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Fez travel
Fez travel




fez travel

You’ll be able to find many of them across the medina and in the new city. Fez has a certain roughness not just visible in its architecture.Įven though many “Fessi” trade their medina home for a more modern home in the novelle city, it is still home to 70 000 people.Ī hammam is a typical Moroccan bathing house. You’ll be able to find century-old grand buildings, stunning hidden plazas, delicate wells behind rustic, decrepit alleys and buildings. Even the city’s waste is carried away on mules. You’ll see tourists roaming the streets, salesmen who seem to be able to talk any language of this world next to mules pulling carts as in the middle ages. It felt cosmopolitan and yet quaint at the same time. Fez, one of the four royal cities of Morroco, was home to respected Imans, artists and scholars is a proud, confident city. As you roam through the streets, you’ll be able to watch artisans apply century old traditions. Moroccans are proud of their traditions and heritage. Some of them more extensive, some of them so narrow you almost didn’t recognize it them as a path. Fez’s old city, the medina consists of more than 9400 alleys. Until today, the medina of Fez is the largest car-free zone in the world.

fez travel

The medina of Fez – the wold’s biggest car-free zone Our beautifully decorated, a two-story room almost took our breath away. We were mesmerized as soon as we entered our “Dar.” Hidden behind a small door, a spacious inner courtyard awaited us. As we followed him through the medina, we were already falling for Fez. Mohammed, our first host, expected us with a big almost toothless grin. We pictured us walking through picturesque arches, wandering narrow alleys, and exploring new flavors. It sounded amazing to just get lost and discover Morroco. The Islamic zellij, or mosaics, are particularly impressive.The walled “medina” of Fez is known to be a maze to everyone who hasn’t grown up there. Magnificent stucco work and intricate wood carving can be found throughout, while expensive marbles glisten in the courtyard. Although the layout of the college is relatively simple, the adornments that cover almost every surface are not. It is one of the finest extant examples of Marinid architecture in Morocco and is open to members of all faiths. Medersa Bou Inania-The Medersa Bou Inania is a historic Islamic college built during the rule of the Marinids.Non-Muslims will have to content themselves with viewing the mosque from the outside, however, because they are not allowed to enter inside. The library at Kairaouine Mosque is one of the oldest and most important in the world. It's also associated with the world's oldest continuously run university, the University of Al-Karaouine, whose origins date back to the mid-9th century. Kairaouine Mosque-Tucked deep into the heart of the medina, the Kairaouine Mosque is the second-largest mosque in the country.However, the rainbow colors of the dye vats in the early morning make for excellent photos. Pigeon dung is used to soften the leather before it is dyed, and the stench of the tanneries is often overwhelming. Here, skins are laid out to dry in the hot sun and vast vats are filled with dyes made from turmeric, poppy, mint, and indigo. Chaouwara Tanneries-Fez is famous for its leather, and at traditional tanneries like Chaouwara, leather production methods have changed very little since medieval times.






Fez travel