Rabat
Rabat from across the river
Hassan Tower, Rabat
Rabat is the current capital of modern Morocco and has much to thank the French for, its well designed boulevards are a perfect setting for the culture and grandeur a state capital should offer. The Royal Palace, the unfinished mosque with its striking Hassan Tower, the necropolis at Chellah and the grand Mauosoleum of the Kings (Mohammed V and Hassan II) are a perfect combination of sights for the visitor. Rabat has a human scale and even its medina and souk are laid back and laid out in grid pattern. Rabat is a great day out if you are staying nearby as it has excellent train connections from Casablanca, Fes, Meknes and Marrakech. Gardens, promenades, great avenues and a broad array of festivals: Rabat takes the time to live life to the full.
The frenetic activity down by the river and the peace of the Kasbah make up the hidden gem of Morocco - do not miss.  
We have chosen:

La Tour Hassan
Villa Mandarine
Riad Kalaa
La Tour Hassan Hotel, Rabat
Villa Mandarine, Rabat
Riad Kalaa
Rabat's premier hotel, old world style and modern luxury together with an excellent location.
A wonderful find, a small family-run guest house transformed from a mansion house; full of luxury and character.
A high quality riad property in the heart of the medina ramparts, only a few steps from the ocean. The Riad Kalaa, originally built in 1815, has undergone a thorough restoration.


Skhirat Plage
Golden Tulip Hotel, Rabat
Recently fully refurbished, great location next to the Hassan Tower and the overlooking the river too.
A good budget hotel in the very centre of Rabat.
L’Amphitrite Palace sits majestically in manicured gardens next to its Atlantic Ocean beach. This hotel offers five-star luxury away from the madding crowd of the city.
Sightseeing: start your tour in the south of the city, the gardens on Mechouar Square await you for a stroll by the Royal Palace. Go back towards the town centre and take the time to visit the archaeological museum: it has some excellent exhibits from the excavations at several of the country’s archaeological sites, notably Volubilis and Lixus. Also in the town centre, you will find Mohammed V Avenue, lined with art deco buildings, with its wide avenues and parks, this area of the city harmoniously borders the old medina.
A fabulous medina: Made of adobe in the 12th century, the Andalusian ramparts protect the south side of the medina. The rectilinear layout of the old city is impressive as it is very different from the traditional mazes of streets. You can enter through the Bab El Had gate, scene of the Sunday market. This is where Souika street begins, the biggest and probably most animated in the medina. It leads to the Great Mosque and ends up at the Souk Es Sebat, the shoe market covered with reed mats and overflowing with hundreds of babouches, leather and handcraft goods and gold and silver jewellery. Then, along Rue des Consuls, which is partially covered by glass roofs, artisans work before your eyes on their deep-pile carpets, fabrics and copper objects. Heading back north, you approach the gate of the Oudayas.
Oudayas Kasbah: This fortress quarter conserved its old cannons positioned on a bulwark. Beautiful and massive, its door is carved from top to bottom, and one of the towers houses three art galleries. The white and blue facades create a very Mediterranean ambiance. Its cobblestone streets lead to El Atiqa mosque, the city’s oldest, and then to the platform of the ancient semaphore. From here, as from the terrace of café Maure just nearby, the view of Rabat, its neighbour Salé, and the meeting of Bouregreg river and the ocean is simply splendid. From up high, the Oudayas Palace, which today houses the national museum, has conserved its original ornamentations, imprints of sobriety and equilibrium. The Andalusian garden at its feet is a haven of peacefulness full of fruit trees, rosebays and cascades of bougainvilleas.
City gate, Rabat
entrance to the Chellah, Rabat
Lighthouse, Rabat
Sightseeing nearby: Beyond the city’s ramparts, other walls conceal an enchanting place: this small, fertile valley, with its prickly pear trees, palm trees and olive trees, was chosen by the Merinides dynasty in the 13th century to accommodate their final residency. Stroll through the sepulchres in the shade of the ruins of a sanctuary where the minaret acts as refuge to the storks. A little further along stand other ruins of a more distant past: those of Sala la Romaine. From the other side of the mouth of Bouregreg river, Salé, the old city of pirates, faces the capital. Founded before Rabat at the start of the 12th century, its medina, lined with fountains, magnificent riads, and mosques, buzzes with activity. Don’t forget the Medersa, the Koranic school, a renowned chef d’oeuvre of Merinides art. Be sure to visit the Chellah necropolis, this peaceful place, the last residence of the Merinide sovereigns, it is protected by imposing walls, where storks like to build their nests. This is also where the old Roman city of Salé uses to be. You will admire the ruins of a triumphal arch, the forum, thermal bathes and several shops.
Festivals: In Rabat, the year is brimming with a wide variety of events and festivals, bearing witness to great cultural dynamism. In May, music holds the place of honour in the Mawazine world music festival. The International Alternative Film Festival takes place in June, and music returns to centre stage in November with the Plucked String Instrument Festival. An ancestral tradition persists on rue des Consuls in the medina in the area covered by glass ceilings. Every Monday and Thursday morning, a rug auction takes place. A guaranteed spectacle. An art gallery in the wall - The magnificent Bab Rouah, the "Gate of the Winds", is monumental. It stands out for the richness of its adornments. It has become a gallery for exhibitions. Under the elaborate arches of the four square rooms, the works of famous Moroccan artists have found their venue.
The Candles Festival - Every year in the month of May, the city of Salé celebrates Sidi Abdallah Ben Hassoune, the city's saint, during the Candles Festival. Accompanied by musiciens and flag bearers, a long parade of men in colourful attire and carrying huge wax lamps comprised of thousands of sculpted and dyed pieces, moves through the city's main streets to arrive at the holy man marabout.
Military ceremonies - Every day at exactly 10:45 AM, you can enter the court of the barracks of the royal guard to attend the ceremony of the hoisting of the colours - the hoisting of the national flag. Also spectacular is the changing of the mounted guard, which takes place every day at 7:00 AM before the Hassan Tower. From the esplanade of this tower, cannon shots are fired the evening before the main religious festivals.

 rediscover.co.uk

 
Video By youtube.com

Nhãn: ,

Leave a Reply