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Marrakesh

Marrakesh or Marrakech (/məˈrækɛʃ/ or /ˌmærəˈkɛʃ/;[3] Arabic: مراكش, romanizedmurrākuš, pronounced [murraːkuʃ]) is the fourth-largest city in Morocco.[2] It is one of the four imperial cities of Morocco and is the capital of the Marrakesh–Safi region. The city lies west of the foothills of the Atlas Mountains.

Marrakesh
مراكش
Marrakesh
Location of Marrakesh within Morocco
Marrakesh
Marrakesh (Africa)
Coordinates: 31°37′48″N 8°0′32″W / 31.63000°N 8.00889°W / 31.63000; -8.00889
Country Morocco
RegionMarrakesh-Safi
PrefectureMarrakesh
Established1070
Founded byAbu Bakr ibn Umar
Government
 • MayorFatima Ezzahra El Mansouri
Elevation
466 m (1,529 ft)
Population
 (2014)[1]
 • Total928,850
 • Rank4th in Morocco[a]
DemonymMarrakshi
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  1. ^ The High Commission for Planning defines the city of Marrakesh as comprising the municipality of Méchouar-Kasba and the five arrondissements of Annakhil, Gueliz, Marrakech-Médina, Ménara and Sidi Youssef Ben Ali.[2]
Official nameMedina of Marrakesh
CriteriaCultural: i, ii, iv, v
Reference331
Inscription1985 (9th Session)
Area1,107 ha

The city was founded in 1070 by Emir Abu Bakr ibn Umar as the capital of the Almoravid dynasty. The Almoravids established the first major structures in the city and shaped its layout for centuries to come. The red walls of the city, built by Ali ibn Yusuf in 1122–1123, and various buildings constructed in red sandstone afterwards, have given the city the nickname of the "Red City" (المدينة الحمراء Almadinat alhamra') or "Ochre City" (ville ocre). Marrakesh grew rapidly and established itself as a cultural, religious, and trading center for the Maghreb.

After a period of decline, the city was surpassed by Fez. Marrakesh gained its preeminence in the early 16th century serving as the capital of the Saadian dynasty, with sultans Abdallah al-Ghalib and Ahmad al-Mansur embellishing the city with sumptuous palaces such as the El Badi Palace (1578) and restoring many ruined monuments. Beginning in the 17th century, the city became popular among Sufi pilgrims for its seven patron saints who are entombed within the city's quarters. In 1912 the French Protectorate in Morocco was established and T'hami El Glaoui became Pasha of Marrakesh and held this position nearly throughout the protectorate until the role was dissolved upon the independence of Morocco and the reestablishment of the monarchy in 1956.

Marrakesh comprises an old fortified city packed with vendors and their stalls. This medina quarter is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The city is one of the busiest in Africa, with Jemaa el-Fnaa being the busiest square in the continent, and serves as a major economic center and tourist destination. Real estate and hotel development in Marrakesh have grown dramatically in the 21st century. Marrakesh is particularly popular with the French, and numerous French celebrities own property in the city. Marrakesh has the largest traditional market (souk) in Morocco, with some 18 souks. Crafts employ a significant percentage of the population, who primarily sell their products to tourists.

Marrakesh is served by Ménara International Airport and by Marrakesh railway station, which connects the city to Casablanca and northern Morocco. Marrakesh has several universities and schools, including Cadi Ayyad University. A number of Moroccan football clubs are here, including Najm de Marrakech, KAC Marrakech, Mouloudia de Marrakech and Chez Ali Club de Marrakech. The Marrakesh Street Circuit hosts the World Touring Car Championship, Auto GP and FIA Formula Two Championship races.

Etymology edit

The exact meaning of the name is debated.[4] One possible origin of the name Marrakesh is from the Berber (Amazigh) words amur (n) akush, which means "Land of God".[5] According to historian Susan Searight, however, the town's name was first documented in an 11th-century manuscript in the Qarawiyyin library in Fez, where its meaning was given as "country of the sons of Kush".[6] The word mur [7] is used now in Berber mostly in the feminine form tamurt. The same word "mur" appears in Mauretania, the North African kingdom from antiquity, although the link remains controversial as this name possibly originates from μαύρος mavros, the ancient Greek word for "dark".[4] The common English spelling is "Marrakesh",[8][9] although "Marrakech" (the French spelling) is also widely used.[5] The name is spelled Mṛṛakc in the Berber Latin alphabet, Marraquexe in Portuguese, Marrakech in Spanish.[10] A typical pronunciation in Moroccan Arabic is marrākesh with stress on the second syllable, while vowels in the other syllables may be barely pronounced.

From medieval times until around the beginning of the 20th century, the entire country of Morocco was known as the "Kingdom of Marrakesh", as the kingdom's historic capital city was often Marrakesh.[11][12] The name for Morocco is still "Marrakesh" to this day in Persian and Urdu as well as many other South Asian languages. Various European names for Morocco (Marruecos, Marrocos, Maroc, Marokko, etc.) are directly derived from the name Murrākush. Conversely, the city itself was in earlier times simply called Marocco City (or similar) by travelers from abroad. The name of the city and the country diverged after the Treaty of Fez divided Morocco into a French protectorate in Morocco and Spanish protectorate in Morocco, and the old interchangeable usage lasted widely until about the interregnum of Mohammed Ben Aarafa (1953–1955).[13] The latter episode set in motion the country's return to independence, when Morocco officially became المملكة المغربية (al-Mamlaka al-Maġribiyya, "The Maghreb Kingdom"), its name no longer referring to the city of Marrakesh. Marrakesh is known by a variety of nicknames, including the "Red City", the "Ochre City" and "the Daughter of the Desert", and has been the focus of poetic analogies such as one comparing the city to "a drum that beats an African identity into the complex soul of Morocco."[14]

History edit

The Marrakesh area was inhabited by Berber farmers from Neolithic times, and numerous stone implements have been unearthed in the area.[6] Marrakesh was founded by Abu Bakr ibn Umar, chieftain and second cousin of the Almoravid king Yusuf ibn Tashfin (c. 1061–1106).[15][16] Historical sources cite a variety of dates for this event ranging between 1062 (454 in the Hijri calendar), according to Ibn Abi Zar and Ibn Khaldun, and 1078 (470 AH), according to Muhammad al-Idrisi.[17] The date most commonly used by modern historians is 1070,[18] although 1062 is still cited by some writers.[19]

 
Gold Almoravid dinar minted during the reign of Ali ibn Yusuf

The Almoravids, a Berber dynasty seeking to reform Islamic society, ruled an emirate stretching from the edge of Senegal to the centre of Spain and from the Atlantic coast to Algiers.[20] They used Marrakesh as their capital and established its first structures, including mosques and a fortified residence, the Ksar al-Hajjar, near the present-day Kutubiyya Mosque.[21] These Almoravid foundations also influenced the layout and urban organization of the city for centuries to come. For example, the present-day Jemaa el-Fnaa originated from a public square in front of the Almoravid palace gates, the Rahbat al-Ksar,[22][23] and the major souks (markets) of the city developed roughly in the area between this square and the city's main mosque, where they remain today.[24] The city developed the community into a trading centre for the Maghreb and sub-Saharan Africa.[25] It grew rapidly and established itself as a cultural and religious centre, supplanting Aghmat, which had long been the capital of Haouz. Andalusi craftsmen from Cordoba and Seville built and decorated numerous monuments, importing the Cordoban Umayyad style characterised by carved domes and cusped arches.[6][26] This Andalusian influence merged with designs from the Sahara and West Africa, creating a unique style of architecture which was fully adapted to the Marrakesh environment. Yusuf ibn Tashfin built houses, minted coins, and brought gold and silver to the city in caravans.[6] His son and successor, Ali Ibn Yusuf, built the Ben Youssef Mosque, the city's main mosque, between 1120 and 1132.[27][28] He also fortified the city with city walls for the first time in 1126–1127 and expanded its water supply by creating the underground water system known as the khettara.[29][30]

 
Bab Agnaou, the Almohad-era gate of the Kasbah (photo circa 1890)

In 1125, the preacher Ibn Tumart settled in Tin Mal in the mountains to the south of Marrakesh, founding the Almohad movement. This new faction, composed mainly of Masmuda tribesmen, followed a doctrine of radical reform with Ibn Tumart as the mahdi, a messianic figure. He preached against the Almoravids and influenced a revolt which succeeded in bringing about the fall of nearby Aghmat, but stopped short of bringing down Marrakesh following an unsuccessful siege in 1130.[6] Ibn Tumart died shortly after in the same year, but his successor Abd al-Mu'min took over the political leadership of the movement and captured Marrakesh in 1147 after a siege of several months.[31] The Almohads purged the Almoravid population over three days and established the city as their new capital.[32] They went on to take over much of the Almoravids' former territory in Africa and the Iberian Peninsula. In 1147, shortly after the city's conquest, Abd al-Mu'min founded the Kutubiyya Mosque (or Koutoubia Mosque), next to the former Almoravid palace, to serve as the city's new main mosque.[33] The Almoravid mosques were either demolished or abandoned as the Almohads enacted their religious reforms.[32] Abd al-Mu'min was also responsible for establishing the Menara Gardens in 1157, while his successor Abu Ya'qub Yusuf (r. 1163–1184) began the Agdal Gardens.[34][35] Ya'qub al-Mansur (r. 1184–1199), possibly on the orders of his father Abu Ya'qub Yusuf, was responsible for building the Kasbah, a citadel and palace district on the south side of the city.[36][37] The Kasbah housed the center of government and the residence of the caliph, a title borne by the Almohad rulers to rival the eastern Abbasid Caliphate. In part because of these various additions, the Almohads also improved the water supply system and created water reservoirs to irrigate their gardens.[38] Thanks to its economic, political, and cultural importance, Marrakesh hosted many writers, artists, and intellectuals, many of them from Al-Andalus, including the famous philosopher Averroes of Cordoba.[39][40]

 
Detail of the Cantiga de Santa Maria #181. The cantiga #181 depicts the successful 1261–62 defence of Marrakesh by Almohad ruler Al-Murtada (with help from Christian militias) from the siege laid on by Marinid ruler Abu Yusuf.[41]

The death of Yusuf II in 1224 began a period of instability. Marrakesh became the stronghold of the Almohad tribal sheikhs and the ahl ad-dar (descendants of Ibn Tumart), who sought to claw power back from the ruling Almohad family. Marrakesh was taken, lost and retaken by force multiple times by a stream of caliphs and pretenders, such as during the brutal seizure of Marrakesh by the Sevillan caliph Abd al-Wahid II al-Ma'mun in 1226, which was followed by a massacre of the Almohad tribal sheikhs and their families and a public denunciation of Ibn Tumart's doctrines by the caliph from the pulpit of the Kasbah Mosque.[42] After al-Ma'mun's death in 1232, his widow attempted to forcibly install her son, acquiring the support of the Almohad army chiefs and Spanish mercenaries with the promise to hand Marrakesh over to them for the sack. Hearing of the terms, the people of Marrakesh sought to make an agreement with the military captains and saved the city from destruction with a sizable payoff of 500,000 dinars.[42] In 1269, Marrakesh was conquered by nomadic Zenata tribes who overran the last of the Almohads.[43] The city then fell into a state of decline, which soon led to the loss of its status as capital to rival city Fez.

 
El Badi Palace, built by the Saadi sultan Ahmad al-Mansur (16th century)

In the early 16th century, Marrakesh again became the capital of Morocco, after a period when it was the seat of the Hintata emirs. It quickly reestablished its status, especially during the reigns of the Saadian sultans Abdallah al-Ghalib and Ahmad al-Mansur.[44][45] Thanks to the wealth amassed by the Sultans, Marrakesh was embellished with sumptuous palaces while its ruined monuments were restored. El Badi Palace, begun by Ahmad al-Mansur in 1578, was made with costly materials including marble from Italy.[46][47] The palace was intended primarily for hosting lavish receptions for ambassadors from Spain, England, and the Ottoman Empire, showcasing Saadian Morocco as a nation whose power and influence reached as far as the borders of Niger and Mali.[48] Under the Saadian dynasty, Marrakesh experienced a golden age,[49] and regained its former position as a point of contact for caravan routes from the Maghreb, the Mediterranean and sub-Saharan Africa.

 
Litography depicting the city of Marrakesh, in 1860 by Évremond de Bérard.

For centuries Marrakesh has been known as the location of the tombs of Morocco's seven patron saints (sebaatou rizjel). When sufism was at the height of its popularity during the late 17th-century reign of Moulay Ismail, the festival of these saints was founded by Abu Ali al-Hassan al-Yusi at the request of the sultan.[50] The tombs of several renowned figures were moved to Marrakesh to attract pilgrims, and the pilgrimage associated with the seven saints is now a firmly established institution. Pilgrims visit the tombs of the saints in a specific order, as follows: Sidi Yusuf Ali Sanhaji (1196–97), a leper; Qadi Iyyad or qadi of Ceuta (1083–1149), a theologian and author of Ash-Shifa (treatises on the virtues of Muhammad); Sidi Bel Abbas (1130–1204), known as the patron saint of the city and most revered in the region; Sidi Muhammad al-Jazuli (1465), a well known Sufi who founded the Jazuli brotherhood; Abdelaziz al-Tebaa (1508), a student of al-Jazuli; Abdallah al-Ghazwani (1528), known as Moulay al-Ksour; and Sidi Abu al-Qasim Al-Suhayli, (1185), also known as Imam al-Suhayli.[51][52] Until 1867, European Christians were not authorized to enter the city unless they acquired special permission from the sultan; east European Jews were permitted.[12]

During the early 20th century, Marrakesh underwent several years of unrest. After the premature death in 1900 of the grand vizier Ba Ahmed, who had been designated regent until the designated sultan Abd al-Aziz became of age, the country was plagued by anarchy, tribal revolts, the plotting of feudal lords, and European intrigues. In 1907, Marrakesh caliph Moulay Abd al-Hafid was proclaimed sultan by the powerful tribes of the High Atlas and by Ulama scholars who denied the legitimacy of his brother, Abd al-Aziz.[53] It was also in 1907 that Dr. Mauchamp, a French doctor, was murdered in Marrakesh, suspected of spying for his country.[54] France used the event as a pretext for sending its troops from the eastern Moroccan town of Oujda to the major metropolitan center of Casablanca in the west. The French colonial army encountered strong resistance from Ahmed al-Hiba, a son of Sheikh Ma al-'Aynayn, who arrived from the Sahara accompanied by his nomadic Reguibat tribal warriors. On 30 March 1912, the French Protectorate in Morocco was established.[55] After the Battle of Sidi Bou Othman, which saw the victory of the French Mangin column over the al-Hiba forces in September 1912, the French seized Marrakesh. The conquest was facilitated by the rallying of the Imzwarn tribes and their leaders from the powerful Glaoui family, leading to a massacre of Marrakesh citizens in the resulting turmoil.[56]

 
T'hami El Glaoui, Pasha of Marrakesh (1912 to 1956)

T'hami El Glaoui, known as "Lord of the Atlas", became Pasha of Marrakesh, a post he held virtually throughout the 44-year duration of the Protectorate (1912–1956).[57] Glaoui dominated the city and became famous for his collaboration with the general residence authorities, culminating in a plot to dethrone Mohammed Ben Youssef (Mohammed V) and replace him with the Sultan's cousin, Ben Arafa.[57] Glaoui, already known for his amorous adventures and lavish lifestyle, became a symbol of Morocco's colonial order. He could not, however, subdue the rise of nationalist sentiment, nor the hostility of a growing proportion of the inhabitants. Nor could he resist pressure from France, who agreed to terminate its Moroccan Protectorate in 1956 due to the launch of the Algerian War (1954–1962) immediately following the end of the war in Indochina (1946–1954), in which Moroccans had been conscripted to fight in Vietnam on behalf of the French Army. After two successive exiles to Corsica and Madagascar, Mohammed Ben Youssef was allowed to return to Morocco in November 1955, bringing an end to the despotic rule of Glaoui over Marrakesh and the surrounding region. A protocol giving independence to Morocco was then signed on 2 March 1956 between French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau and M’Barek Ben Bakkai.[58]

 
The Gueliz district in Marrakech, was established outside the old city during the French Protectorate period (after 1912)

Since the independence of Morocco, Marrakesh has thrived as a tourist destination. In the 1960s and early 1970s, the city became a trendy "hippie mecca". It attracted numerous western rock stars and musicians, artists, film directors and actors, models, and fashion divas,[59] leading tourism revenues to double in Morocco between 1965 and 1970.[60] Yves Saint Laurent, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Jean-Paul Getty all spent significant time in the city; Laurent bought a property here and renovated the Majorelle Gardens.[61][62] Expatriates, especially those from France, have invested heavily in Marrakesh since the 1960s and developed many of the riads and palaces.[61] Old buildings were renovated in the Old Medina, new residences and commuter villages were built in the suburbs, and new hotels began to spring up.

United Nations agencies became active in Marrakesh beginning in the 1970s, and the city's international political presence has subsequently grown. In 1985, UNESCO declared the old town area of Marrakesh a UNESCO World Heritage Site, raising international awareness of the cultural heritage of the city.[63] In the 1980s, Patrick Guerand-Hermes purchased the 30 acres (12 ha) Ain el Quassimou, built by the family of Leo Tolstoy. [62] On 15 April 1994, the Marrakesh Agreement was signed here to establish the World Trade Organisation,[64] and in March 1997 Marrakesh served as the site of the World Water Council's first World Water Forum, which was attended by over 500 international participants.[65]

In the 21st century, property and real estate development in the city has boomed, with a dramatic increase in new hotels and shopping centres, fuelled by the policies of Mohammed VI of Morocco, who aims to increase the number of tourists annually visiting Morocco to 20 million by 2020. In 2010, a major gas explosion occurred in the city. On 28 April 2011, a bomb attack took place in the Jemaa el-Fnaa square, killing 15 people, mainly foreigners. The blast destroyed the nearby Argana Cafe.[66] Police sources arrested three suspects and claimed the chief suspect was loyal to Al-Qaeda, although Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb denied involvement.[67] In November 2016 the city hosted the 2016 United Nations Climate Change Conference.[68] In September 2023, the city was affected by a deadly earthquake.[69] From October 9 to October 15, the city hosted the Annual Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group.[70][71]

Geography edit

 
In winter, the Atlas mountains are typically covered in snow and ice.

By road, Marrakesh is 580 kilometres (360 mi) southwest of Tangier, 327 kilometres (203 mi) southwest of the Moroccan capital of Rabat, 239 kilometres (149 mi) southwest of Casablanca, 196 kilometres (122 mi) southwest of Beni Mellal, 177 kilometres (110 mi) east of Essaouira, and 246 kilometres (153 mi) northeast of Agadir.[72] The city has expanded north from the old centre with suburbs such as Daoudiat, Diour El Massakine, Sidi Abbad, Sakar and Amerchich, to the southeast with Sidi Youssef Ben Ali, to the west with Massira and Targa, and southwest to M'hamid beyond the airport.[72] On the P2017 road leading south out of the city are large villages such as Douar Lahna, Touggana, Lagouassem, and Lahebichate, leading eventually through desert to the town of Tahnaout at the edge of the High Atlas, the highest mountainous barrier in North Africa.[72] The average elevation of the snow-covered High Atlas lies above 3,000 metres (9,800 ft). It is mainly composed of Jurassic limestone. The mountain range runs along the Atlantic coast, then rises to the east of Agadir and extends northeast into Algeria before disappearing into Tunisia.[73]

 
The Ourika River valley

The city is located in the Tensift River valley,[74] with the Tensift River passing along the northern edge of the city. The Ourika River valley is about 30 kilometres (19 mi) south of Marrakesh.[75] The "silvery valley of the Ourika river curving north towards Marrakesh", and the "red heights of Jebel Yagour still capped with snow" to the south are sights in this area.[76] David Prescott Barrows, who describes Marrakesh as Morocco's "strangest city", describes the landscape in the following terms: "The city lies some fifteen or twenty miles [25–30 km] from the foot of the Atlas mountains, which here rise to their grandest proportions. The spectacle of the mountains is superb. Through the clear desert air the eye can follow the rugged contours of the range for great distances to the north and eastward. The winter snows mantle them with white, and the turquoise sky gives a setting for their grey rocks and gleaming caps that is of unrivaled beauty."[56]

With 130,000 hectares of greenery and over 180,000 palm trees in its Palmeraie, Marrakesh is an oasis of rich plant variety. Throughout the seasons, fragrant orange, fig, pomegranate and olive trees display their color and fruits in Agdal Garden, Menara Garden and other gardens in the city.[77] The city's gardens feature numerous native plants alongside other species that have been imported over the course of the centuries, including giant bamboos, yuccas, papyrus, palm trees, banana trees, cypress, philodendrons, rose bushes, bougainvilleas, pines and various kinds of cactus plants.

Climate edit

Marrakesh features a hot semi-arid climate (Köppen climate classification BSh) with long, hot dry summers and brief, mild to cool winters. Average temperatures range from 12 °C (54 °F) in the winter to 26–30 °C (79–86 °F) in the summer.[78] The relatively wet winter and dry summer precipitation pattern of Marrakesh mirrors precipitation patterns found in Mediterranean climates. However, the city receives less rain than is typically found in a Mediterranean climate, resulting in a semi-arid climate classification.

Between 1961 and 1990 the city averaged 281.3 millimetres (11.1 in) of precipitation annually.[78] Barrows says of the climate, "The region of Marrakesh is frequently described as desert in character, but, to one familiar with the southwestern parts of the United States, the locality does not suggest the desert, rather an area of seasonal rainfall, where moisture moves underground rather than by surface streams, and where low brush takes the place of the forests of more heavily watered regions. The location of Marrakesh on the north side of the Atlas, rather than the south, prevents it from being described as a desert city, and it remains the northern focus of the Saharan lines of communication, and its history, its types of dwellers, and its commerce and arts, are all related to the great south Atlas spaces that reach further into the Sahara desert."[79]

Climate data for Marrakesh, Morocco (Menara International Airport) 1991–2020, extremes 1900–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 30.1
(86.2)
34.3
(93.7)
37.0
(98.6)
39.6
(103.3)
44.4
(111.9)
46.9
(116.4)
49.6
(121.3)
48.6
(119.5)
44.8
(112.6)
39.8
(103.6)
35.2
(95.4)
30.9
(87.6)
49.6
(121.3)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 19.1
(66.4)
20.7
(69.3)
23.6
(74.5)
25.7
(78.3)
29.4
(84.9)
33.6
(92.5)
37.7
(99.9)
37.4
(99.3)
32.5
(90.5)
28.5
(83.3)
23.1
(73.6)
20.1
(68.2)
27.6
(81.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 12.5
(54.5)
14.2
(57.6)
17.0
(62.6)
19.0
(66.2)
22.3
(72.1)
25.8
(78.4)
29.2
(84.6)
29.3
(84.7)
25.6
(78.1)
22.1
(71.8)
16.9
(62.4)
13.7
(56.7)
20.6
(69.1)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 5.9
(42.6)
7.6
(45.7)
10.3
(50.5)
12.4
(54.3)
15.2
(59.4)
17.9
(64.2)
20.6
(69.1)
21.1
(70.0)
18.6
(65.5)
15.7
(60.3)
10.7
(51.3)
7.3
(45.1)
13.6
(56.5)
Record low °C (°F) −3.6
(25.5)
−3.0
(26.6)
0.4
(32.7)
2.8
(37.0)
6.8
(44.2)
9.0
(48.2)
10.4
(50.7)
6.0
(42.8)
10.0
(50.0)
1.1
(34.0)
0.0
(32.0)
−1.6
(29.1)
−3.6
(25.5)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 25.0
(0.98)
25.7
(1.01)
35.2
(1.39)
26.3
(1.04)
10.5
(0.41)
3.1
(0.12)
2.2
(0.09)
4.7
(0.19)
15.2
(0.60)
19.1
(0.75)
29.8
(1.17)
24.2
(0.95)
221.0
(8.70)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 3.0 3.7 4.7 2.9 1.5 0.6 0.3 0.8 1.3 2.4 3.8 4.1 29.1
Average relative humidity (%) 65 66 61 60 58 55 47 47 52 59 62 65 58
Mean monthly sunshine hours 230.1 216.5 252.8 270.2 303.1 359.7 330.4 315.1 266.8 251.5 228.9 226.6 3,251.7
Source 1: NOAA (sun 1981–2010)[80][81]
Source 2: Deutscher Wetterdienst (record highs for February, April, May, September and November, and humidity),[82] Meteo Climat (record highs and record lows for June, July and August only)[83]
Climate data for Marrakesh
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 11.0 10.0 12.1
Average Ultraviolet index 3 5 7 8 10 11 11 10 9 6 4 3 7.3
Source: Weather Atlas[84]

Climate change edit

A 2019 paper published in PLOS One estimated that under Representative Concentration Pathway 4.5, a "moderate" scenario of climate change where global warming reaches ~2.5–3 °C (4.5–5.4 °F) by 2100, the climate of Marrakesh in the year 2050 would most closely resemble the current climate of Bir Lehlou in Western Sahara. The annual temperature would increase by 2.9 °C (5.2 °F), and the temperature of the coldest month by 1.6 °C (2.9 °F), while the temperature of the warmest month would increase by 7 °C (13 °F).[85][86] According to Climate Action Tracker, the current warming trajectory appears consistent with 2.7 °C (4.9 °F), which closely matches RCP 4.5.[87]

Water edit

Marrakesh's water supply relies partly on groundwater resources, which have lowered gradually over the last 40 years, attaining an acute decline in the early 2000s. Since 2002, groundwater levels have dropped by an average of 0.9 m per year in 80% of Marrakesh and its surrounding area. The most affected area experienced a drop of 37 m (more than 2 m per year).[88]

Demographics edit

According to the 2014 census, the population of Marrakesh was 928,850 against 843,575 in 2004. The number of households in 2014 was 217,245 against 173,603 in 2004.[89][90]

Economy edit

 
Sofitel Hotel, April 2013

Marrakesh is a vital component of the economy and culture of Morocco.[91] Improvements to the highways from Marrakesh to Casablanca, Agadir and the local airport have led to a dramatic increase in tourism in the city, which now attracts over two million tourists annually. Because of the importance of tourism to Morocco's economy, King Mohammed VI vowed in 2012 to double the number of tourists, attracting 20 million a year to Morocco by 2020.[92] The city is popular with the French, and many French celebrities have bought property in the city, including fashion moguls Yves St Laurent and Jean-Paul Gaultier.[93] In the 1990s very few foreigners lived in the city, and real estate developments have dramatically increased in the last 15 years; by 2005 over 3,000 foreigners had purchased properties in the city, lured by its culture and the relatively cheap house prices.[93] It has been cited in French weekly magazine Le Point as the second St Tropez: "No longer simply a destination for a scattering of adventurous elites, bohemians or backpackers seeking Arabian Nights fantasies, Marrakech is becoming a desirable stopover for the European jet set."[93] However, despite the tourism boom, the majority of the city's inhabitants are still poor, and as of 2010, some 20,000 households still have no access to water or electricity.[94] Many enterprises in the city are facing colossal debt problems.[94]

Despite the global economic crisis that began in 2007, investments in real estate progressed substantially in 2011 both in the area of tourist accommodation and social housing. The main developments have been in facilities for tourists including hotels and leisure centres such as golf courses and health spas, with investments of 10.9 billion dirham (US$1.28 billion) in 2011.[95][96] The hotel infrastructure in recent years has experienced rapid growth. In 2012, alone, 19 new hotels were scheduled to open, a development boom often compared to Dubai.[92] Royal Ranches Marrakech, one of Gulf Finance House's flagship projects in Morocco, is a 380 hectares (940 acres) resort under development in the suburbs and one of the world's first five star Equestrian Resorts.[97] The resort is expected to make a significant contribution to the local and national economy, creating many jobs and attracting thousands of visitors annually; as of April 2012 it was about 45% complete.[98] The Avenue Mohammed VI, formerly Avenue de France, is a major city thoroughfare. It has seen rapid development of residential complexes and many luxury hotels. Avenue Mohammed VI contains what is claimed to be Africa's largest nightclub:[99] Pacha Marrakech, a trendy club that plays house and electro house music.[100] It also has two large cinema complexes, Le Colisée à Gueliz and Cinéma Rif, and a new shopping precinct, Al Mazar.

 
Menara Mall, opened in 2015

Trade and crafts are extremely important to the local tourism-fueled economy. There are 18 souks in Marrakesh, employing over 40,000 people in pottery, copperware, leather and other crafts. The souks contain a massive range of items from plastic sandals to Palestinian-style scarves imported from India or China. Local boutiques are adept at making western-style clothes using Moroccan materials.[93] The Birmingham Post comments: "The souk offers an incredible shopping experience with a myriad of narrow winding streets that lead through a series of smaller markets clustered by trade. Through the squawking chaos of the poultry market, the gory fascination of the open-air butchers' shops and the uncountable number of small and specialist traders, just wandering around the streets can pass an entire day."[91] Marrakesh has several supermarkets including Marjane Acima, Asswak Salam and Carrefour, and three major shopping centres, Al Mazar Mall, Plaza Marrakech and Marjane Square; a branch of Carrefour opened in Al Mazar Mall in 2010.[101][102] Industrial production in the city is centred in the neighbourhood of Sidi Ghanem Al Massar, containing large factories, workshops, storage depots and showrooms. Ciments Morocco, a subsidiary of a major Italian cement firm, has a factory in Marrakech.[103] The AeroExpo Marrakech International Exhibition of aeronautical industries and services is held here, as is the Riad Art Expo.

Marrakesh is one of North Africa's largest centers of wildlife trade, despite the illegality of most of this trade.[104] Much of this trade can be found in the medina and adjacent squares. Tortoises are particularly popular for sale as pets, and Barbary macaques and snakes can also be seen.[105][106] The majority of these animals suffer from poor welfare conditions in these stalls.[107]

Politics edit

 
Marrakesh City Hall

Marrakesh, the regional capital, constitutes a prefecture-level administrative unit of Morocco, Marrakech Prefecture, forming part of the region of Marrakech-Safi. Marrakesh is a major centre for law and jurisdiction in Morocco and most of the major courts of the region are here. These include the regional Court of Appeal, the Commercial Court, the Administrative Court, the Court of First Instance, the Court of Appeal of Commerce, and the Administrative Court of Appeal.[108] Numerous organizations of the region are based here, including the regional government administrative offices, the Regional Council of Tourism office, and regional public maintenance organisations such as the Governed Autonomous Water Supply and Electricity and Maroc Telecom.[109]

Testament to Marrakesh's development as a modern city, on 12 June 2009, Fatima-Zahra Mansouri, a then 33-year-old lawyer and daughter of a former assistant to the local authority chief in Marrakesh, was elected the first female mayor of the city, defeating outgoing Mayor Omar Jazouli by 54 votes to 35 in a municipal council vote.[110][111] Mansouri became the second woman in the history of Morocco to obtain a mayoral position, after Asma Chaabi, mayor of Essaouira[110] and was elected to serve as Marrakech's mayor for a second term in September 2021.[112]

Since the legislative elections in November 2011, the ruling political party in Marrakesh has, for the first time, been the Justice and Development Party or PDJ which also rules at the national level. The party, which advocates Islamism and Islamic democracy, won five seats; the National Rally of Independents (RNI) took one seat, while the PAM won three.[113] In the partial legislative elections for the Guéliz Ennakhil constituency in October 2012, the PDJ under the leadership of Ahmed El Moutassadik was again declared the winner with 10,452 votes. The PAM, largely consisting of friends of King Mohammed VI, came in second place with 9,794 votes.[114]

Landmarks edit

Jemaa el-Fnaa edit

 
Jemaa el-Fnaa square

The Jemaa el-Fnaa is one of the best-known squares in Africa and is the centre of city activity and trade. It has been described as a "world-famous square", "a metaphorical urban icon, a bridge between the past and the present, the place where (spectacularized) Moroccan tradition encounters modernity."[115] It has been part of the UNESCO World Heritage site since 1985.[116] The square's name has several possible meanings; the most plausible etymology endorsed by historians is that it meant "ruined mosque" or "mosque of annihilation", referring to the construction of a mosque within the square in the late 16th century that was left unfinished and fell into ruin.[117][118][119] The square was originally an open space for markets located on the east side of the Ksar el-Hajjar, the main fortress and palace of the Almoravid dynasty who founded Marrakesh.[22][52] Following the takeover of the city by the Almohads, a new royal palace complex was founded to the south of the city (the Kasbah) and the old Almoravid palace was abandoned, but the market square remained. Subsequently, with the fluctuating fortunes of the city, Jemaa el-Fnaa saw periods of decline and renewal.[120]

Historically this square was used for public executions by rulers who sought to maintain their power by frightening the public. The square attracted dwellers from the surrounding desert and mountains to trade here, and stalls were raised in the square from early in its history. The square attracted tradesmen, snake charmers ("wild, dark, frenzied men with long disheveled hair falling over their naked shoulders"), dancing boys of the Chleuh Atlas tribe, and musicians playing pipes, tambourines and African drums.[121] Today the square attracts people from a diversity of social and ethnic backgrounds and tourists from all around the world. Snake charmers, acrobats, magicians, mystics, musicians, monkey trainers, herb sellers, story-tellers, dentists, pickpockets, and entertainers in medieval garb still populate the square.[116][122]

Souks edit

 
 
Olives and colourful bejewelled slippers for sale

Marrakesh has the largest traditional market in Morocco and the image of the city is closely associated with its souks. Historically, the souks of Marrakesh were divided into retail areas for particular goods such as leather, carpets, metalwork and pottery. These divisions still roughly exist, though with significant overlap. Many of the souks sell items like carpets and rugs, traditional Muslim attire, leather bags, and lanterns.[123] Haggling is still a very important part of trade in the souks.[124]

One of the largest souks is Souk Semmarine, which sells everything from brightly coloured bejewelled sandals and slippers and leather pouffes to jewellery and kaftans.[125] Souk Ableuh contains stalls which specialize in lemons, chilis, capers, pickles, green, red, and black olives, and mint, a common ingredient of Moroccan cuisine and tea. Similarly, Souk Kchacha specializes in dried fruit and nuts, including dates, figs, walnuts, cashews and apricots.[126] Rahba Qedima contains stalls selling hand-woven baskets, natural perfumes, knitted hats, scarves, tee shirts, Ramadan tea, ginseng, and alligator and iguana skins. The Criée Berbère, to the northeast of this market, is noted for its dark Berber carpets and rugs.[125] Souk Siyyaghin is known for its jewellery, and Souk Smata nearby is noted for its extensive collection of babouches and belts. Souk Cherratine specializes in leatherware, and Souk Belaarif sells modern consumer goods.[124] Souk Haddadine specializes in ironware and lanterns.[127] The Medina is also famous for its street food. Mechoui Alley is particularly famous for selling slow-roasted lamb dishes.[128] The Ensemble Artisanal, located near the Koutoubia Mosque, is a government-run complex of small arts and crafts which offers a range of leather goods, textiles and carpets. Young apprentices are taught a range of crafts in the workshop at the back of this complex.[129]

City walls and gates edit

 
Medina walls of Marrakesh

The ramparts of Marrakesh, which stretch for some 19 kilometres (12 mi) around the medina of the city, were built by the Almoravids in the 12th century as protective fortifications. The walls are made of a distinct orange-red clay and chalk, giving the city its nickname as the "red city"; they stand up to 19 feet (5.8 m) high and have 20 gates and 200 towers along them.[130]

 
Bab Agnaou, the historic gate of the Kasbah

Of the city's gates, one of the best-known is Bab Agnaou, built in the late 12th century by the Almohad caliph Ya'qub al-Mansur as the main public entrance to the new Kasbah.[131][132] The Berber name Agnaou, like Gnaoua, refers to people of Sub-Saharan African origin (cf. Akal-n-iguinawen – land of the black). The gate was called Bab al Kohl (the word kohl also meaning "black") or Bab al Qsar (palace gate) in some historical sources.[133] The corner-pieces are embellished with floral decorations. This ornamentation is framed by three panels marked with an inscription from the Quran in Maghrebi script using foliated Kufic letters, which were also used in Al-Andalus. Bab Agnaou was renovated and its opening reduced in size during the rule of sultan Mohammed ben Abdallah.[134]

 
Medina walls of Marrakesh in a photo of 1925. ETH Library.

The medina has at least eight main historic gates: Bab Doukkala, Bab el-Khemis, Bab ad-Debbagh, Bab Aylan, Bab Aghmat, Bab er-Robb, Bab el-Makhzen and Bab el-'Arissa. These date back to the 12th century during the Almoravid period and many have them have been modified since.[135][52] Bab Doukkala (in the northwestern part of the city wall) is in general more massive and less ornamented than the other gates; it takes its name from Doukkala area on the Atlantic coast, well to the north of Marrakesh.[136] Bab el-Khemis is in the medina's northeastern corner and is named for the open-air Thursday market (Souq el Khemis).[52][135] It is one of the city's main gates and features a man-made spring.[137] Bab ad-Debbagh, to the east, has one of the most complex layouts of any gate, with an interior passage that turns multiple times.[135] Bab Aylan is located slightly further south of it.[135] Bab Aghmat is one of the city's main southern gates, located east of the Jewish and Muslim cemeteries and near the tomb of Ali ibn Yusuf.[138] Bab er Robb is the other main southern exit from the city, located near Bab Agnaou. It has a curious position and layout which may be the result of multiple modifications to the surrounding area over the years.[135][52] It provides access to roads leading to the mountain towns of Amizmiz and Asni.

Gardens edit

 
Pavilion and reservoir of the Menara gardens

The city is home to a number of gardens, both historical and modern. The largest and oldest gardens in the city are the Menara gardens to the west and the Agdal Gardens to the south. The Menara Gardens were established in 1157 by the Almohad ruler Abd al-Mu'min.[139][35] They are centered around a large water reservoir surrounded by orchards and olive groves. A 19th-century pavilion stands at the edge of the reservoir. The Agdal Gardens were established during the reign of Abu Ya'qub Yusuf (r. 1163–1184) and extend over a larger area today, containing several water basins and palace structures.[35] The Agdal Gardens cover about 340 hectares (1.3 sq mi) and are surrounded by a circuit of pisé walls,[140] while the Menara Gardens cover around 96 hectares (0.37 sq mi).[139] The water reservoirs for both gardens were supplied with water through an old hydraulic system known as khettaras, which conveyed water from the foothills of the nearby Atlas Mountains.[141][142]

 
Majorelle Garden

The Majorelle Garden, on Avenue Yacoub el Mansour, was at one time the home of the landscape painter Jacques Majorelle. Famed designer Yves Saint Laurent bought and restored the property, which features a stele erected in his memory,[143] and the Museum of Islamic Art, which is housed in a dark blue building.[144] The garden, open to the public since 1947, has a large collection of plants from five continents including cacti, palms and bamboo.[145]

The Koutoubia Mosque is also flanked by another set of gardens, the Koutoubia Gardens. They feature orange and palm trees, and are frequented by storks.[146] The Mamounia Gardens, more than 100 years old and named after Prince Moulay Mamoun, have olive and orange trees as well as a variety of floral displays.[147] In 2016, artist André Heller opened the acclaimed garden ANIMA near Ourika, which combines a large collection of plants, palms, bamboo and cacti as well as works by Keith Haring, Auguste Rodin, Hans Werner Geerdts and other artists.[citation needed]

Palaces and Riads edit

 
Courtyard in the Bahia Palace

The historic wealth of the city is manifested in palaces, mansions and other lavish residences. The best-known palaces today are the El Badi Palace and the Bahia Palace, as well as the main Royal Palace which is still in use as one of the official residences of the King of Morocco. Riads (Moroccan mansions, historically designating a type of garden[52]) are common in Marrakesh. Based on the design of the Roman villa, they are characterized by an open central garden courtyard surrounded by high walls. This construction provided the occupants with privacy and lowered the temperature within the building.[148] Numerous riads and historic residences exist through the old city, with the oldest documented examples dating back to the Saadian period (16th-17th centuries), while many others date from the 19th and 20th centuries.[45][52]

Mosques edit

 
Minaret of the Koutoubia Mosque

The Koutoubia Mosque is one of the largest and most famous mosques in the city, located southwest of Jemaa el-Fnaa. The mosque was founded in 1147 by the Almohad caliph Abd al-Mu'min. A second version of the mosque was entirely rebuilt by Abd al-Mu'min around 1158, with Ya'qub al-Mansur possibly finalizing construction of the minaret around 1195.[131] This second mosque is the structure that stands today. It is considered a major example of Almohad architecture and of Moroccan mosque architecture generally.[131] Its minaret tower, the tallest in the city at 77 metres (253 ft) in height, is considered an important landmark and symbol of Marrakesh.[149][150] It likely influenced other buildings such as the Giralda of Seville and the Hassan Tower of Rabat.[132][151][20][152]

Ben Youssef Mosque is named after the Almoravid sultan Ali ibn Yusuf, who built the original mosque in the 12th century to serve as the city's main Friday mosque.[153] After being abandoned during the Almohad period and falling into ruin, it was rebuilt in the 1560s by Abdallah al-Ghalib and then completely rebuilt again Moulay Sliman at the beginning of the 19th century.[154] The 16th-century Ben Youssef Madrasa is located next to it. Also next to it is the Koubba Ba’adiyn or Almoravid Koubba, a rare architectural remnant of the Almoravid period which was excavated and restored in the 20th century. The Koubba, a domed kiosk structure, demonstrates a sophisticated style and is an important indication of the art and architecture of the period.[155][132]

The Kasbah Mosque overlooks Place Moulay Yazid in the Kasbah district of Marrakesh, close to the El Badi Palace. It was built by the Almohad caliph Yaqub al-Mansour in the late 12th century to serve as the main mosque of the kasbah (citadel) where he and his high officials resided.[156] It contended with the Koutoubia Mosque for prestige and the decoration of its minaret was highly influential in subsequent Moroccan architecture.[157] The mosque was repaired by the Saadi sultan Moulay Abdallah al-Ghalib following a devastating explosion at a nearby gunpowder reserve in the second half of the 16th century.[158] Notably, the Saadian Tombs were built just outside its southern wall in this period.[159]

Among the other notable mosques of the city is the 14th-century Ben Salah Mosque, located east of the medina centre. It is one of the only major Marinid-era monuments in the city.[160] The Mouassine Mosque (also known as the Al Ashraf Mosque) was built by the Saadian sultan Abdallah al-Ghalib between 1562–63 and 1572–73.[161] It was part of a larger architectural complex which included a library, hammam (public bathhouse), and a madrasa (school). The complex also included a large ornate street fountain known as the Mouassine Fountain, which still exists today.[161][162] The Bab Doukkala Mosque, built around the same time further west, has a similar layout and style as the Mouassine Mosque. Both the Mouassine and Bab Doukkala mosques appear to have been originally designed to anchor the development of new neighbourhoods after the relocation of the Jewish district from this area to the new mellah near the Kasbah.[161][163][164]

Tombs edit

 
Saadian Tombs

One of the most famous funerary monuments in the city is the Saadian Tombs, which were built in the 16th century as a royal necropolis for the Saadian Dynasty. It is located next to the south wall of the Kasbah Mosque. The necropolis contains the tombs of many Saadian rulers including Muhammad al-Shaykh, Abdallah al-Ghalib, and Ahmad al-Mansur, as well as various family members and later sultans.[159] It consists of two main structures, each with several rooms, standing within a garden enclosure. The most important graves are marked by horizontal tombstones of finely carved marble, while others are merely covered in colorful zellij tiles. Al-Mansur's mausoleum chamber is especially rich in decoration, with a roof of carved and painted cedar wood supported on twelve columns of carrara marble, and with walls decorated with geometric patterns in zellij tilework and vegetal motifs in carved stucco. The chamber next to it, originally a prayer room equipped with a mihrab, was later repurposed as a mausoleum for members of the Alaouite dynasty.[159][165]

The city also holds the tombs of many Sufi figures. Of these, there are seven patron saints of the city, which are visited every year by pilgrims during the seven-day ziara pilgrimage. During this time pilgrims visit the tombs in the following order: Sidi Yusuf ibn Ali Sanhaji, Sidi al-Qadi Iyyad al-Yahsubi, Sidi Bel Abbas, Sidi Mohamed ibn Sulayman al-Jazouli, Sidi Abdellaziz Tabba'a, Sidi Abdellah al-Ghazwani, and lastly, Sidi Abderrahman al-Suhayli.[166][167] Many of these mausoleums also serve as the focus of their own zawiyas (Sufi religious complexes with mosques), including: the Zawiya and mosque of Sidi Bel Abbes (the most important of them),[168] the Zawiya of al-Jazuli, the Zawiya of Sidi Abdellaziz, the Zawiya of Sidi Yusuf ibn Ali, and the Zawiya of Sidi al-Ghazwani (also known as Moulay el-Ksour).[169]

Mellah edit

The Mellah of Marrakesh is the old Jewish Quarter (Mellah) of the city, and is located in the kasbah area of the city's medina, east of Place des Ferblantiers. It was created in 1558 by the Saadians at the site where the sultan's stables were.[170] At the time, the Jewish community consisted of a large portion of the city's tailors, metalworkers, bankers, jewelers, and sugar traders. During the 16th century, the Mellah had its own fountains, gardens, synagogues and souks. Until the arrival of the French in 1912, Jews could not own property outside of the Mellah; all growth was consequently contained within the limits of the neighborhood, resulting in narrow streets, small shops and higher residential buildings. The Mellah, today reconfigured as a mainly residential zone renamed Hay Essalam, currently occupies an area smaller than its historic limits and has an almost entirely Muslim population. The Slat al-Azama Synagogue (or Lazama Synagogue), built around a central courtyard, is in the Mellah.[171] The Jewish cemetery here is the largest of its kind in Morocco. Characterized by white-washed tombs and sandy graves,[171] the cemetery is within the Medina on land adjacent to the Mellah.[172] According to the World Jewish Congress there were only 250 Moroccan Jews remaining in Marrakesh.[173]

Hotels edit

 
Hotel Marrakech

As one of the principal tourist cities in Africa, Marrakesh has over 400 hotels. Mamounia Hotel is a five-star hotel in the Art Deco-Moroccan fusion style, built in 1925 by Henri Prost and A. Marchis.[174] It is considered the most eminent hotel of the city[175][176] and has been described as the "grand dame of Marrakesh hotels." The hotel has hosted numerous internationally renowned people including Winston Churchill, Prince Charles and Mick Jagger.[176] Churchill used to relax within the gardens of the hotel and paint there.[177] The 231-room hotel,[178] which contains a casino, was refurbished in 1986 and again in 2007 by French designer Jacques Garcia.[177][176] Other hotels include Eden Andalou Hotel, Hotel Marrakech, Sofitel Marrakech, Palm Plaza Hotel & Spa, Royal Mirage Hotel, Piscina del Hotel, and Palmeraie Palace at the Palmeraie Rotana Resort.[179] In March 2012, Accor opened its first Pullman-branded hotel in Marrakech, Pullman Marrakech Palmeraie Resort & Spa. Set in a 17 hectares (42 acres) olive grove at La Palmeraie, the hotel has 252 rooms, 16 suites, six restaurants and a 535 square metres (5,760 sq ft) conference room.[180]

Culture edit

Museums edit

Marrakech Museum edit

 
Marrakech Museum

The Marrakech Museum, housed in the Dar Menebhi Palace in the old city centre, was built at the beginning of the 20th century by Mehdi Menebhi.[181][182] The palace was carefully restored by the Omar Benjelloun Foundation and converted into a museum in 1997.[183] The house itself represents an example of classical Andalusian architecture, with fountains in the central courtyard, traditional seating areas, a hammam and intricate tilework and carvings.[184] It has been cited as having "an orgy of stalactite stucco-work" which "drips from the ceiling and combines with a mind-boggling excess of zellij work."[184] The museum holds exhibits of both modern and traditional Moroccan art together with fine examples of historical books, coins and pottery produced by Moroccan Jewish, Berber and Arab peoples.[185][186]

Dar Si Said Museum edit

 
Dar Si Said Museum

Dar Si Said Museum, also known as the Museum of Moroccan Arts is to the north of the Bahia Palace. It was the mansion of Si Said, brother to Grand Vizier Ba Ahmad, and was constructed at the same time as Ahmad's own Bahia Palace. The collection of the museum is considered to be one of the finest in Morocco, with "jewellery from the High Atlas, the Anti Atlas and the extreme south; carpets from the Haouz and the High Atlas; oil lamps from Taroudannt; blue pottery from Safi and green pottery from Tamegroute; and leatherwork from Marrakesh."[187] Among its oldest and most significant artifacts is an early 11th-century marble basin from the late caliphal period of Cordoba, Spain.[188]

Berber Museum edit

The former home and villa of Jacques Majorelle, a blue-coloured building within the Majorelle Gardens, was converted into the Berber Museum (Musée Pierre Bergé des Arts Berbères) in 2011, after previously serving as a museum of Islamic art.[189][190][191] It exhibits a variety of objects of Amazigh (Berber) culture from across different regions of Morocco.[189]

Other museums edit

The House of Photography of Marrakech, opened by Patrick Menac’h and Hamid Mergani in 2009, holds exhibits of vintage Moroccan photography from the 1870s to 1950s. It is housed in a renovated traditional house in the medina.[192][193] The Mouassine Museum, by the same owners, consists of a historic 16th–17th-century house in the Mouassine neighbourhood, formerly inhabited by the family of painter Abdelhay Mellakh [fr], which was opened as a museum and cultural venue in 2014 and since 2020 has also served a museum of Moroccan music (Musée de la Musique), in addition to hosting musical performances.[194][195][196]

Elsewhere in the medina, the Dar El Bacha hosts the Musée des Confluences, which opened in 2017.[197] The museum holds temporary exhibits highlighting different facets of Moroccan culture[198] as well as various art objects from different cultures across the world.[199] The Tiskiwin Museum is housed in another restored medina mansion and features a collection of artifacts from across the former the trans-Saharan trade routes that were connected to the city.[200][201] Various other small and often privately owned museums also exist in the medina, such as the Musée Boucharouite and the Perfume Museum (Musée du Parfum).[202][203][204] Dar Bellarj, an arts center located in a former mansion next to the Ben Youssef Mosque, also occasionally hosts art exhibits.[205][202]

A number of art galleries and museums are also found outside the medina, in Gueliz and its surrounding districts in the new city.[206][202] The Museum of Art and Culture of Marrakesh (MACMA), opened in 2016, houses a collection of Moroccan art objects and photography from the 1870s to 1970s.[207][208] Since 2019, its collection of Orientalist paintings are now housed at its sister museum, the Orientalist Museum in the medina.[209] The Museum of African Contemporary Art Al Maaden (MACAAL) is a non-profit art gallery that exhibits contemporary Moroccan and African art.[206][210] The Yves Saint Laurent Museum, opened in 2017 in a new building near the Jardin Majorelle, displays a collection of work spanning the career of French fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent.[211] It is a sister museum to the Yves Saint Laurent Museum in Paris.[202]

Music, theatre and dance edit

Two types of music are traditionally associated with Marrakesh. Berber music is influenced by Andalusian classical music and typified by its oud accompaniment. By contrast, Gnaoua music is loud and funky with a sound reminiscent of the Blues. It is performed on handmade instruments such as castanets, ribabs (three-stringed banjos) and deffs (handheld drums). Gnaoua music's rhythm and crescendo take the audience into a mood of trance; the style is said to have emerged in Marrakesh and Essaouira as a ritual of deliverance from slavery.[212] More recently, several Marrakesh female music groups have also risen to popularity.[213]

The Théâtre Royal de Marrakesh, the Institut Français and Dar Chérifa are major performing arts institutions in the city. The Théâtre Royal, built by Tunisian architect Charles Boccara, puts on theatrical performances of comedy, opera, and dance in French and Arabic.[214] A greater number of theatrical troupes perform outdoors and entertain tourists on the main square and the streets, especially at night.[citation needed]

Crafts edit

 
Locally made hats

The arts and crafts of Marrakesh have had a wide and enduring impact on Moroccan handicrafts to the present day. Riad décor is widely used in carpets and textiles, ceramics, woodwork, metal work and zelij. Carpets and textiles are weaved, sewn or embroidered, sometimes used for upholstering. Moroccan women who practice craftsmanship are known as Maalems (expert craftspeople) and make such fine products as Berber carpets and shawls made of sabra (another name for rayon, also sometimes called cactus silk).[213][215] Ceramics are in monochrome Berber-style only, a limited tradition depicting bold forms and decorations.[213]

Wood crafts are generally made of cedar, including the riad doors and palace ceilings. Orange wood is used for making ladles known as harira (lentil soup ladles). Thuya craft products are made of caramel coloured thuya, a conifer indigenous to Morocco. Since this species is almost extinct, these trees are being replanted and promoted by the artists' cooperative Femmes de Marrakech.[213]

Metalwork made in Marrakesh includes brass lamps, iron lanterns, candle holders made from recycled sardine tins, and engraved brass teapots and tea trays used in the traditional serving of tea. Contemporary art includes sculpture and figurative paintings. Blue veiled Tuareg figurines and calligraphy paintings are also popular.[213]

Festivals edit

Festivals, both national and Islamic, are celebrated in Marrakesh and throughout the country, and some of them are observed as national holidays.[216] Cultural festivals of note held in Marrakesh include the National Folklore Festival, the Marrakech Festival of Popular Arts (in which a variety of famous Moroccan musicians and artists participate), international folklore festival Marrakech Folklore Days[217] and the Berber Festival.[216][218] The International Film Festival of Marrakech, which aspires to be the North African version of the Cannes Film Festival, was established in 2001.[219] The festival, which showcases over 100 films from around the world annually, has attracted Hollywood stars such as Martin Scorsese, Francis Ford Coppola, Susan Sarandon, Jeremy Irons, Roman Polanski and many European, Arab and Indian film stars.[219] The Marrakech Bienniale was established in 2004 by Vanessa Branson as a cultural festival in various disciplines, including visual arts, cinema, video, literature, performing arts, and architecture.[220]

Food edit

 
 
Left: Tanjias prepared in terracotta pots sealed with paper. Right: Moroccan mint tea prepared with gunpowder tea, fresh mint, and sugar.

Surrounded by lemon, orange, and olive groves, the city's culinary characteristics are rich and heavily spiced but not hot, using various preparations of Ras el hanout (which means "Head of the shop"), a blend of dozens of spices which include ash berries, chilli, cinnamon, grains of paradise, monk's pepper, nutmeg, and turmeric.[221] A specialty of the city and the symbol of its cuisine is tanjia marrakshia, affectionately referred to as bint ar-rimad (بنت الرماد "daughter of the ash"), a local meal prepared with beef meat, spices, and smen and slow-cooked in a ceramic pot in traditional oven in hot ashes.[222] Tajines can be prepared with chicken, lamb, beef or fish, adding fruit, olives and preserved lemon, vegetables and spices, including cumin, peppers, saffron, turmeric, and ras el hanout. The meal is prepared in a tajine pot and slow-cooked with steam. Another version of tajine includes vegetables and chickpeas seasoned with flower petals.[223] Tajines may also be basted with "smen" Moroccan ghee that has a flavour similar to blue cheese.[224]

Shrimp, chicken and lemon-filled briouats are another traditional specialty of Marrakesh. Rice is cooked with saffron, raisins, spices, and almonds, while couscous may have added vegetables. A pastilla is a filo-wrapped pie stuffed with minced chicken or pigeon that has been prepared with almonds, cinnamon, spices and sugar.[225] Harira soup in Marrakesh typically includes lamb with a blend of chickpeas, lentils, vermicelli, and tomato paste, seasoned with coriander, spices and parsley. Kefta (mince meat), liver in crépinette, merguez and tripe stew are commonly sold at the stalls of Jemaa el-Fnaa.[226]

 
A massive shebakia in Marrakesh.

The desserts of Marrakesh include chebakia (sesame spice cookies usually prepared and served during Ramadan), tartlets of filo dough with dried fruit, or cheesecake with dates.[227]

The Moroccan tea culture is practiced in Marrakesh; green tea with mint is served with sugar from a curved teapot spout into small glasses.[228] Another popular non-alcoholic drink is orange juice.[229] Under the Almoravids, alcohol consumption was common;[230] historically, hundreds of Jews produced and sold alcohol in the city.[231] In the present day, alcohol is sold in some hotel bars and restaurants.[232]

Education edit

 
Université Privée de Marrakech

Marrakesh has several universities and schools, including Cadi Ayyad University (also known as the University of Marrakech), and its component, the École nationale des sciences appliquées de Marrakech (ENSA Marrakech), which was created in 2000 by the Ministry of Higher Education and specializes in engineering and scientific research, and the La faculté des sciences et techniques-gueliz which known to be number one in Morocco in its kind of faculties. [233][234] Cadi Ayyad University was established in 1978 and operates 13 institutions in the Marrakech Tensift Elhaouz and Abda Doukkala regions of Morocco in four main cities, including Kalaa of Sraghna, Essaouira and Safi in addition to Marrakech.[235] Sup de Co Marrakech, also known as the École Supérieure de Commerce de Marrakech, is a private four-year college that was founded in 1987 by Ahmed Bennis. The school is affiliated with the École Supérieure de Commerce of Toulouse, France; since 1995 the school has built partnership programs with numerous American universities including the University of Delaware, University of St. Thomas, Oklahoma State University, National-Louis University, and Temple University.

Ben Youssef Madrasa edit

 
The courtyard of the Ben Youssef Madrasa

The Ben Youssef Madrasa, north of the Medina, was an Islamic college in Marrakesh named after the Almoravid sultan Ali ibn Yusuf (1106–1142) who expanded the city and its influence considerably. It is the largest madrasa in all of Morocco and was one of the largest theological colleges in North Africa, at one time housing as many as 900 students.[236]

This education complex specialized in Quranic law and was linked to similar institutions in Fez, Taza, Salé, and Meknes.[237] The Madrasa was constructed by the Saadian Sultan Abdallah al-Ghalib (1557–1574) in 1564 as the largest and most prestigious madrasa in Morocco.[237] The construction ordered by Abdallah al-Ghalib was completed in 1565, as attested by the inscription in the prayer room.[238] Its 130 student dormitory cells cluster around a courtyard richly carved in cedar, marble and stucco. In accordance with Islam, the carvings contain no representation of humans or animals, consisting entirely of inscriptions and geometric patterns. One of the school's best known teachers was Mohammed al-Ifrani (1670–1745). After a temporary closure beginning in 1960, the building was refurbished and reopened to the public as a historical site in 1982.[239]

Sports edit

Football clubs based in Marrakesh include Najm de Marrakech, KAC Marrakech, Mouloudia de Marrakech and Chez Ali Club de Marrakech. The city contains the Circuit International Automobile Moulay El Hassan a race track which hosts the World Touring Car Championship and from 2017 FIA Formula E. The Marrakech Marathon is also held here.[240] Roughly 5000 runners turn out for the event annually.[241] Also, here takes place Grand Prix Hassan II tennis tournament (on clay) part of ATP World Tour series. Marrakech could host matches at the 2030 FIFA World Cup.

Golf is a popular sport in Marrakech. The city has three golf courses just outside the city limits and played almost through the year. The three main courses are the Golf de Amelikis on the road to Ourazazate, the Palmeraie Golf Palace near the Palmeraie, and the Royal Golf Club, the oldest of the three courses.[242]

Jnan Amar Polo Club is located in Tameslouht, near Marrakech.

Transport edit

Bus edit

 
BRT Marrakesh

BRT Marrakesh, a bus rapid transit system using trolleybuses was opened in 2017.[243]

Rail edit

 
Marrakesh railway station

The Marrakesh railway station is linked by several trains running daily to other major cities in Morocco such as Casablanca, Tangiers, Fez, Meknes and Rabat. The Casablanca–Tangier high-speed rail line opened in November 2018.[244]

In 2015, a tramway was proposed.

Road edit

The main road network within and around Marrakesh is well paved. The major highway connecting Marrakesh with Casablanca to the north is the A7, a toll expressway, 210 km (130 mi) in length. The road from Marrakesh to Settat, a 146 km (91 mi) stretch, was inaugurated by King Mohammed VI in April 2007, completing the 558 km (347 mi) highway to Tangiers. Highway A7 connects also Marrakesh to Agadir, 233 km (145 mi) to the south-west.[244]

Air edit

 
Marrakesh Menara Airport

The Marrakesh-Menara Airport (RAK) is 3 km (1.9 mi) southwest of the city centre. It is an international facility that receives several European flights as well as flights from Casablanca and several Arab nations.[245] The airport is at an elevation of 471 metres (1,545 ft) at 31°36′25″N 008°02′11″W / 31.60694°N 8.03639°W / 31.60694; -8.03639.[246] It has two formal passenger terminals; these are more or less combined into one large terminal. A third terminal is being built.[247] The existing T1 and T2 terminals offer a space of 42,000 m2 (450,000 sq ft) and have a capacity of 4.5 million passengers per year. The blacktopped runway is 4.5 km (2.8 mi) long and 45 m (148 ft) wide. The airport has parking space for 14 Boeing 737 and four Boeing 747 aircraft. The separate freight terminal has 340 m2 (3,700 sq ft) of covered space.[248]

Healthcare edit

Marrakesh has long been an important centre for healthcare in Morocco, and the regional rural and urban populations alike are reliant upon hospitals in the city. The psychiatric hospital installed by the Merinid Caliph Ya'qub al-Mansur in the 16th century was described by the historian 'Abd al-Wahfd al- Marrakushi as one of the greatest in the world at the time.[249] A strong Andalusian influence was evident in the hospital, and many of the physicians to the Caliphs came from places such as Seville, Zaragoza and Denia in eastern Spain.[249]

A severe strain has been placed upon the healthcare facilities of the city in the last decade as the city population has grown dramatically.[250] Ibn Tofail University Hospital is one of the major hospitals of the city.[251] In February 2001, the Moroccan government signed a loan agreement worth eight million U.S. dollars with The OPEC Fund for International Development to help improve medical services in and around Marrakesh, which led to expansions of the Ibn Tofail and Ibn Nafess hospitals. Seven new buildings were constructed, with a total floor area of 43,000 square metres (460,000 sq ft). New radiotherapy and medical equipment was provided and 29,000 square metres (310,000 sq ft) of existing hospital space was rehabilitated.[250]

In 2009, king Mohammed VI inaugurated a regional psychiatric hospital in Marrakesh, built by the Mohammed V Foundation for Solidarity, costing 22 million dirhams (approximately 2.7 million U.S. dollars).[252] The hospital has 194 beds, covering an area of 3 hectares (7.4 acres).[252] Mohammed VI has also announced plans for the construction of a 450 million dirham military hospital in Marrakesh.[253]

International relations edit

Marrakesh is twinned with:[254]

Notable people edit

See also edit

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Further reading edit

  • Fernea, Elizabeth Warnock (1988). A Street in Marrakech: A Personal View of Urban Women in Morocco. Waveland Press. ISBN 978-0-88133-404-3.
  • Mourad, Khireddine (1994). Marrakech Et La Mamounia (in French). www.acr-edition.com. ISBN 978-2-86770-081-1.
  • Wilbaux, Quentin (2009). Marrakesh: The Secret of Courtyard Houses. Translated by McElhearn, Kirk. ACR Édition. ISBN 978-2-86770-130-6.

External links edit

  • Moroccan National Tourist Office
  • Bulletin du Patrimoine – Patrimoines de Marrakech: local publication (in French) on the city's historic heritage, also available on Academia

marrakesh, other, uses, disambiguation, marrakech, arabic, مراكش, romanized, murrākuš, pronounced, murraːkuʃ, fourth, largest, city, morocco, four, imperial, cities, morocco, capital, safi, region, city, lies, west, foothills, atlas, mountains, مراكشprefecture. For other uses see Marrakesh disambiguation Marrakesh or Marrakech m e ˈ r ae k ɛ ʃ or ˌ m aer e ˈ k ɛ ʃ 3 Arabic مراكش romanized murrakus pronounced murraːkuʃ is the fourth largest city in Morocco 2 It is one of the four imperial cities of Morocco and is the capital of the Marrakesh Safi region The city lies west of the foothills of the Atlas Mountains Marrakesh مراكشPrefecture level cityClockwise from top Menara Gardens Majorelle Garden Kutubiyya Mosque Jemaa el FnaaFlagSealMarrakeshLocation of Marrakesh within MoroccoShow map of MoroccoMarrakeshMarrakesh Africa Show map of AfricaCoordinates 31 37 48 N 8 0 32 W 31 63000 N 8 00889 W 31 63000 8 00889Country MoroccoRegionMarrakesh SafiPrefectureMarrakeshEstablished1070Founded byAbu Bakr ibn UmarGovernment MayorFatima Ezzahra El MansouriElevation466 m 1 529 ft Population 2014 1 Total928 850 Rank4th in Morocco a DemonymMarrakshiTime zoneUTC 1 CET The High Commission for Planning defines the city of Marrakesh as comprising the municipality of Mechouar Kasba and the five arrondissements of Annakhil Gueliz Marrakech Medina Menara and Sidi Youssef Ben Ali 2 UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameMedina of MarrakeshCriteriaCultural i ii iv vReference331Inscription1985 9th Session Area1 107 ha The city was founded in 1070 by Emir Abu Bakr ibn Umar as the capital of the Almoravid dynasty The Almoravids established the first major structures in the city and shaped its layout for centuries to come The red walls of the city built by Ali ibn Yusuf in 1122 1123 and various buildings constructed in red sandstone afterwards have given the city the nickname of the Red City المدينة الحمراء Almadinat alhamra or Ochre City ville ocre Marrakesh grew rapidly and established itself as a cultural religious and trading center for the Maghreb After a period of decline the city was surpassed by Fez Marrakesh gained its preeminence in the early 16th century serving as the capital of the Saadian dynasty with sultans Abdallah al Ghalib and Ahmad al Mansur embellishing the city with sumptuous palaces such as the El Badi Palace 1578 and restoring many ruined monuments Beginning in the 17th century the city became popular among Sufi pilgrims for its seven patron saints who are entombed within the city s quarters In 1912 the French Protectorate in Morocco was established and T hami El Glaoui became Pasha of Marrakesh and held this position nearly throughout the protectorate until the role was dissolved upon the independence of Morocco and the reestablishment of the monarchy in 1956 Marrakesh comprises an old fortified city packed with vendors and their stalls This medina quarter is a UNESCO World Heritage Site The city is one of the busiest in Africa with Jemaa el Fnaa being the busiest square in the continent and serves as a major economic center and tourist destination Real estate and hotel development in Marrakesh have grown dramatically in the 21st century Marrakesh is particularly popular with the French and numerous French celebrities own property in the city Marrakesh has the largest traditional market souk in Morocco with some 18 souks Crafts employ a significant percentage of the population who primarily sell their products to tourists Marrakesh is served by Menara International Airport and by Marrakesh railway station which connects the city to Casablanca and northern Morocco Marrakesh has several universities and schools including Cadi Ayyad University A number of Moroccan football clubs are here including Najm de Marrakech KAC Marrakech Mouloudia de Marrakech and Chez Ali Club de Marrakech The Marrakesh Street Circuit hosts the World Touring Car Championship Auto GP and FIA Formula Two Championship races Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 1 1 Climate change 3 2 Water 4 Demographics 5 Economy 6 Politics 7 Landmarks 7 1 Jemaa el Fnaa 7 2 Souks 7 3 City walls and gates 7 4 Gardens 7 5 Palaces and Riads 7 6 Mosques 7 7 Tombs 7 8 Mellah 7 9 Hotels 8 Culture 8 1 Museums 8 1 1 Marrakech Museum 8 1 2 Dar Si Said Museum 8 1 3 Berber Museum 8 1 4 Other museums 8 2 Music theatre and dance 8 3 Crafts 8 4 Festivals 8 5 Food 9 Education 9 1 Ben Youssef Madrasa 10 Sports 11 Transport 11 1 Bus 11 2 Rail 11 3 Road 11 4 Air 12 Healthcare 13 International relations 14 Notable people 15 See also 16 References 16 1 Bibliography 17 Further reading 18 External linksEtymology editThe exact meaning of the name is debated 4 One possible origin of the name Marrakesh is from the Berber Amazigh words amur n akush which means Land of God 5 According to historian Susan Searight however the town s name was first documented in an 11th century manuscript in the Qarawiyyin library in Fez where its meaning was given as country of the sons of Kush 6 The word mur 7 is used now in Berber mostly in the feminine form tamurt The same word mur appears in Mauretania the North African kingdom from antiquity although the link remains controversial as this name possibly originates from mayros mavros the ancient Greek word for dark 4 The common English spelling is Marrakesh 8 9 although Marrakech the French spelling is also widely used 5 The name is spelled Mṛṛakc in the Berber Latin alphabet Marraquexe in Portuguese Marrakech in Spanish 10 A typical pronunciation in Moroccan Arabic is marrakesh with stress on the second syllable while vowels in the other syllables may be barely pronounced From medieval times until around the beginning of the 20th century the entire country of Morocco was known as the Kingdom of Marrakesh as the kingdom s historic capital city was often Marrakesh 11 12 The name for Morocco is still Marrakesh to this day in Persian and Urdu as well as many other South Asian languages Various European names for Morocco Marruecos Marrocos Maroc Marokko etc are directly derived from the name Murrakush Conversely the city itself was in earlier times simply called Marocco City or similar by travelers from abroad The name of the city and the country diverged after the Treaty of Fez divided Morocco into a French protectorate in Morocco and Spanish protectorate in Morocco and the old interchangeable usage lasted widely until about the interregnum of Mohammed Ben Aarafa 1953 1955 13 The latter episode set in motion the country s return to independence when Morocco officially became المملكة المغربية al Mamlaka al Maġribiyya The Maghreb Kingdom its name no longer referring to the city of Marrakesh Marrakesh is known by a variety of nicknames including the Red City the Ochre City and the Daughter of the Desert and has been the focus of poetic analogies such as one comparing the city to a drum that beats an African identity into the complex soul of Morocco 14 History editMain articles History of Marrakesh and Timeline of Marrakesh The Marrakesh area was inhabited by Berber farmers from Neolithic times and numerous stone implements have been unearthed in the area 6 Marrakesh was founded by Abu Bakr ibn Umar chieftain and second cousin of the Almoravid king Yusuf ibn Tashfin c 1061 1106 15 16 Historical sources cite a variety of dates for this event ranging between 1062 454 in the Hijri calendar according to Ibn Abi Zar and Ibn Khaldun and 1078 470 AH according to Muhammad al Idrisi 17 The date most commonly used by modern historians is 1070 18 although 1062 is still cited by some writers 19 nbsp Gold Almoravid dinar minted during the reign of Ali ibn Yusuf The Almoravids a Berber dynasty seeking to reform Islamic society ruled an emirate stretching from the edge of Senegal to the centre of Spain and from the Atlantic coast to Algiers 20 They used Marrakesh as their capital and established its first structures including mosques and a fortified residence the Ksar al Hajjar near the present day Kutubiyya Mosque 21 These Almoravid foundations also influenced the layout and urban organization of the city for centuries to come For example the present day Jemaa el Fnaa originated from a public square in front of the Almoravid palace gates the Rahbat al Ksar 22 23 and the major souks markets of the city developed roughly in the area between this square and the city s main mosque where they remain today 24 The city developed the community into a trading centre for the Maghreb and sub Saharan Africa 25 It grew rapidly and established itself as a cultural and religious centre supplanting Aghmat which had long been the capital of Haouz Andalusi craftsmen from Cordoba and Seville built and decorated numerous monuments importing the Cordoban Umayyad style characterised by carved domes and cusped arches 6 26 This Andalusian influence merged with designs from the Sahara and West Africa creating a unique style of architecture which was fully adapted to the Marrakesh environment Yusuf ibn Tashfin built houses minted coins and brought gold and silver to the city in caravans 6 His son and successor Ali Ibn Yusuf built the Ben Youssef Mosque the city s main mosque between 1120 and 1132 27 28 He also fortified the city with city walls for the first time in 1126 1127 and expanded its water supply by creating the underground water system known as the khettara 29 30 nbsp Bab Agnaou the Almohad era gate of the Kasbah photo circa 1890 In 1125 the preacher Ibn Tumart settled in Tin Mal in the mountains to the south of Marrakesh founding the Almohad movement This new faction composed mainly of Masmuda tribesmen followed a doctrine of radical reform with Ibn Tumart as the mahdi a messianic figure He preached against the Almoravids and influenced a revolt which succeeded in bringing about the fall of nearby Aghmat but stopped short of bringing down Marrakesh following an unsuccessful siege in 1130 6 Ibn Tumart died shortly after in the same year but his successor Abd al Mu min took over the political leadership of the movement and captured Marrakesh in 1147 after a siege of several months 31 The Almohads purged the Almoravid population over three days and established the city as their new capital 32 They went on to take over much of the Almoravids former territory in Africa and the Iberian Peninsula In 1147 shortly after the city s conquest Abd al Mu min founded the Kutubiyya Mosque or Koutoubia Mosque next to the former Almoravid palace to serve as the city s new main mosque 33 The Almoravid mosques were either demolished or abandoned as the Almohads enacted their religious reforms 32 Abd al Mu min was also responsible for establishing the Menara Gardens in 1157 while his successor Abu Ya qub Yusuf r 1163 1184 began the Agdal Gardens 34 35 Ya qub al Mansur r 1184 1199 possibly on the orders of his father Abu Ya qub Yusuf was responsible for building the Kasbah a citadel and palace district on the south side of the city 36 37 The Kasbah housed the center of government and the residence of the caliph a title borne by the Almohad rulers to rival the eastern Abbasid Caliphate In part because of these various additions the Almohads also improved the water supply system and created water reservoirs to irrigate their gardens 38 Thanks to its economic political and cultural importance Marrakesh hosted many writers artists and intellectuals many of them from Al Andalus including the famous philosopher Averroes of Cordoba 39 40 nbsp Detail of the Cantiga de Santa Maria 181 The cantiga 181 depicts the successful 1261 62 defence of Marrakesh by Almohad ruler Al Murtada with help from Christian militias from the siege laid on by Marinid ruler Abu Yusuf 41 The death of Yusuf II in 1224 began a period of instability Marrakesh became the stronghold of the Almohad tribal sheikhs and the ahl ad dar descendants of Ibn Tumart who sought to claw power back from the ruling Almohad family Marrakesh was taken lost and retaken by force multiple times by a stream of caliphs and pretenders such as during the brutal seizure of Marrakesh by the Sevillan caliph Abd al Wahid II al Ma mun in 1226 which was followed by a massacre of the Almohad tribal sheikhs and their families and a public denunciation of Ibn Tumart s doctrines by the caliph from the pulpit of the Kasbah Mosque 42 After al Ma mun s death in 1232 his widow attempted to forcibly install her son acquiring the support of the Almohad army chiefs and Spanish mercenaries with the promise to hand Marrakesh over to them for the sack Hearing of the terms the people of Marrakesh sought to make an agreement with the military captains and saved the city from destruction with a sizable payoff of 500 000 dinars 42 In 1269 Marrakesh was conquered by nomadic Zenata tribes who overran the last of the Almohads 43 The city then fell into a state of decline which soon led to the loss of its status as capital to rival city Fez nbsp El Badi Palace built by the Saadi sultan Ahmad al Mansur 16th century In the early 16th century Marrakesh again became the capital of Morocco after a period when it was the seat of the Hintata emirs It quickly reestablished its status especially during the reigns of the Saadian sultans Abdallah al Ghalib and Ahmad al Mansur 44 45 Thanks to the wealth amassed by the Sultans Marrakesh was embellished with sumptuous palaces while its ruined monuments were restored El Badi Palace begun by Ahmad al Mansur in 1578 was made with costly materials including marble from Italy 46 47 The palace was intended primarily for hosting lavish receptions for ambassadors from Spain England and the Ottoman Empire showcasing Saadian Morocco as a nation whose power and influence reached as far as the borders of Niger and Mali 48 Under the Saadian dynasty Marrakesh experienced a golden age 49 and regained its former position as a point of contact for caravan routes from the Maghreb the Mediterranean and sub Saharan Africa nbsp Litography depicting the city of Marrakesh in 1860 by Evremond de Berard For centuries Marrakesh has been known as the location of the tombs of Morocco s seven patron saints sebaatou rizjel When sufism was at the height of its popularity during the late 17th century reign of Moulay Ismail the festival of these saints was founded by Abu Ali al Hassan al Yusi at the request of the sultan 50 The tombs of several renowned figures were moved to Marrakesh to attract pilgrims and the pilgrimage associated with the seven saints is now a firmly established institution Pilgrims visit the tombs of the saints in a specific order as follows Sidi Yusuf Ali Sanhaji 1196 97 a leper Qadi Iyyad or qadi of Ceuta 1083 1149 a theologian and author of Ash Shifa treatises on the virtues of Muhammad Sidi Bel Abbas 1130 1204 known as the patron saint of the city and most revered in the region Sidi Muhammad al Jazuli 1465 a well known Sufi who founded the Jazuli brotherhood Abdelaziz al Tebaa 1508 a student of al Jazuli Abdallah al Ghazwani 1528 known as Moulay al Ksour and Sidi Abu al Qasim Al Suhayli 1185 also known as Imam al Suhayli 51 52 Until 1867 European Christians were not authorized to enter the city unless they acquired special permission from the sultan east European Jews were permitted 12 During the early 20th century Marrakesh underwent several years of unrest After the premature death in 1900 of the grand vizier Ba Ahmed who had been designated regent until the designated sultan Abd al Aziz became of age the country was plagued by anarchy tribal revolts the plotting of feudal lords and European intrigues In 1907 Marrakesh caliph Moulay Abd al Hafid was proclaimed sultan by the powerful tribes of the High Atlas and by Ulama scholars who denied the legitimacy of his brother Abd al Aziz 53 It was also in 1907 that Dr Mauchamp a French doctor was murdered in Marrakesh suspected of spying for his country 54 France used the event as a pretext for sending its troops from the eastern Moroccan town of Oujda to the major metropolitan center of Casablanca in the west The French colonial army encountered strong resistance from Ahmed al Hiba a son of Sheikh Ma al Aynayn who arrived from the Sahara accompanied by his nomadic Reguibat tribal warriors On 30 March 1912 the French Protectorate in Morocco was established 55 After the Battle of Sidi Bou Othman which saw the victory of the French Mangin column over the al Hiba forces in September 1912 the French seized Marrakesh The conquest was facilitated by the rallying of the Imzwarn tribes and their leaders from the powerful Glaoui family leading to a massacre of Marrakesh citizens in the resulting turmoil 56 nbsp T hami El Glaoui Pasha of Marrakesh 1912 to 1956 T hami El Glaoui known as Lord of the Atlas became Pasha of Marrakesh a post he held virtually throughout the 44 year duration of the Protectorate 1912 1956 57 Glaoui dominated the city and became famous for his collaboration with the general residence authorities culminating in a plot to dethrone Mohammed Ben Youssef Mohammed V and replace him with the Sultan s cousin Ben Arafa 57 Glaoui already known for his amorous adventures and lavish lifestyle became a symbol of Morocco s colonial order He could not however subdue the rise of nationalist sentiment nor the hostility of a growing proportion of the inhabitants Nor could he resist pressure from France who agreed to terminate its Moroccan Protectorate in 1956 due to the launch of the Algerian War 1954 1962 immediately following the end of the war in Indochina 1946 1954 in which Moroccans had been conscripted to fight in Vietnam on behalf of the French Army After two successive exiles to Corsica and Madagascar Mohammed Ben Youssef was allowed to return to Morocco in November 1955 bringing an end to the despotic rule of Glaoui over Marrakesh and the surrounding region A protocol giving independence to Morocco was then signed on 2 March 1956 between French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau and M Barek Ben Bakkai 58 nbsp The Gueliz district in Marrakech was established outside the old city during the French Protectorate period after 1912 Since the independence of Morocco Marrakesh has thrived as a tourist destination In the 1960s and early 1970s the city became a trendy hippie mecca It attracted numerous western rock stars and musicians artists film directors and actors models and fashion divas 59 leading tourism revenues to double in Morocco between 1965 and 1970 60 Yves Saint Laurent The Beatles The Rolling Stones and Jean Paul Getty all spent significant time in the city Laurent bought a property here and renovated the Majorelle Gardens 61 62 Expatriates especially those from France have invested heavily in Marrakesh since the 1960s and developed many of the riads and palaces 61 Old buildings were renovated in the Old Medina new residences and commuter villages were built in the suburbs and new hotels began to spring up United Nations agencies became active in Marrakesh beginning in the 1970s and the city s international political presence has subsequently grown In 1985 UNESCO declared the old town area of Marrakesh a UNESCO World Heritage Site raising international awareness of the cultural heritage of the city 63 In the 1980s Patrick Guerand Hermes purchased the 30 acres 12 ha Ain el Quassimou built by the family of Leo Tolstoy 62 On 15 April 1994 the Marrakesh Agreement was signed here to establish the World Trade Organisation 64 and in March 1997 Marrakesh served as the site of the World Water Council s first World Water Forum which was attended by over 500 international participants 65 In the 21st century property and real estate development in the city has boomed with a dramatic increase in new hotels and shopping centres fuelled by the policies of Mohammed VI of Morocco who aims to increase the number of tourists annually visiting Morocco to 20 million by 2020 In 2010 a major gas explosion occurred in the city On 28 April 2011 a bomb attack took place in the Jemaa el Fnaa square killing 15 people mainly foreigners The blast destroyed the nearby Argana Cafe 66 Police sources arrested three suspects and claimed the chief suspect was loyal to Al Qaeda although Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb denied involvement 67 In November 2016 the city hosted the 2016 United Nations Climate Change Conference 68 In September 2023 the city was affected by a deadly earthquake 69 From October 9 to October 15 the city hosted the Annual Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group 70 71 Geography edit nbsp In winter the Atlas mountains are typically covered in snow and ice By road Marrakesh is 580 kilometres 360 mi southwest of Tangier 327 kilometres 203 mi southwest of the Moroccan capital of Rabat 239 kilometres 149 mi southwest of Casablanca 196 kilometres 122 mi southwest of Beni Mellal 177 kilometres 110 mi east of Essaouira and 246 kilometres 153 mi northeast of Agadir 72 The city has expanded north from the old centre with suburbs such as Daoudiat Diour El Massakine Sidi Abbad Sakar and Amerchich to the southeast with Sidi Youssef Ben Ali to the west with Massira and Targa and southwest to M hamid beyond the airport 72 On the P2017 road leading south out of the city are large villages such as Douar Lahna Touggana Lagouassem and Lahebichate leading eventually through desert to the town of Tahnaout at the edge of the High Atlas the highest mountainous barrier in North Africa 72 The average elevation of the snow covered High Atlas lies above 3 000 metres 9 800 ft It is mainly composed of Jurassic limestone The mountain range runs along the Atlantic coast then rises to the east of Agadir and extends northeast into Algeria before disappearing into Tunisia 73 nbsp The Ourika River valley The city is located in the Tensift River valley 74 with the Tensift River passing along the northern edge of the city The Ourika River valley is about 30 kilometres 19 mi south of Marrakesh 75 The silvery valley of the Ourika river curving north towards Marrakesh and the red heights of Jebel Yagour still capped with snow to the south are sights in this area 76 David Prescott Barrows who describes Marrakesh as Morocco s strangest city describes the landscape in the following terms The city lies some fifteen or twenty miles 25 30 km from the foot of the Atlas mountains which here rise to their grandest proportions The spectacle of the mountains is superb Through the clear desert air the eye can follow the rugged contours of the range for great distances to the north and eastward The winter snows mantle them with white and the turquoise sky gives a setting for their grey rocks and gleaming caps that is of unrivaled beauty 56 With 130 000 hectares of greenery and over 180 000 palm trees in its Palmeraie Marrakesh is an oasis of rich plant variety Throughout the seasons fragrant orange fig pomegranate and olive trees display their color and fruits in Agdal Garden Menara Garden and other gardens in the city 77 The city s gardens feature numerous native plants alongside other species that have been imported over the course of the centuries including giant bamboos yuccas papyrus palm trees banana trees cypress philodendrons rose bushes bougainvilleas pines and various kinds of cactus plants Climate edit Marrakesh features a hot semi arid climate Koppen climate classification BSh with long hot dry summers and brief mild to cool winters Average temperatures range from 12 C 54 F in the winter to 26 30 C 79 86 F in the summer 78 The relatively wet winter and dry summer precipitation pattern of Marrakesh mirrors precipitation patterns found in Mediterranean climates However the city receives less rain than is typically found in a Mediterranean climate resulting in a semi arid climate classification Between 1961 and 1990 the city averaged 281 3 millimetres 11 1 in of precipitation annually 78 Barrows says of the climate The region of Marrakesh is frequently described as desert in character but to one familiar with the southwestern parts of the United States the locality does not suggest the desert rather an area of seasonal rainfall where moisture moves underground rather than by surface streams and where low brush takes the place of the forests of more heavily watered regions The location of Marrakesh on the north side of the Atlas rather than the south prevents it from being described as a desert city and it remains the northern focus of the Saharan lines of communication and its history its types of dwellers and its commerce and arts are all related to the great south Atlas spaces that reach further into the Sahara desert 79 Climate data for Marrakesh Morocco Menara International Airport 1991 2020 extremes 1900 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Record high C F 30 1 86 2 34 3 93 7 37 0 98 6 39 6 103 3 44 4 111 9 46 9 116 4 49 6 121 3 48 6 119 5 44 8 112 6 39 8 103 6 35 2 95 4 30 9 87 6 49 6 121 3 Mean daily maximum C F 19 1 66 4 20 7 69 3 23 6 74 5 25 7 78 3 29 4 84 9 33 6 92 5 37 7 99 9 37 4 99 3 32 5 90 5 28 5 83 3 23 1 73 6 20 1 68 2 27 6 81 7 Daily mean C F 12 5 54 5 14 2 57 6 17 0 62 6 19 0 66 2 22 3 72 1 25 8 78 4 29 2 84 6 29 3 84 7 25 6 78 1 22 1 71 8 16 9 62 4 13 7 56 7 20 6 69 1 Mean daily minimum C F 5 9 42 6 7 6 45 7 10 3 50 5 12 4 54 3 15 2 59 4 17 9 64 2 20 6 69 1 21 1 70 0 18 6 65 5 15 7 60 3 10 7 51 3 7 3 45 1 13 6 56 5 Record low C F 3 6 25 5 3 0 26 6 0 4 32 7 2 8 37 0 6 8 44 2 9 0 48 2 10 4 50 7 6 0 42 8 10 0 50 0 1 1 34 0 0 0 32 0 1 6 29 1 3 6 25 5 Average precipitation mm inches 25 0 0 98 25 7 1 01 35 2 1 39 26 3 1 04 10 5 0 41 3 1 0 12 2 2 0 09 4 7 0 19 15 2 0 60 19 1 0 75 29 8 1 17 24 2 0 95 221 0 8 70 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 3 0 3 7 4 7 2 9 1 5 0 6 0 3 0 8 1 3 2 4 3 8 4 1 29 1 Average relative humidity 65 66 61 60 58 55 47 47 52 59 62 65 58 Mean monthly sunshine hours 230 1 216 5 252 8 270 2 303 1 359 7 330 4 315 1 266 8 251 5 228 9 226 6 3 251 7 Source 1 NOAA sun 1981 2010 80 81 Source 2 Deutscher Wetterdienst record highs for February April May September and November and humidity 82 Meteo Climat record highs and record lows for June July and August only 83 Climate data for Marrakesh 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 11 0 10 0 12 1 Average Ultraviolet index 3 5 7 8 10 11 11 10 9 6 4 3 7 3 Source Weather Atlas 84 Climate change edit A 2019 paper published in PLOS One estimated that under Representative Concentration Pathway 4 5 a moderate scenario of climate change where global warming reaches 2 5 3 C 4 5 5 4 F by 2100 the climate of Marrakesh in the year 2050 would most closely resemble the current climate of Bir Lehlou in Western Sahara The annual temperature would increase by 2 9 C 5 2 F and the temperature of the coldest month by 1 6 C 2 9 F while the temperature of the warmest month would increase by 7 C 13 F 85 86 According to Climate Action Tracker the current warming trajectory appears consistent with 2 7 C 4 9 F which closely matches RCP 4 5 87 Water edit Marrakesh s water supply relies partly on groundwater resources which have lowered gradually over the last 40 years attaining an acute decline in the early 2000s Since 2002 groundwater levels have dropped by an average of 0 9 m per year in 80 of Marrakesh and its surrounding area The most affected area experienced a drop of 37 m more than 2 m per year 88 Demographics editAccording to the 2014 census the population of Marrakesh was 928 850 against 843 575 in 2004 The number of households in 2014 was 217 245 against 173 603 in 2004 89 90 Economy edit nbsp Sofitel Hotel April 2013 Marrakesh is a vital component of the economy and culture of Morocco 91 Improvements to the highways from Marrakesh to Casablanca Agadir and the local airport have led to a dramatic increase in tourism in the city which now attracts over two million tourists annually Because of the importance of tourism to Morocco s economy King Mohammed VI vowed in 2012 to double the number of tourists attracting 20 million a year to Morocco by 2020 92 The city is popular with the French and many French celebrities have bought property in the city including fashion moguls Yves St Laurent and Jean Paul Gaultier 93 In the 1990s very few foreigners lived in the city and real estate developments have dramatically increased in the last 15 years by 2005 over 3 000 foreigners had purchased properties in the city lured by its culture and the relatively cheap house prices 93 It has been cited in French weekly magazine Le Point as the second St Tropez No longer simply a destination for a scattering of adventurous elites bohemians or backpackers seeking Arabian Nights fantasies Marrakech is becoming a desirable stopover for the European jet set 93 However despite the tourism boom the majority of the city s inhabitants are still poor and as of 2010 update some 20 000 households still have no access to water or electricity 94 Many enterprises in the city are facing colossal debt problems 94 Despite the global economic crisis that began in 2007 investments in real estate progressed substantially in 2011 both in the area of tourist accommodation and social housing The main developments have been in facilities for tourists including hotels and leisure centres such as golf courses and health spas with investments of 10 9 billion dirham US 1 28 billion in 2011 95 96 The hotel infrastructure in recent years has experienced rapid growth In 2012 alone 19 new hotels were scheduled to open a development boom often compared to Dubai 92 Royal Ranches Marrakech one of Gulf Finance House s flagship projects in Morocco is a 380 hectares 940 acres resort under development in the suburbs and one of the world s first five star Equestrian Resorts 97 The resort is expected to make a significant contribution to the local and national economy creating many jobs and attracting thousands of visitors annually as of April 2012 it was about 45 complete 98 The Avenue Mohammed VI formerly Avenue de France is a major city thoroughfare It has seen rapid development of residential complexes and many luxury hotels Avenue Mohammed VI contains what is claimed to be Africa s largest nightclub 99 Pacha Marrakech a trendy club that plays house and electro house music 100 It also has two large cinema complexes Le Colisee a Gueliz and Cinema Rif and a new shopping precinct Al Mazar nbsp Menara Mall opened in 2015 Trade and crafts are extremely important to the local tourism fueled economy There are 18 souks in Marrakesh employing over 40 000 people in pottery copperware leather and other crafts The souks contain a massive range of items from plastic sandals to Palestinian style scarves imported from India or China Local boutiques are adept at making western style clothes using Moroccan materials 93 The Birmingham Post comments The souk offers an incredible shopping experience with a myriad of narrow winding streets that lead through a series of smaller markets clustered by trade Through the squawking chaos of the poultry market the gory fascination of the open air butchers shops and the uncountable number of small and specialist traders just wandering around the streets can pass an entire day 91 Marrakesh has several supermarkets including Marjane Acima Asswak Salam and Carrefour and three major shopping centres Al Mazar Mall Plaza Marrakech and Marjane Square a branch of Carrefour opened in Al Mazar Mall in 2010 101 102 Industrial production in the city is centred in the neighbourhood of Sidi Ghanem Al Massar containing large factories workshops storage depots and showrooms Ciments Morocco a subsidiary of a major Italian cement firm has a factory in Marrakech 103 The AeroExpo Marrakech International Exhibition of aeronautical industries and services is held here as is the Riad Art Expo Marrakesh is one of North Africa s largest centers of wildlife trade despite the illegality of most of this trade 104 Much of this trade can be found in the medina and adjacent squares Tortoises are particularly popular for sale as pets and Barbary macaques and snakes can also be seen 105 106 The majority of these animals suffer from poor welfare conditions in these stalls 107 Politics edit nbsp Marrakesh City Hall Marrakesh the regional capital constitutes a prefecture level administrative unit of Morocco Marrakech Prefecture forming part of the region of Marrakech Safi Marrakesh is a major centre for law and jurisdiction in Morocco and most of the major courts of the region are here These include the regional Court of Appeal the Commercial Court the Administrative Court the Court of First Instance the Court of Appeal of Commerce and the Administrative Court of Appeal 108 Numerous organizations of the region are based here including the regional government administrative offices the Regional Council of Tourism office and regional public maintenance organisations such as the Governed Autonomous Water Supply and Electricity and Maroc Telecom 109 Testament to Marrakesh s development as a modern city on 12 June 2009 Fatima Zahra Mansouri a then 33 year old lawyer and daughter of a former assistant to the local authority chief in Marrakesh was elected the first female mayor of the city defeating outgoing Mayor Omar Jazouli by 54 votes to 35 in a municipal council vote 110 111 Mansouri became the second woman in the history of Morocco to obtain a mayoral position after Asma Chaabi mayor of Essaouira 110 and was elected to serve as Marrakech s mayor for a second term in September 2021 112 Since the legislative elections in November 2011 the ruling political party in Marrakesh has for the first time been the Justice and Development Party or PDJ which also rules at the national level The party which advocates Islamism and Islamic democracy won five seats the National Rally of Independents RNI took one seat while the PAM won three 113 In the partial legislative elections for the Gueliz Ennakhil constituency in October 2012 the PDJ under the leadership of Ahmed El Moutassadik was again declared the winner with 10 452 votes The PAM largely consisting of friends of King Mohammed VI came in second place with 9 794 votes 114 Landmarks editMain article Landmarks of Marrakesh Jemaa el Fnaa edit nbsp Jemaa el Fnaa square The Jemaa el Fnaa is one of the best known squares in Africa and is the centre of city activity and trade It has been described as a world famous square a metaphorical urban icon a bridge between the past and the present the place where spectacularized Moroccan tradition encounters modernity 115 It has been part of the UNESCO World Heritage site since 1985 116 The square s name has several possible meanings the most plausible etymology endorsed by historians is that it meant ruined mosque or mosque of annihilation referring to the construction of a mosque within the square in the late 16th century that was left unfinished and fell into ruin 117 118 119 The square was originally an open space for markets located on the east side of the Ksar el Hajjar the main fortress and palace of the Almoravid dynasty who founded Marrakesh 22 52 Following the takeover of the city by the Almohads a new royal palace complex was founded to the south of the city the Kasbah and the old Almoravid palace was abandoned but the market square remained Subsequently with the fluctuating fortunes of the city Jemaa el Fnaa saw periods of decline and renewal 120 Historically this square was used for public executions by rulers who sought to maintain their power by frightening the public The square attracted dwellers from the surrounding desert and mountains to trade here and stalls were raised in the square from early in its history The square attracted tradesmen snake charmers wild dark frenzied men with long disheveled hair falling over their naked shoulders dancing boys of the Chleuh Atlas tribe and musicians playing pipes tambourines and African drums 121 Today the square attracts people from a diversity of social and ethnic backgrounds and tourists from all around the world Snake charmers acrobats magicians mystics musicians monkey trainers herb sellers story tellers dentists pickpockets and entertainers in medieval garb still populate the square 116 122 Souks edit nbsp nbsp Olives and colourful bejewelled slippers for sale Marrakesh has the largest traditional market in Morocco and the image of the city is closely associated with its souks Historically the souks of Marrakesh were divided into retail areas for particular goods such as leather carpets metalwork and pottery These divisions still roughly exist though with significant overlap Many of the souks sell items like carpets and rugs traditional Muslim attire leather bags and lanterns 123 Haggling is still a very important part of trade in the souks 124 One of the largest souks is Souk Semmarine which sells everything from brightly coloured bejewelled sandals and slippers and leather pouffes to jewellery and kaftans 125 Souk Ableuh contains stalls which specialize in lemons chilis capers pickles green red and black olives and mint a common ingredient of Moroccan cuisine and tea Similarly Souk Kchacha specializes in dried fruit and nuts including dates figs walnuts cashews and apricots 126 Rahba Qedima contains stalls selling hand woven baskets natural perfumes knitted hats scarves tee shirts Ramadan tea ginseng and alligator and iguana skins The Criee Berbere to the northeast of this market is noted for its dark Berber carpets and rugs 125 Souk Siyyaghin is known for its jewellery and Souk Smata nearby is noted for its extensive collection of babouches and belts Souk Cherratine specializes in leatherware and Souk Belaarif sells modern consumer goods 124 Souk Haddadine specializes in ironware and lanterns 127 The Medina is also famous for its street food Mechoui Alley is particularly famous for selling slow roasted lamb dishes 128 The Ensemble Artisanal located near the Koutoubia Mosque is a government run complex of small arts and crafts which offers a range of leather goods textiles and carpets Young apprentices are taught a range of crafts in the workshop at the back of this complex 129 City walls and gates edit Main article Walls of Marrakesh nbsp Medina walls of Marrakesh The ramparts of Marrakesh which stretch for some 19 kilometres 12 mi around the medina of the city were built by the Almoravids in the 12th century as protective fortifications The walls are made of a distinct orange red clay and chalk giving the city its nickname as the red city they stand up to 19 feet 5 8 m high and have 20 gates and 200 towers along them 130 nbsp Bab Agnaou the historic gate of the Kasbah Of the city s gates one of the best known is Bab Agnaou built in the late 12th century by the Almohad caliph Ya qub al Mansur as the main public entrance to the new Kasbah 131 132 The Berber name Agnaou like Gnaoua refers to people of Sub Saharan African origin cf Akal n iguinawen land of the black The gate was called Bab al Kohl the word kohl also meaning black or Bab al Qsar palace gate in some historical sources 133 The corner pieces are embellished with floral decorations This ornamentation is framed by three panels marked with an inscription from the Quran in Maghrebi script using foliated Kufic letters which were also used in Al Andalus Bab Agnaou was renovated and its opening reduced in size during the rule of sultan Mohammed ben Abdallah 134 nbsp Medina walls of Marrakesh in a photo of 1925 ETH Library The medina has at least eight main historic gates Bab Doukkala Bab el Khemis Bab ad Debbagh Bab Aylan Bab Aghmat Bab er Robb Bab el Makhzen and Bab el Arissa These date back to the 12th century during the Almoravid period and many have them have been modified since 135 52 Bab Doukkala in the northwestern part of the city wall is in general more massive and less ornamented than the other gates it takes its name from Doukkala area on the Atlantic coast well to the north of Marrakesh 136 Bab el Khemis is in the medina s northeastern corner and is named for the open air Thursday market Souq el Khemis 52 135 It is one of the city s main gates and features a man made spring 137 Bab ad Debbagh to the east has one of the most complex layouts of any gate with an interior passage that turns multiple times 135 Bab Aylan is located slightly further south of it 135 Bab Aghmat is one of the city s main southern gates located east of the Jewish and Muslim cemeteries and near the tomb of Ali ibn Yusuf 138 Bab er Robb is the other main southern exit from the city located near Bab Agnaou It has a curious position and layout which may be the result of multiple modifications to the surrounding area over the years 135 52 It provides access to roads leading to the mountain towns of Amizmiz and Asni Gardens edit nbsp Pavilion and reservoir of the Menara gardens The city is home to a number of gardens both historical and modern The largest and oldest gardens in the city are the Menara gardens to the west and the Agdal Gardens to the south The Menara Gardens were established in 1157 by the Almohad ruler Abd al Mu min 139 35 They are centered around a large water reservoir surrounded by orchards and olive groves A 19th century pavilion stands at the edge of the reservoir The Agdal Gardens were established during the reign of Abu Ya qub Yusuf r 1163 1184 and extend over a larger area today containing several water basins and palace structures 35 The Agdal Gardens cover about 340 hectares 1 3 sq mi and are surrounded by a circuit of pise walls 140 while the Menara Gardens cover around 96 hectares 0 37 sq mi 139 The water reservoirs for both gardens were supplied with water through an old hydraulic system known as khettaras which conveyed water from the foothills of the nearby Atlas Mountains 141 142 nbsp Majorelle Garden The Majorelle Garden on Avenue Yacoub el Mansour was at one time the home of the landscape painter Jacques Majorelle Famed designer Yves Saint Laurent bought and restored the property which features a stele erected in his memory 143 and the Museum of Islamic Art which is housed in a dark blue building 144 The garden open to the public since 1947 has a large collection of plants from five continents including cacti palms and bamboo 145 The Koutoubia Mosque is also flanked by another set of gardens the Koutoubia Gardens They feature orange and palm trees and are frequented by storks 146 The Mamounia Gardens more than 100 years old and named after Prince Moulay Mamoun have olive and orange trees as well as a variety of floral displays 147 In 2016 artist Andre Heller opened the acclaimed garden ANIMA near Ourika which combines a large collection of plants palms bamboo and cacti as well as works by Keith Haring Auguste Rodin Hans Werner Geerdts and other artists citation needed Palaces and Riads edit nbsp Courtyard in the Bahia Palace The historic wealth of the city is manifested in palaces mansions and other lavish residences The best known palaces today are the El Badi Palace and the Bahia Palace as well as the main Royal Palace which is still in use as one of the official residences of the King of Morocco Riads Moroccan mansions historically designating a type of garden 52 are common in Marrakesh Based on the design of the Roman villa they are characterized by an open central garden courtyard surrounded by high walls This construction provided the occupants with privacy and lowered the temperature within the building 148 Numerous riads and historic residences exist through the old city with the oldest documented examples dating back to the Saadian period 16th 17th centuries while many others date from the 19th and 20th centuries 45 52 Mosques edit nbsp Minaret of the Koutoubia Mosque The Koutoubia Mosque is one of the largest and most famous mosques in the city located southwest of Jemaa el Fnaa The mosque was founded in 1147 by the Almohad caliph Abd al Mu min A second version of the mosque was entirely rebuilt by Abd al Mu min around 1158 with Ya qub al Mansur possibly finalizing construction of the minaret around 1195 131 This second mosque is the structure that stands today It is considered a major example of Almohad architecture and of Moroccan mosque architecture generally 131 Its minaret tower the tallest in the city at 77 metres 253 ft in height is considered an important landmark and symbol of Marrakesh 149 150 It likely influenced other buildings such as the Giralda of Seville and the Hassan Tower of Rabat 132 151 20 152 Ben Youssef Mosque is named after the Almoravid sultan Ali ibn Yusuf who built the original mosque in the 12th century to serve as the city s main Friday mosque 153 After being abandoned during the Almohad period and falling into ruin it was rebuilt in the 1560s by Abdallah al Ghalib and then completely rebuilt again Moulay Sliman at the beginning of the 19th century 154 The 16th century Ben Youssef Madrasa is located next to it Also next to it is the Koubba Ba adiyn or Almoravid Koubba a rare architectural remnant of the Almoravid period which was excavated and restored in the 20th century The Koubba a domed kiosk structure demonstrates a sophisticated style and is an important indication of the art and architecture of the period 155 132 The Kasbah Mosque overlooks Place Moulay Yazid in the Kasbah district of Marrakesh close to the El Badi Palace It was built by the Almohad caliph Yaqub al Mansour in the late 12th century to serve as the main mosque of the kasbah citadel where he and his high officials resided 156 It contended with the Koutoubia Mosque for prestige and the decoration of its minaret was highly influential in subsequent Moroccan architecture 157 The mosque was repaired by the Saadi sultan Moulay Abdallah al Ghalib following a devastating explosion at a nearby gunpowder reserve in the second half of the 16th century 158 Notably the Saadian Tombs were built just outside its southern wall in this period 159 Among the other notable mosques of the city is the 14th century Ben Salah Mosque located east of the medina centre It is one of the only major Marinid era monuments in the city 160 The Mouassine Mosque also known as the Al Ashraf Mosque was built by the Saadian sultan Abdallah al Ghalib between 1562 63 and 1572 73 161 It was part of a larger architectural complex which included a library hammam public bathhouse and a madrasa school The complex also included a large ornate street fountain known as the Mouassine Fountain which still exists today 161 162 The Bab Doukkala Mosque built around the same time further west has a similar layout and style as the Mouassine Mosque Both the Mouassine and Bab Doukkala mosques appear to have been originally designed to anchor the development of new neighbourhoods after the relocation of the Jewish district from this area to the new mellah near the Kasbah 161 163 164 Tombs edit nbsp Saadian Tombs One of the most famous funerary monuments in the city is the Saadian Tombs which were built in the 16th century as a royal necropolis for the Saadian Dynasty It is located next to the south wall of the Kasbah Mosque The necropolis contains the tombs of many Saadian rulers including Muhammad al Shaykh Abdallah al Ghalib and Ahmad al Mansur as well as various family members and later sultans 159 It consists of two main structures each with several rooms standing within a garden enclosure The most important graves are marked by horizontal tombstones of finely carved marble while others are merely covered in colorful zellij tiles Al Mansur s mausoleum chamber is especially rich in decoration with a roof of carved and painted cedar wood supported on twelve columns of carrara marble and with walls decorated with geometric patterns in zellij tilework and vegetal motifs in carved stucco The chamber next to it originally a prayer room equipped with a mihrab was later repurposed as a mausoleum for members of the Alaouite dynasty 159 165 The city also holds the tombs of many Sufi figures Of these there are seven patron saints of the city which are visited every year by pilgrims during the seven day ziara pilgrimage During this time pilgrims visit the tombs in the following order Sidi Yusuf ibn Ali Sanhaji Sidi al Qadi Iyyad al Yahsubi Sidi Bel Abbas Sidi Mohamed ibn Sulayman al Jazouli Sidi Abdellaziz Tabba a Sidi Abdellah al Ghazwani and lastly Sidi Abderrahman al Suhayli 166 167 Many of these mausoleums also serve as the focus of their own zawiyas Sufi religious complexes with mosques including the Zawiya and mosque of Sidi Bel Abbes the most important of them 168 the Zawiya of al Jazuli the Zawiya of Sidi Abdellaziz the Zawiya of Sidi Yusuf ibn Ali and the Zawiya of Sidi al Ghazwani also known as Moulay el Ksour 169 Mellah edit The Mellah of Marrakesh is the old Jewish Quarter Mellah of the city and is located in the kasbah area of the city s medina east of Place des Ferblantiers It was created in 1558 by the Saadians at the site where the sultan s stables were 170 At the time the Jewish community consisted of a large portion of the city s tailors metalworkers bankers jewelers and sugar traders During the 16th century the Mellah had its own fountains gardens synagogues and souks Until the arrival of the French in 1912 Jews could not own property outside of the Mellah all growth was consequently contained within the limits of the neighborhood resulting in narrow streets small shops and higher residential buildings The Mellah today reconfigured as a mainly residential zone renamed Hay Essalam currently occupies an area smaller than its historic limits and has an almost entirely Muslim population The Slat al Azama Synagogue or Lazama Synagogue built around a central courtyard is in the Mellah 171 The Jewish cemetery here is the largest of its kind in Morocco Characterized by white washed tombs and sandy graves 171 the cemetery is within the Medina on land adjacent to the Mellah 172 According to the World Jewish Congress there were only 250 Moroccan Jews remaining in Marrakesh 173 Hotels edit nbsp Hotel Marrakech As one of the principal tourist cities in Africa Marrakesh has over 400 hotels Mamounia Hotel is a five star hotel in the Art Deco Moroccan fusion style built in 1925 by Henri Prost and A Marchis 174 It is considered the most eminent hotel of the city 175 176 and has been described as the grand dame of Marrakesh hotels The hotel has hosted numerous internationally renowned people including Winston Churchill Prince Charles and Mick Jagger 176 Churchill used to relax within the gardens of the hotel and paint there 177 The 231 room hotel 178 which contains a casino was refurbished in 1986 and again in 2007 by French designer Jacques Garcia 177 176 Other hotels include Eden Andalou Hotel Hotel Marrakech Sofitel Marrakech Palm Plaza Hotel amp Spa Royal Mirage Hotel Piscina del Hotel and Palmeraie Palace at the Palmeraie Rotana Resort 179 In March 2012 Accor opened its first Pullman branded hotel in Marrakech Pullman Marrakech Palmeraie Resort amp Spa Set in a 17 hectares 42 acres olive grove at La Palmeraie the hotel has 252 rooms 16 suites six restaurants and a 535 square metres 5 760 sq ft conference room 180 Culture editMuseums edit Marrakech Museum edit nbsp Marrakech Museum The Marrakech Museum housed in the Dar Menebhi Palace in the old city centre was built at the beginning of the 20th century by Mehdi Menebhi 181 182 The palace was carefully restored by the Omar Benjelloun Foundation and converted into a museum in 1997 183 The house itself represents an example of classical Andalusian architecture with fountains in the central courtyard traditional seating areas a hammam and intricate tilework and carvings 184 It has been cited as having an orgy of stalactite stucco work which drips from the ceiling and combines with a mind boggling excess of zellij work 184 The museum holds exhibits of both modern and traditional Moroccan art together with fine examples of historical books coins and pottery produced by Moroccan Jewish Berber and Arab peoples 185 186 Dar Si Said Museum edit nbsp Dar Si Said Museum Dar Si Said Museum also known as the Museum of Moroccan Arts is to the north of the Bahia Palace It was the mansion of Si Said brother to Grand Vizier Ba Ahmad and was constructed at the same time as Ahmad s own Bahia Palace The collection of the museum is considered to be one of the finest in Morocco with jewellery from the High Atlas the Anti Atlas and the extreme south carpets from the Haouz and the High Atlas oil lamps from Taroudannt blue pottery from Safi and green pottery from Tamegroute and leatherwork from Marrakesh 187 Among its oldest and most significant artifacts is an early 11th century marble basin from the late caliphal period of Cordoba Spain 188 Berber Museum edit The former home and villa of Jacques Majorelle a blue coloured building within the Majorelle Gardens was converted into the Berber Museum Musee Pierre Berge des Arts Berberes in 2011 after previously serving as a museum of Islamic art 189 190 191 It exhibits a variety of objects of Amazigh Berber culture from across different regions of Morocco 189 Other museums edit The House of Photography of Marrakech opened by Patrick Menac h and Hamid Mergani in 2009 holds exhibits of vintage Moroccan photography from the 1870s to 1950s It is housed in a renovated traditional house in the medina 192 193 The Mouassine Museum by the same owners consists of a historic 16th 17th century house in the Mouassine neighbourhood formerly inhabited by the family of painter Abdelhay Mellakh fr which was opened as a museum and cultural venue in 2014 and since 2020 has also served a museum of Moroccan music Musee de la Musique in addition to hosting musical performances 194 195 196 Elsewhere in the medina the Dar El Bacha hosts the Musee des Confluences which opened in 2017 197 The museum holds temporary exhibits highlighting different facets of Moroccan culture 198 as well as various art objects from different cultures across the world 199 The Tiskiwin Museum is housed in another restored medina mansion and features a collection of artifacts from across the former the trans Saharan trade routes that were connected to the city 200 201 Various other small and often privately owned museums also exist in the medina such as the Musee Boucharouite and the Perfume Museum Musee du Parfum 202 203 204 Dar Bellarj an arts center located in a former mansion next to the Ben Youssef Mosque also occasionally hosts art exhibits 205 202 A number of art galleries and museums are also found outside the medina in Gueliz and its surrounding districts in the new city 206 202 The Museum of Art and Culture of Marrakesh MACMA opened in 2016 houses a collection of Moroccan art objects and photography from the 1870s to 1970s 207 208 Since 2019 its collection of Orientalist paintings are now housed at its sister museum the Orientalist Museum in the medina 209 The Museum of African Contemporary Art Al Maaden MACAAL is a non profit art gallery that exhibits contemporary Moroccan and African art 206 210 The Yves Saint Laurent Museum opened in 2017 in a new building near the Jardin Majorelle displays a collection of work spanning the career of French fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent 211 It is a sister museum to the Yves Saint Laurent Museum in Paris 202 Music theatre and dance edit Two types of music are traditionally associated with Marrakesh Berber music is influenced by Andalusian classical music and typified by its oud accompaniment By contrast Gnaoua music is loud and funky with a sound reminiscent of the Blues It is performed on handmade instruments such as castanets ribabs three stringed banjos and deffs handheld drums Gnaoua music s rhythm and crescendo take the audience into a mood of trance the style is said to have emerged in Marrakesh and Essaouira as a ritual of deliverance from slavery 212 More recently several Marrakesh female music groups have also risen to popularity 213 The Theatre Royal de Marrakesh the Institut Francais and Dar Cherifa are major performing arts institutions in the city The Theatre Royal built by Tunisian architect Charles Boccara puts on theatrical performances of comedy opera and dance in French and Arabic 214 A greater number of theatrical troupes perform outdoors and entertain tourists on the main square and the streets especially at night citation needed Crafts edit nbsp Locally made hats The arts and crafts of Marrakesh have had a wide and enduring impact on Moroccan handicrafts to the present day Riad decor is widely used in carpets and textiles ceramics woodwork metal work and zelij Carpets and textiles are weaved sewn or embroidered sometimes used for upholstering Moroccan women who practice craftsmanship are known as Maalems expert craftspeople and make such fine products as Berber carpets and shawls made of sabra another name for rayon also sometimes called cactus silk 213 215 Ceramics are in monochrome Berber style only a limited tradition depicting bold forms and decorations 213 Wood crafts are generally made of cedar including the riad doors and palace ceilings Orange wood is used for making ladles known as harira lentil soup ladles Thuya craft products are made of caramel coloured thuya a conifer indigenous to Morocco Since this species is almost extinct these trees are being replanted and promoted by the artists cooperative Femmes de Marrakech 213 Metalwork made in Marrakesh includes brass lamps iron lanterns candle holders made from recycled sardine tins and engraved brass teapots and tea trays used in the traditional serving of tea Contemporary art includes sculpture and figurative paintings Blue veiled Tuareg figurines and calligraphy paintings are also popular 213 Festivals edit Festivals both national and Islamic are celebrated in Marrakesh and throughout the country and some of them are observed as national holidays 216 Cultural festivals of note held in Marrakesh include the National Folklore Festival the Marrakech Festival of Popular Arts in which a variety of famous Moroccan musicians and artists participate international folklore festival Marrakech Folklore Days 217 and the Berber Festival 216 218 The International Film Festival of Marrakech which aspires to be the North African version of the Cannes Film Festival was established in 2001 219 The festival which showcases over 100 films from around the world annually has attracted Hollywood stars such as Martin Scorsese Francis Ford Coppola Susan Sarandon Jeremy Irons Roman Polanski and many European Arab and Indian film stars 219 The Marrakech Bienniale was established in 2004 by Vanessa Branson as a cultural festival in various disciplines including visual arts cinema video literature performing arts and architecture 220 Food edit nbsp nbsp Left Tanjias prepared in terracotta pots sealed with paper Right Moroccan mint tea prepared with gunpowder tea fresh mint and sugar Surrounded by lemon orange and olive groves the city s culinary characteristics are rich and heavily spiced but not hot using various preparations of Ras el hanout which means Head of the shop a blend of dozens of spices which include ash berries chilli cinnamon grains of paradise monk s pepper nutmeg and turmeric 221 A specialty of the city and the symbol of its cuisine is tanjia marrakshia affectionately referred to as bint ar rimad بنت الرماد daughter of the ash a local meal prepared with beef meat spices and smen and slow cooked in a ceramic pot in traditional oven in hot ashes 222 Tajines can be prepared with chicken lamb beef or fish adding fruit olives and preserved lemon vegetables and spices including cumin peppers saffron turmeric and ras el hanout The meal is prepared in a tajine pot and slow cooked with steam Another version of tajine includes vegetables and chickpeas seasoned with flower petals 223 Tajines may also be basted with smen Moroccan ghee that has a flavour similar to blue cheese 224 Shrimp chicken and lemon filled briouats are another traditional specialty of Marrakesh Rice is cooked with saffron raisins spices and almonds while couscous may have added vegetables A pastilla is a filo wrapped pie stuffed with minced chicken or pigeon that has been prepared with almonds cinnamon spices and sugar 225 Harira soup in Marrakesh typically includes lamb with a blend of chickpeas lentils vermicelli and tomato paste seasoned with coriander spices and parsley Kefta mince meat liver in crepinette merguez and tripe stew are commonly sold at the stalls of Jemaa el Fnaa 226 nbsp A massive shebakia in Marrakesh The desserts of Marrakesh include chebakia sesame spice cookies usually prepared and served during Ramadan tartlets of filo dough with dried fruit or cheesecake with dates 227 The Moroccan tea culture is practiced in Marrakesh green tea with mint is served with sugar from a curved teapot spout into small glasses 228 Another popular non alcoholic drink is orange juice 229 Under the Almoravids alcohol consumption was common 230 historically hundreds of Jews produced and sold alcohol in the city 231 In the present day alcohol is sold in some hotel bars and restaurants 232 Education edit nbsp Universite Privee de Marrakech Marrakesh has several universities and schools including Cadi Ayyad University also known as the University of Marrakech and its component the Ecole nationale des sciences appliquees de Marrakech ENSA Marrakech which was created in 2000 by the Ministry of Higher Education and specializes in engineering and scientific research and the La faculte des sciences et techniques gueliz which known to be number one in Morocco in its kind of faculties 233 234 Cadi Ayyad University was established in 1978 and operates 13 institutions in the Marrakech Tensift Elhaouz and Abda Doukkala regions of Morocco in four main cities including Kalaa of Sraghna Essaouira and Safi in addition to Marrakech 235 Sup de Co Marrakech also known as the Ecole Superieure de Commerce de Marrakech is a private four year college that was founded in 1987 by Ahmed Bennis The school is affiliated with the Ecole Superieure de Commerce of Toulouse France since 1995 the school has built partnership programs with numerous American universities including the University of Delaware University of St Thomas Oklahoma State University National Louis University and Temple University Ben Youssef Madrasa edit nbsp The courtyard of the Ben Youssef Madrasa The Ben Youssef Madrasa north of the Medina was an Islamic college in Marrakesh named after the Almoravid sultan Ali ibn Yusuf 1106 1142 who expanded the city and its influence considerably It is the largest madrasa in all of Morocco and was one of the largest theological colleges in North Africa at one time housing as many as 900 students 236 This education complex specialized in Quranic law and was linked to similar institutions in Fez Taza Sale and Meknes 237 The Madrasa was constructed by the Saadian Sultan Abdallah al Ghalib 1557 1574 in 1564 as the largest and most prestigious madrasa in Morocco 237 The construction ordered by Abdallah al Ghalib was completed in 1565 as attested by the inscription in the prayer room 238 Its 130 student dormitory cells cluster around a courtyard richly carved in cedar marble and stucco In accordance with Islam the carvings contain no representation of humans or animals consisting entirely of inscriptions and geometric patterns One of the school s best known teachers was Mohammed al Ifrani 1670 1745 After a temporary closure beginning in 1960 the building was refurbished and reopened to the public as a historical site in 1982 239 Sports editFootball clubs based in Marrakesh include Najm de Marrakech KAC Marrakech Mouloudia de Marrakech and Chez Ali Club de Marrakech The city contains the Circuit International Automobile Moulay El Hassan a race track which hosts the World Touring Car Championship and from 2017 FIA Formula E The Marrakech Marathon is also held here 240 Roughly 5000 runners turn out for the event annually 241 Also here takes place Grand Prix Hassan II tennis tournament on clay part of ATP World Tour series Marrakech could host matches at the 2030 FIFA World Cup Golf is a popular sport in Marrakech The city has three golf courses just outside the city limits and played almost through the year The three main courses are the Golf de Amelikis on the road to Ourazazate the Palmeraie Golf Palace near the Palmeraie and the Royal Golf Club the oldest of the three courses 242 Jnan Amar Polo Club is located in Tameslouht near Marrakech Transport editBus edit nbsp BRT Marrakesh BRT Marrakesh a bus rapid transit system using trolleybuses was opened in 2017 243 Rail edit nbsp Marrakesh railway station The Marrakesh railway station is linked by several trains running daily to other major cities in Morocco such as Casablanca Tangiers Fez Meknes and Rabat The Casablanca Tangier high speed rail line opened in November 2018 244 In 2015 a tramway was proposed Road edit The main road network within and around Marrakesh is well paved The major highway connecting Marrakesh with Casablanca to the north is the A7 a toll expressway 210 km 130 mi in length The road from Marrakesh to Settat a 146 km 91 mi stretch was inaugurated by King Mohammed VI in April 2007 completing the 558 km 347 mi highway to Tangiers Highway A7 connects also Marrakesh to Agadir 233 km 145 mi to the south west 244 Air edit nbsp Marrakesh Menara Airport The Marrakesh Menara Airport RAK is 3 km 1 9 mi southwest of the city centre It is an international facility that receives several European flights as well as flights from Casablanca and several Arab nations 245 The airport is at an elevation of 471 metres 1 545 ft at 31 36 25 N 008 02 11 W 31 60694 N 8 03639 W 31 60694 8 03639 246 It has two formal passenger terminals these are more or less combined into one large terminal A third terminal is being built 247 The existing T1 and T2 terminals offer a space of 42 000 m2 450 000 sq ft and have a capacity of 4 5 million passengers per year The blacktopped runway is 4 5 km 2 8 mi long and 45 m 148 ft wide The airport has parking space for 14 Boeing 737 and four Boeing 747 aircraft The separate freight terminal has 340 m2 3 700 sq ft of covered space 248 Healthcare editMarrakesh has long been an important centre for healthcare in Morocco and the regional rural and urban populations alike are reliant upon hospitals in the city The psychiatric hospital installed by the Merinid Caliph Ya qub al Mansur in the 16th century was described by the historian Abd al Wahfd al Marrakushi as one of the greatest in the world at the time 249 A strong Andalusian influence was evident in the hospital and many of the physicians to the Caliphs came from places such as Seville Zaragoza and Denia in eastern Spain 249 A severe strain has been placed upon the healthcare facilities of the city in the last decade as the city population has grown dramatically 250 Ibn Tofail University Hospital is one of the major hospitals of the city 251 In February 2001 the Moroccan government signed a loan agreement worth eight million U S dollars with The OPEC Fund for International Development to help improve medical services in and around Marrakesh which led to expansions of the Ibn Tofail and Ibn Nafess hospitals Seven new buildings were constructed with a total floor area of 43 000 square metres 460 000 sq ft New radiotherapy and medical equipment was provided and 29 000 square metres 310 000 sq ft of existing hospital space was rehabilitated 250 In 2009 king Mohammed VI inaugurated a regional psychiatric hospital in Marrakesh built by the Mohammed V Foundation for Solidarity costing 22 million dirhams approximately 2 7 million U S dollars 252 The hospital has 194 beds covering an area of 3 hectares 7 4 acres 252 Mohammed VI has also announced plans for the construction of a 450 million dirham military hospital in Marrakesh 253 International relations editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Morocco Marrakesh is twinned with 254 nbsp Granada Spain nbsp Marseille France nbsp Granby Canada nbsp Ningbo China nbsp Scottsdale United States nbsp Sousse Tunisia nbsp Timbuktu MaliNotable people editAmine Amamou footballer Ibn al Banna al Marrakushi 13th century mathematician and astronomer Ibn Idhari 13th century historian Abdelwahid al Marrakushi 13th century historian Abd el Ouahed ben Messaoud 16th century Moroccan diplomat and ambassador to Elizabeth I of England possible inspiration for Shakespeare s Othello character Ahmad ibn Qasim Al Hajari prominent 16th century Morisco who escaped the Spanish Inquisition and worked as an ambassador for Morocco Abdelali Mhamdi professional goalkeeper Ahmed Bahja Former footballer Hasna Benhassi Former middle distance runner Tahar El Khalej Former footballer Abdellah Jlaidi footballer Abdelali Mhamdi footballer Adil Ramzi Former footballer Salaheddine Saidi footballer Tahar Tamsamani Former boxerSee also edit nbsp Morocco portal Arab Astronomical Society 2016 List of people from Marrakesh Marrakesh in popular cultureReferences edit Morocco Population Census Marrakesh مراكش High Commission for Planning 19 March 2015 p 7 Retrieved 12 August 2017 a b Note de presentation des 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 Marrakech or Marrakesh Collins Dictionary n d Archived from the original on 9 December 2014 Retrieved 24 September 2014 a b Shillington 2005 p 948 a b Nanjira 2010 p 208 a b c d e Searight 1999 p 378 Egginton amp Pitz 2010 p 11 Bosworth 1989 p 588 Cornell 1998 p 15 RAE RAE Marrakech Diccionario panhispanico de dudas Diccionario panhispanico de dudas in Spanish Archived from the original on 2021 11 07 Retrieved 2020 09 07 Bosworth 1989 p 593 a b Gottreich 2007 p 10 Morocco Country Study Guide International Business Publications 1 April 2006 p 23 ISBN 978 0 7397 1514 7 Archived from the original on 26 June 2014 Retrieved 29 June 2013 Rogerson amp Lavington 2004 p xi Deverdun 1959 pp 59 64 Gerteiny 1967 p 28 Deverdun 1959 p 61 Deverdun 1959 p 59 63 Messier 2010 p 180 Abun Nasr 1987 p 83 Salmon 2018 p 33 Wilbaux 2001 p 208 Bennison 2016 p 22 34 Lintz Delery amp Tuil Leonetti 2014 p 565 Bloom amp Blair 2009 Marrakesh Naylor 2009 p 90 Park amp Boum 2006 p 238 a b Bennison 2016 Deverdun 1959 pp 56 59 a b Deverdun 1959 p 143 Skounti Ahmed Tebaa Ouidad 2006 La Place Jemaa El Fna patrimoine immateriel de Marrakech du Maroc et de l humanite in French Rabat Bureau de l UNESCO pour le Maghreb pp 25 27 Archived from the original on November 7 2021 Retrieved May 12 2019 Wilbaux 2001 p 115 The Rotarian Rotary Rotary International 14 July 2005 ISSN 0035 838X Archived from the original on 26 June 2014 Retrieved 9 October 2012 Lehmann Henss amp Szerelmy 2009 p 292 Bloom amp Blair 2009 pp 111 115 Wilbaux 2001 pp 223 224 Deverdun 1959 p 85 87 110 Wilbaux 2001 p 224 Bennison 2016 p 60 70 a b Bennison 2016 p 307 Wilbaux 2001 p 241 Wilbaux 2001 p 224 246 a b c Navarro Julio Garrido Fidel Almela Inigo 2017 The Agdal of Marrakesh 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Archived from the original on 2015 10 26 Retrieved 2015 09 07 Wilbaux Quentin 2001 La medina de Marrakech Formation des espaces urbains d une ancienne capitale du Maroc Paris L Harmattan ISBN 2747523888 Salmon Xavier 2016 Marrakech Splendeurs saadiennes 1550 1650 Paris LienArt ISBN 9782359061826 Salmon Xavier 2018 Maroc Almoravide et Almohade Architecture et decors au temps des conquerants 1055 1269 Paris LienArt Further reading editFernea Elizabeth Warnock 1988 A Street in Marrakech A Personal View of Urban Women in Morocco Waveland Press ISBN 978 0 88133 404 3 Mourad Khireddine 1994 Marrakech Et La Mamounia in French www acr edition com ISBN 978 2 86770 081 1 Wilbaux Quentin 2009 Marrakesh The Secret of Courtyard Houses Translated by McElhearn Kirk ACR Edition ISBN 978 2 86770 130 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marrakech nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Marrakesh Moroccan National Tourist Office Bulletin du Patrimoine Patrimoines de Marrakech local publication in French on the city s historic heritage also available on Academia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marrakesh amp oldid 1220815662, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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