403, 414 

Salé, Rabat, and the coastal cities edit

 
A traditional house in Rabat (now serving as a riad hotel)

In Salé and Rabat houses were more typically built in rubble masonry, with cut stone used in the corners of walls and for the outlines of arches. The central patios were of moderate size and surrounded by galleries more often made of stone. The arches of the galleries are round, polylobed, or sculpted in muqarnas, supported by columns made of stone drums ending in capitals carved with arabesque motifs like acanthus leaves.[3]: 398  The use of stone, which was available from the limestone quarries in the Bou Regreg valley, enabled houses in these cities to have more slender columns and thinner walls that allowed for more light and more elegant architectural proportions.[11] Older houses generally had only a ground floor, and ceilings were simple and unadorned, in contrast with the houses of Marrakesh and Fes. Both external and internal walls are typically whitewashed.[3]: 398 

 
Characteristic stone doorway in the Kasbah of Rabat

One of the most distinguishing features of this regional style are the outer entrances, whose doorways are made in cut stone.[3]: 398  These stone facades are frequently decorated with a sculpted molding around their edges and a sculpted keystone motif at the top of the doorway arch. Although some of these doorways, especially in Salé, are carved with decorative arabesque reliefs, in most areas they have a semi-European appearance. George Marçais attributes this stylistic feature to the influence of Spanish Renaissance architecture, which would have been imported to this region by the Morisco refugees who were expelled from Spain at the beginning of the 17th century and settled in these coastal cities. Additionally, the presence of Spanish and Portuguese outposts along the Moroccan coast between the 15th and 17th centuries likely added to this influence. This style, with local variations, is also visible in other coastal cities such as Safi and Azemmour.[3]: 398 

Palaces edit

 
The Grand Riad in the Bahia Palace of Marrakesh (late 19th century)

Sultans and caliphs, as well as the more powerful and wealthy government ministers in the 19th and 20th century, were able to build extensive palaces. The Dar al-Makhzen (meaning roughly 'House/Abode of the Government') referred to the royal palace and center of government in a number of cities, such as the Dar al-Makhzen in Fes, Rabat, Tangier, Meknes, or Marrakesh.[3][12][13] Royal palaces generally had a mechouar, a large walled square which acted as a ceremonial space or parade ground at the entrance of the palace.[14][13][15] The palaces themselves had a sprawling layout, typically consisting of many structures and pavilions arranged around a series of courtyards and gardens.[3][16] They often included a number of facilities such as bathhouses and mosques, thus turning them into nearly self-sufficient, self-contained royal cities.[14][13] Sultans also built additional outlying palaces and pavilions, such as the Dar Batha in Fes, as well as vast gardens on the outskirts of their capital city, such as the Agdal Gardens in Marrakesh and the former Mosara Garden in Fes.[1][17][18]

In the 19th and early 20th centuries, grand viziers and other high officials of the government were able to accumulate enough power and wealth to build their own private palaces for themselves and their households.[13] Examples of these include the Bahia Palace of Ba Ahmed (which was later taken over by the sultan), the Dar al Bacha and Dar Si Said in Marrakesh, the Dar Moqri and Dar Glaoui in Fes, and the Dar Mnebbhi in Fes and its counterpart in Marrakesh. Other local warlords and magnates were also sometimes capable of building their own lavish palaces, such as the Palace of Raissouli in Asilah.[12] The Kasbah of Telouet, also built by the Glaoui clan and only partly preserved today, is another notable example of a 20th-century palace constructed with traditional methods, but located in a rural mountain town.[19][20]

Recent developments and present day edit

Today, modern materials have increasingly replaced certain traditional ones during the renovations of old houses. Wooden mashrabiya-type windows have been replaced with iron grilles, and cement is used for walls and pillars instead of brick and rammed earth.[1]: 63  The term "riad", traditionally referring to the interior garden, is nowadays applied in a broader way to traditional Moroccan houses that have been converted into hotels and tourist guesthouses.[21][22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Wilbaux, Quentin (2001). La médina de Marrakech: Formation des espaces urbains d'une ancienne capitale du Maroc. Paris: L'Harmattan. ISBN 2747523888.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Revault, Jacques; Golvin, Lucien; Amahan, Ali (1985). Palais et demeures de Fès. Vol I: Époques mérinde et saadienne (XIVe-XVIIe siècles). Patrimoine architectural. Éditions du Centre national de la recherche scientifique. ISBN 9782271081322.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Marçais, Georges (1954). L'architecture musulmane d'Occident. Paris: Arts et métiers graphiques.
  4. ^ Bloom, Jonathan M. (2020). Architecture of the Islamic West: North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula, 700-1800. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300218701.
  5. ^ Bel, Alfred (1919). Inscriptions arabes de Fès, une maison privée du xive siècle. Paris. pp. 317 and after.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ Terrasse, Henri; Maslow, Boris (1935). "Une maison mérinide de Fès". Deuxième congrès de la Fédération des Sociétés savantes de l'Afrique du Nord (Tlemcen, 14-17 Avril 1936), Tome II (in French). Algiers: Société Historique Algérienne. pp. 503–510.
  7. ^ "La magnifique rénovation des 27 monuments de Fès – Conseil Régional du Tourisme (CRT) de Fès" (in French). Retrieved 2021-02-12.
  8. ^ a b c Salmon, Xavier (2016). Marrakech: Splendeurs saadiennes: 1550-1650. Paris: LienArt. ISBN 9782359061826.
  9. ^ "The Secret Garden - Marrakech | Marrakech Riad". www.marrakech-riad.co.uk. 2017-03-12. Retrieved 2021-02-05.
  10. ^ "L'extraordinaire "Jardin secret" de Marrakech [Médina]". Vanupied (in French). 2018-05-10. Retrieved 2021-02-05.
  11. ^ Mouline, Saïd (2008). "Rabat. Salé – Holy Cities of the Two Banks". The City in the Islamic World. Vol. 1. Brill. pp. 643–662. ISBN 9789004171688.
  12. ^ a b Touri, Abdelaziz; Benaboud, Mhammad; Boujibar El-Khatib, Naïma; Lakhdar, Kamal; Mezzine, Mohamed (2010). Le Maroc andalou : à la découverte d'un art de vivre (2 ed.). Ministère des Affaires Culturelles du Royaume du Maroc & Museum With No Frontiers. ISBN 978-3902782311.
  13. ^ a b c d Deverdun, Gaston (1959). Marrakech: Des origines à 1912. Rabat: Éditions Techniques Nord-Africaines.
  14. ^ a b Aouchar, Amina (2005). Fès, Meknès. Flammarion. pp. 210–211.
  15. ^ Parker, Richard (1981). A practical guide to Islamic Monuments in Morocco. Charlottesville, VA: The Baraka Press.
  16. ^ Métalsi, Mohamed (2003). Fès: La ville essentielle. Paris: ACR Édition Internationale. ISBN 978-2867701528.
  17. ^ Le Tourneau, Roger (1949). Fès avant le protectorat: étude économique et sociale d'une ville de l'occident musulman. Casablanca: Société Marocaine de Librairie et d'Édition.
  18. ^ Bressolette, Henri; Delaroziere, Jean (1983). "Fès-Jdid de sa fondation en 1276 au milieu du XXe siècle". Hespéris-Tamuda: 245–318.
  19. ^ "Morocco.com | Glaoui Kasbah, High Atlas". Morocco.com. Retrieved 2020-07-19.
  20. ^ Griffiths, Chris (2013-12-29). "Telouet Kasbah in Morocco: A Rare Performance". Journey Beyond Travel. Retrieved 2020-07-19.
  21. ^ "Accommodation in Morocco | Where to stay in Morocco". Rough Guides. Retrieved 2020-05-31.
  22. ^ Planet, Lonely. "Sleeping in Morocco". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 2020-05-31.

historic, house, architecture, morocco, traditional, houses, morocco, usually, centered, around, large, internal, courtyard, wast, characterized, focus, interior, decoration, rather, than, external, appearance, houses, wealthy, residents, featured, decoration,. Traditional houses in Morocco are usually centered around a large internal courtyard the wast ad dar and are characterized by a focus on interior decoration rather than on external appearance The houses of wealthy residents featured decoration typical of Moroccan architecture and medieval Moorish architecture including carved and painted wood carved stucco and zellij mosaic tilework The center of larger houses could also be occupied by a riad garden Arabic رياض particularly in places like Marrakesh where more space was available Restored historic apartment in the Mouassine Museum Marrakesh with examples of carved and painted decoration in wood and stuccoThe oldest surviving houses and mansions in Morocco today are from the Marinid period 13th to 15th centuries or the following Saadi period 16th and early 17th centuries while a larger number of examples have survived from later centuries In the context of modern tourism in Morocco many traditional houses have been converted into hotels or guesthouses that are popularly referred to as riads Contents 1 General characteristics 2 Origins 3 House architecture up to the 16th century 4 House architecture after the 16th century 4 1 Fes Meknes and northern Morocco 4 2 Marrakesh and southern Morocco 4 3 Sale Rabat and the coastal cities 5 Palaces 6 Recent developments and present day 7 See also 8 ReferencesGeneral characteristics edit nbsp A courtyard house in FesTraditional Moroccan houses can be divided into two categories the dar Arabic دار and the riyad or riad Arabic رياض Both are organized around a central courtyard or patio known as the wast ad dar Arabic وسط الدار lit middle of the house The dar is usually a house where this central space is paved or unplanted while the riyad is a house where the central space is primarily occupied by a garden 1 55 In both cases the central space is often surrounded by a gallery or portico These galleries have an arcade along the inner side facing the center of the courtyard and walls on the outer side through which other rooms and sections branch off 2 1 nbsp Zellij tilework on a fountain in the Dar Adiyel in FesHouses are focused inward even rich mansions are usually completely unadorned on the outside with all decoration concentrated on the inside There were few if any large windows on the outside The entrance which leads to the courtyard is typically a bent entrance that prevents outsiders on the street from seeing directly into the house As with other traditional Moroccan structures the interior decoration includes carved stucco sculpted and painted wood and zellij tilework 2 1 The central patio courtyard the wast ad dar is thus the centerpiece of the house The size and craftsmanship of this interior space was an indication of the status and wealth of its owners rather than the house s external appearance 1 54 In the riyad house this courtyard is occupied by an interior garden often planted with trees The garden courtyard is normally rectangular and divided into four parts along its central axes with two straight paths intersecting in the middle where a fountain is usually present 1 55 58 In Morocco riads became especially widespread in the palaces and mansions of Marrakesh where the combination of available space and warm climate made them particularly appealing 1 72 75 Traditional Moroccan house architecture is also similar to that found in the rest of the Maghreb such as in Algeria and Tunisia However Ottoman influence from the 16th century onward is more evident in the houses of cities like Algiers and Tunis The differences also increase when comparing with traditional house architecture further east in Cairo Damascus and other cities of the eastern Mediterranean 1 74 75 Origins editCourtyard houses like those in Moroccan architecture have historical antecedents in the houses and villas of the Greco Roman Mediterranean world and even earlier in the ancient Middle East 1 65 Riyad gardens more specifically probably originated in Persian architecture where they re known as chahar bagh and became a prominent feature in Moorish palaces in Spain such Madinat al Zahra the Aljaferia and the Alhambra 1 69 71 In Morocco the earliest known example of a true riyad garden with a symmetrical four part division was found in the Almoravid palace built by Ali ibn Yusuf in Marrakesh in the early 12th century next to what is now the Kutubiyya Mosque 1 71 3 404 The inward focus of Moroccan house architecture may have been partly encouraged by the values of Islamic society which placed emphasis on privacy and encouraged a separation between private family spaces where women generally lived and worked and semi public spaces where outside guests were received Nonetheless pre Islamic traditions of domestic architecture in the Mediterranean and Africa were also at the origin of this model These two factors likely contributed together to making the courtyard house the near universal model of traditional Moroccan houses 1 67 68 It is unclear to what extent Moroccan riads and houses were inspired by models imported by immigrants from al Andalus present day Spain where many early examples have also survived or to what extent they developed locally in parallel with Andalusi versions 1 66 67 2 77 89 What is certain however is that there was historically a close cultural and geopolitical relationship between the two lands on either side of the Strait of Gibraltar and that the palaces of Granada for example were thus similar to those of Fes in the same period 4 13 2 77 89 House architecture up to the 16th century edit nbsp Alfred Bel s sketch of one of the gallery facades of the courtyard of a 14th century house studied in 1914 right before its demolition The house contained many classic elements of later Moroccan houses and its decoration was similar to that of Marinid madrasas of the time A number of historic bourgeois mansions have survived across the country mostly from the Alawi era but some dating as far back as the Marinid or Saadi periods in Fes and Marrakesh 2 1 In Fes in the early 20th century one richly decorated house from the beginning of the 14th century the early Marinid period was studied and documented by Alfred Bel before it was demolished by its owners 5 Built in brick its form and decoration bore very strong similarities with the Marinid madrasas built in Fes in the same period revealing a shared ornamental repertoire and craftsmanship between madrasas and domestic architecture Beyond this the overall layout was also comparable to the Muslim houses of Granada and demonstrated many classic features of medieval Moroccan houses that are often repeated in later examples It had a central square courtyard surrounded by a two story gallery from which rooms opened on every side on both stories The rooms were wide but not very deep so as to preserve the overall square floor plan of the building with the courtyard at its center The main rooms opened through tall arched doorways with wooden double doors Above these doorways on the ground floor were windows that allowed light from the courtyard to enter the rooms behind While not completely symmetrical each facade of the courtyard gallery consisted of a tall wide central arch and two narrow side arches This arrangement resulted in a cluster of three pillars at each corner of the courtyard The top of the central arches in the lower floor gallery consisted of a two tiered or corbelled wooden lintel instead of a round arch while the two smaller side arches were round and much shorter The vertical spaces above the side arches were filled with ornate stucco decoration based on a sebka motif similar to some of the decorated surfaces in the Marinid madrasas of the city The lower parts of the brick pillars were covered in zellij tiles In the upper floor gallery the central arches were round and their spandrels were filled with the same kind of stucco decoration The two smaller arches to either side had a similar form The wooden lintels above the arches were carved with vegetal motifs and floriated Kufic letters Although the house is now gone pieces of its stucco decoration have been preserved in the Dar Batha museum in Fes 3 313 314 2 nbsp Rooftop view of Dar Demana prior to recent restoration a Marinid era house with a menzeh or observation towerAfter the demolition of this early documented medieval house another Marinid era house probably 14th century known as Dar Sfairia or Dar al Fasiyin was studied by Henri Terrasse and Boris Maslow of similar form but more modest 6 3 313 314 It too was demolished in the late 20th century Several other houses possibly dating to the Marinid era or to the Saadi era have been studied since then by Jacques Revault Lucien Golvin and Ali Amahan in their study of the houses of Fes 2 They all feature variations on the same overall form as the house studied by Alfred Bel a central square courtyard surrounded by rooms which opened through tall archway doors sometimes with windows above the ground floor doorways and often behind a two story gallery While most houses have a simpler arrangement of one pillar at the corners of the gallery larger mansions such as Dar Lazreq owned by the Lazreq family since the 19th century and Dar Demana built by the Ouazzani family have clusters of three pillars at each corner for twelve pillars in total repeating the motif of a gallery with large central openings flanked by smaller arches 2 Wooden lintels forming corbelled arches in the galleries is a common feature throughout sometimes carved with vegetal or epigraphic decoration and sometimes supported by ornate stucco corbels Dar Lazreq which likely dates to the 15th or 16th century features the same kind of sebka based stucco decoration in the spaces above the small side arches of its courtyard gallery 2 Dar Demana which dates in style to the Marinid period but may have been founded earlier is further distinguished by a short lookout tower a menzeh on its roof terrace allowing its owners to enjoy a better view of the city 2 This menzeh was a feature of some mansions in both Fes and Marrakesh 1 269 It is also adjoined by a separate riad garden a feature which was not previously common in the architecture of Fes 2 Both Dar Demana and Dar Lazreq were recently restored in the 2010s 7 nbsp Dar Cherifa a restored Saadi era house in Marrakesh with similarities to earlier Marinid era houses in Fes with its arrangement of twelve pillars stucco decoration and wooden corbelled archesThe oldest surviving houses in Marrakesh date from the Saadi period during the 16th and early 17th centuries 1 8 A number of such houses still stand today in various states of preservation These include the Dar Cherifa formerly known as Dar Ijimi the Dar al Mas udiyyin partly ruined and the Dar al Masluhiyyin restored and now also known as Ksour Agafay 8 272 293 The Mouassine Museum also contains an example of a restored Saadi era douiria or upper floor guest apartment Dar Cherifa and the Dar al Mas udiyyin in particular have very rich decoration which has strong similarities with the stucco and wood decoration of the Ben Youssef Madrasa indicating that they were probably built around the same time second half of the 16th century They continue the traditional forms of earlier Marinid houses with the twelve pillar courtyard arrangement carved wooden lintels in the galleries and carved stucco decoration with sebka motifs around or above the arches Unlike the Fes houses however the galleries consist of only one tall level In some cases a second story of rooms is integrated behind the upper facades of the galleries The large central openings of the galleries once again allow for unobstructed view of the tall decorated doorways leading to the surrounding rooms In these Marrakesh houses these formal doorways are even more ornate and consist of lambrequin arches with muqarnas sculpted intrados 8 272 293 House architecture after the 16th century editTwentieth century scholar George Marcais in his overview of architecture in the region divided the architecture of later Moroccan houses into three general categories the houses of Fes Meknes and northern Morocco the houses of Marrakesh and southern Morocco and the houses of Rabat Sale and the western coastal cities 3 398 403 Fes Meknes and northern Morocco edit See also Mellah of Fez Houses nbsp Traditional house in Fes now a carpet shop with a classic two story gallery with large central openings flanked by smaller side archesIn Fes and Meknes the architectural traditions established earlier continued Houses were most commonly built in brick though those with thicker walls were often built with rammed earth 3 403 2 19 39 More so than in other cities the houses of Fes are tall and have narrower floor plans with their internal patios having the semblance of a deep well or skylight rather than an open courtyard In Meknes the same is true though to a lesser extent In the rich houses of these cities the central patios are among the most finely decorated in the country 1 75 The lower parts of the walls and pillars are usually covered in zellij tiles the upper surfaces are covered in carved stucco or in smooth plaster for more modest houses and the tops of the galleries were lined with heavy wooden lintels forming corbelled arches as in earlier Marinid and Saadi examples The wooden elements including doors ceilings and the gallery lintels were typically made of cedar wood and were richly carved and painted Wealthier homes had reception rooms at ground level opening off the patio which were equally if not even more richly decorated sometimes with elaborate wooden cupola ceilings This style was in turn found in other cities in the region of the Moroccan north such as Ouazzane Taza and Moulay Idriss Zerhoun though often in less lavish form 3 403 Marrakesh and southern Morocco edit nbsp A large riad garden Le Jardin Secret in Marrakesh part of a former private mansion rebuilt in the 19th century 9 10 In Marrakesh the flat landscape and ample space within its city walls meant that houses could have larger courtyards and fewer stories in contrast with those of Fez Most older houses had only a ground floor or at most an upper floor with a low ceiling used for storage Larger and richer houses often contained riad gardens which were more common in Marrakesh than in other cities Houses were built in brick or rammed earth with wood being used again for certain elements Wooden corbelled arches seen in older houses became less common in more recent centuries and round or ogival brick arches were favoured instead In turn horseshoe arches became rarer after the 18th century Walls were covered with plaster which historically had a rose reddish or yellowish colour and sometimes enlivened with friezes of painted motifs Zellij was used in reception rooms and around fountains Window frames and doorframes are often highlighted with carved stucco The carving of motifs into wood on the other hand became less common over time and by the late 19th century wooden decoration was limited to painted decoration This painted decoration also evolved however increasing the use of floral motifs and typically employing a red background 1 61 64 3 403 414 Sale Rabat and the coastal cities edit nbsp A traditional house in Rabat now serving as a riad hotel In Sale and Rabat houses were more typically built in rubble masonry with cut stone used in the corners of walls and for the outlines of arches The central patios were of moderate size and surrounded by galleries more often made of stone The arches of the galleries are round polylobed or sculpted in muqarnas supported by columns made of stone drums ending in capitals carved with arabesque motifs like acanthus leaves 3 398 The use of stone which was available from the limestone quarries in the Bou Regreg valley enabled houses in these cities to have more slender columns and thinner walls that allowed for more light and more elegant architectural proportions 11 Older houses generally had only a ground floor and ceilings were simple and unadorned in contrast with the houses of Marrakesh and Fes Both external and internal walls are typically whitewashed 3 398 nbsp Characteristic stone doorway in the Kasbah of RabatOne of the most distinguishing features of this regional style are the outer entrances whose doorways are made in cut stone 3 398 These stone facades are frequently decorated with a sculpted molding around their edges and a sculpted keystone motif at the top of the doorway arch Although some of these doorways especially in Sale are carved with decorative arabesque reliefs in most areas they have a semi European appearance George Marcais attributes this stylistic feature to the influence of Spanish Renaissance architecture which would have been imported to this region by the Morisco refugees who were expelled from Spain at the beginning of the 17th century and settled in these coastal cities Additionally the presence of Spanish and Portuguese outposts along the Moroccan coast between the 15th and 17th centuries likely added to this influence This style with local variations is also visible in other coastal cities such as Safi and Azemmour 3 398 Palaces editFurther information Moroccan architecture Palaces nbsp The Grand Riad in the Bahia Palace of Marrakesh late 19th century Sultans and caliphs as well as the more powerful and wealthy government ministers in the 19th and 20th century were able to build extensive palaces The Dar al Makhzen meaning roughly House Abode of the Government referred to the royal palace and center of government in a number of cities such as the Dar al Makhzen in Fes Rabat Tangier Meknes or Marrakesh 3 12 13 Royal palaces generally had a mechouar a large walled square which acted as a ceremonial space or parade ground at the entrance of the palace 14 13 15 The palaces themselves had a sprawling layout typically consisting of many structures and pavilions arranged around a series of courtyards and gardens 3 16 They often included a number of facilities such as bathhouses and mosques thus turning them into nearly self sufficient self contained royal cities 14 13 Sultans also built additional outlying palaces and pavilions such as the Dar Batha in Fes as well as vast gardens on the outskirts of their capital city such as the Agdal Gardens in Marrakesh and the former Mosara Garden in Fes 1 17 18 In the 19th and early 20th centuries grand viziers and other high officials of the government were able to accumulate enough power and wealth to build their own private palaces for themselves and their households 13 Examples of these include the Bahia Palace of Ba Ahmed which was later taken over by the sultan the Dar al Bacha and Dar Si Said in Marrakesh the Dar Moqri and Dar Glaoui in Fes and the Dar Mnebbhi in Fes and its counterpart in Marrakesh Other local warlords and magnates were also sometimes capable of building their own lavish palaces such as the Palace of Raissouli in Asilah 12 The Kasbah of Telouet also built by the Glaoui clan and only partly preserved today is another notable example of a 20th century palace constructed with traditional methods but located in a rural mountain town 19 20 Recent developments and present day editToday modern materials have increasingly replaced certain traditional ones during the renovations of old houses Wooden mashrabiya type windows have been replaced with iron grilles and cement is used for walls and pillars instead of brick and rammed earth 1 63 The term riad traditionally referring to the interior garden is nowadays applied in a broader way to traditional Moroccan houses that have been converted into hotels and tourist guesthouses 21 22 See also editLandmarks of Marrakesh Residential architecture in Historic Cairo AlbaicinReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Wilbaux Quentin 2001 La medina de Marrakech Formation des espaces urbains d une ancienne capitale du Maroc Paris L Harmattan ISBN 2747523888 a b c d e f g h i j k l Revault Jacques Golvin Lucien Amahan Ali 1985 Palais et demeures de Fes Vol I Epoques merinde et saadienne XIVe XVIIe siecles Patrimoine architectural Editions du Centre national de la recherche scientifique ISBN 9782271081322 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Marcais Georges 1954 L architecture musulmane d Occident Paris Arts et metiers graphiques Bloom Jonathan M 2020 Architecture of the Islamic West North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula 700 1800 Yale University Press ISBN 9780300218701 Bel Alfred 1919 Inscriptions arabes de Fes une maison privee du xive siecle Paris pp 317 and after a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Terrasse Henri Maslow Boris 1935 Une maison merinide de Fes Deuxieme congres de la Federation des Societes savantes de l Afrique du Nord Tlemcen 14 17 Avril 1936 Tome II in French Algiers Societe Historique Algerienne pp 503 510 La magnifique renovation des 27 monuments de Fes Conseil Regional du Tourisme CRT de Fes in French Retrieved 2021 02 12 a b c Salmon Xavier 2016 Marrakech Splendeurs saadiennes 1550 1650 Paris LienArt ISBN 9782359061826 The Secret Garden Marrakech Marrakech Riad www marrakech riad co uk 2017 03 12 Retrieved 2021 02 05 L extraordinaire Jardin secret de Marrakech Medina Vanupied in French 2018 05 10 Retrieved 2021 02 05 Mouline Said 2008 Rabat Sale Holy Cities of the Two Banks The City in the Islamic World Vol 1 Brill pp 643 662 ISBN 9789004171688 a b Touri Abdelaziz Benaboud Mhammad Boujibar El Khatib Naima Lakhdar Kamal Mezzine Mohamed 2010 Le Maroc andalou a la decouverte d un art de vivre 2 ed Ministere des Affaires Culturelles du Royaume du Maroc amp Museum With No Frontiers ISBN 978 3902782311 a b c d Deverdun Gaston 1959 Marrakech Des origines a 1912 Rabat Editions Techniques Nord Africaines a b Aouchar Amina 2005 Fes Meknes Flammarion pp 210 211 Parker Richard 1981 A practical guide to Islamic Monuments in Morocco Charlottesville VA The Baraka Press Metalsi Mohamed 2003 Fes La ville essentielle Paris ACR Edition Internationale ISBN 978 2867701528 Le Tourneau Roger 1949 Fes avant le protectorat etude economique et sociale d une ville de l occident musulman Casablanca Societe Marocaine de Librairie et d Edition Bressolette Henri Delaroziere Jean 1983 Fes Jdid de sa fondation en 1276 au milieu du XXe siecle Hesperis Tamuda 245 318 Morocco com Glaoui Kasbah High Atlas Morocco com Retrieved 2020 07 19 Griffiths Chris 2013 12 29 Telouet Kasbah in Morocco A Rare Performance Journey Beyond Travel Retrieved 2020 07 19 Accommodation in Morocco Where to stay in Morocco Rough Guides Retrieved 2020 05 31 Planet Lonely Sleeping in Morocco Lonely Planet Retrieved 2020 05 31 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Historic house architecture in Morocco amp oldid 1217881471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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