The monumental gate of the kasbah, located uphill and overlooking Rabat below, is considered one of most beautiful gates of Almohad and Moroccan architecture. It goes by the name Bab Oudaia (“Udaya Gate”) or Bab al-Kbir (“Great Gate”). It was built by the Almohad caliph Ya’qub al-Mansur between 1195 and 1199, inserted into the previous walls of the kasbah built by Abd al-Mu’min around 1150. It has both an outer facade and an inner facade , both richly decorated. During this time they built a broad platform on the kasbah’s northeastern edge, overlooking the river, which was used for semaphore signalling.

The people who live in the Medina are the people who want to sell their time. This is where you find the wealthy, and the people who work in the city. Its a place where the people are allowed to live and pray, but its also a place where you can do business. The people of the Kasbah and the Medina are very different. The Kasbah is the city’s most famous district and the only place where the “real” people live.

Most eateries are on the major pedestrian thoroughfare of Ave Mohammed V, which runs between the Medina Rabat tram stop and Ave Laalou, the medina’s northern boundary. Rome2rio’s Travel Guide series provide vital information for the global traveller. Read our range of informative guides on popular transport routes and companies – including How do I buy a London Underground ticket? Morocco’s comfortable and fast train network is operated by ONCF and links many tourist destinations, including a high-speed TGV link from Tangier via Rabat and Casablanca to Marrakech.

Tour the Royal Palace, Oudaya Garden & Kasbah and the Hassan Tower Mosque. The main attraction of today, visit the ancient Roman city of Volubilis, a UNESCO World Heritage Site dating back to 40AD. Pass through the former capital, Berber town of Meknes, which consists of intricate gateways and gardens to arrive at Fez. The southern part of the kasbah includes a former pavilion or palace residence built by Sultan Moulay Ismail (ruled 1672–1727) at the end of the 17th century.

Travel south against the flow of the river to the medieval necropolis of Chellah. Near here is the Royal Palace of Rabat, where Morocco’s royal family resides. French fleet as part of French campaigns against the Algerian emir Abdelkader. The Spanish then invaded Morocco in 1860, thus challenging a British policy aimed at preventing any Continental power from securing control of the southern shore of the Strait of Gibraltar. This situation led the British to issue a warning that a permanent Spanish occupation of Tangier or of the nearby Moroccan coast would not be permitted.

Nothing quite prepares you for the sights and sounds of Morocco. It is a tourist’s haven with its easily manageable souks beckoning everyone to come and buy. English is not the preferred language and if you are not conversant in French or Arabic, constant miming, gesticulating or some broken Spanish may see you through.

Don’t miss the newly painted Jidar Street Festival ‘Toiles De Rue’ two murals on the outside walls of the museum. Lastly, we love the business of Dar D’Art Ceramics, run by friendly brothers Mohammed and Jawad. The shop has a large supply of everything from ceramics to Moroccan teapots, platters, and teacups.

Standing tall at 77 meters it soars past a mosque of the Almohad dynasty and at night seems to glow over the medina. There are the historic brownsvillepd blog Jardins de’l Agdal and the Majorelle Gardens. The Museum of Marrakech is a 19th-century palace devoted to contemporary art.