0:26
entrance-old-city-meknes-miknasa-morocco.
...
published: 08 Mar 2012
author: eliot minouch
entrance-old-city-meknes-miknasa-morocco.
4:57
Medina of Meknes
The land upon which the city is founded and much of its surrounding territory came under t...
published: 21 Mar 2008
author: ottawabwb
Medina of Meknes
Medina of Meknes
The land upon which the city is founded and much of its surrounding territory came under the domination of the Roman Empire in 117 AD. The original community...- published: 21 Mar 2008
- views: 154666
- author: ottawabwb
14:34
Maroko. Meknes.مكناس
Drugie z cesarskich miast Maroka, była stolica tego kraju, zwana marokańskim Wersalem. His...
published: 22 May 2011
author: STRABSEN
Maroko. Meknes.مكناس
Maroko. Meknes.مكناس
Drugie z cesarskich miast Maroka, była stolica tego kraju, zwana marokańskim Wersalem. Historia miasta sięga VIII wieku, kiedy powstała w tym miejscu pierwsz...- published: 22 May 2011
- views: 1125
- author: STRABSEN
3:42
Morocco - city of Meknes has a history
Meknes City (Arabic: مكناس, Berber: ⵎⴽⵏⴰⵙ Mknas or Meknas, French: Meknès, Spanish: Mequi...
published: 25 May 2014
Morocco - city of Meknes has a history
Morocco - city of Meknes has a history
Meknes City (Arabic: مكناس, Berber: ⵎⴽⵏⴰⵙ Mknas or Meknas, French: Meknès, Spanish: Mequinez) is a city in northern Morocco. It is served by the A2 expressway between those two cities and by the corresponding railway. Meknes was the capital of Morocco under the reign of Moulay Ismail (1672--1727), before it was relocated to Marrakech. The population is 1,000,000 (2012 census). It is the capital of the Meknes-Tafilalet region. Meknes is named after a Berber tribe which was known as Miknasa (native Berber name: Imeknasen) in the medieval North African sources ...History A Berber tribe called the Miknasa, originally from the Tunisian south, settled here in the 9th century. The Almoravids founded a fortress here in the 11th century. It resisted the Almohads rise, and was thus destroyed by them, only to be rebuilt in a larger size with mosques and large fortifications. Under the Merinids it received further madrasas, kasbahs and mosques in the early 14th century, and continued to thrive under the Wattasid dynasty. Meknes saw its golden age as the imperial capital of Moulay Ismail following his accession to the Sultanate of Morocco (1672--1727 He installed under the old city a large prison to house Christian sailors captured on the sea, and also constructed numerous edifices, gardens, monumental gates, mosques (whence the city's nickname of "City of a Hundred Minarets and the large line of wall, having a length of 40 kilometres (25 miles). According to the ICOMOS Heritage at Risk report of 2000, the historic city of Meknes contains insufficient drainage systems, and as a result suffers from inundation and leakage in certain areas. Meknes On From Wikipedia, Rade L channel....- published: 25 May 2014
- views: 9
6:47
Maroc Meknes 2014
Meknes City (Arabic: مكناس, Berber: ⵎⴽⵏⴰⵙ Mknas or Meknas, French: Meknès, Spanish: Mequi...
published: 09 Mar 2014
Maroc Meknes 2014
Maroc Meknes 2014
Meknes City (Arabic: مكناس, Berber: ⵎⴽⵏⴰⵙ Mknas or Meknas, French: Meknès, Spanish: Mequinez) is a city in northern Morocco. It is served by the A2 expressway between those two cities and by the corresponding railway. Meknes was the capital of Morocco under the reign of Moulay Ismail (1672--1727), before it was relocated to Marrakech. The population is 1,000,000 (2012 census). It is the capital of the Meknes-Tafilalet region. Meknes is named after a Berber tribe which was known as Miknasa (native Berber name: Imeknasen) in the medieval North African sources ...History A Berber tribe called the Miknasa, originally from the Tunisian south, settled here in the 9th century. The Almoravids founded a fortress here in the 11th century. It resisted the Almohads rise, and was thus destroyed by them, only to be rebuilt in a larger size with mosques and large fortifications. Under the Merinids it received further madrasas, kasbahs and mosques in the early 14th century, and continued to thrive under the Wattasid dynasty. Meknes saw its golden age as the imperial capital of Moulay Ismail following his accession to the Sultanate of Morocco (1672--1727 He installed under the old city a large prison to house Christian sailors captured on the sea, and also constructed numerous edifices, gardens, monumental gates, mosques (whence the city's nickname of "City of a Hundred Minarets and the large line of wall, having a length of 40 kilometres (25 miles). According to the ICOMOS Heritage at Risk report of 2000, the historic city of Meknes contains insufficient drainage systems, and as a result suffers from inundation and leakage in certain areas. Meknes On From Wikipedia, Rade L channel....- published: 09 Mar 2014
- views: 15
1:14
Fez, Morocco HD
Fez - Morocco Travel Guide, Tours, Tourism, Vacations HD
World Travel https://www.youtube....
published: 01 Feb 2014
Fez, Morocco HD
Fez, Morocco HD
Fez - Morocco Travel Guide, Tours, Tourism, Vacations HD World Travel https://www.youtube.com/user/World1Tube Fès or Fez is the third largest city of Morocco, with a population of approximately 1 million (2010). It is the capital of the Fès-Boulemane region. The city has two old medinas, the larger of which is Fes el Bali. It is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site and is believed to be one of the world's largest car-free urban areas. Al-Qarawiyyin, founded in AD 859, is the oldest continuously functioning madrasa in the world. The city has been called the "Mecca of the West" and the "Athens of Africa". History Etymology Until the Almoravid rule in the 11th century, Fes consisted of two separate cities or medinas: Madinat Fas and Al-'Aliya, the former being founded by Idris I, the latter by his son, Idris II. During Idrisid rule the capital city was known as Al-'Aliya, with the name Fas being reserved for the separate site on the other side of the river: no Idrisid coins have been found with the name Fes, only al-'Aliya and al-'Aliya Madinat Idris. It is not known whether the name al-'Aliya was ever used to refer to both medinas. It wasn't until 1070 that the two agglomerations were united and the name Fas was used for both sites. The name is probably taken from the word Fazaz, the old Berber name for the Middle Atlas mountains near the city. The name is also attested as that of a Berber tribe living just south of Fes. Today, Ait Fazaz is the name of a small town just west of Meknes. Foundation and the Idrisids Further information: Fes el Bali The city was founded on a bank of the Jawhar river by Idris I in 789, founder of the Zaydi Shi'ite Idrisid dynasty. His son, Idris II (808), built a settlement on the opposing river bank. These settlements would soon develop into two separate, walled and largely autonomous sites, often in conflict with one another: Madinat Fas and Al-'Aliya. In 808 Al-'Aliya replaced Walili as the capital of the Idrisids. Arab emigration to Fez, including 800 Andalusi families of Berber descent[7] in 817--818 expelled after a rebellion against the Umayyads of Córdoba, and 2,000 Arab families banned from Kairouan (modern Tunisia) after another rebellion in 824, gave the city a more Arabic character than other cities of the region. The Andalusians settled in Madinat Fas, while the Tunisians found their home in al-'Aliya. These two waves of immigrants would subsequently give their name to the two sites: 'Adwat Al-Andalus and 'Adwat al-Qarawiyyin. An important aspect of the city's population was of North-African Berber descent, with rural Berbers from the surrounding countryside settling the city throughout this early period, mainly in Madinat Fas (the Andalusian quarter) and later in Fes Jdid. Upon the death of Idris II in 828, the dynasty's territory was divided among his sons, and the eldest, Muhammad, received Fes. The newly fragmented Idrisid power would never again be reunified. During Yahya ibn Muhammad's rule in Fes the Kairouyine mosque, one of the oldest and largest in Africa, was built and its associated Al-Qarawiyyin Madrasa was founded (859).[10] Comparatively little is known about Idrisid Fes, owing to the lack of comprehensive historical narratives from this period and the fact that little has survived of the architecture and infrastructure of early Fes (Al-'Aliya). The sources that mention Idrisid Fes, describe a rather rural one, not having the cultural sophistication of the important cities of Al-Andalus and Ifriqiya. In the 10th century the city was contested by the Caliphate of Córdoba and the Fatimids of Tunisia, who ruled the city through a host of Zenata clients. The Fatimids took the city in 927 and expelled the Idrissids, after which their Miknasa were installed there. The Miknasa were driven out of Fes in 980 by the Maghrawa, their fellow Zenata, allies of the Caliphate of Córdoba. It was in this period that the great Andalusian ruler Al-Mansur Ibn Abi Aamir commissioned the Maghrawa to rebuild and refurnish the Al-Kairouan mosque, giving it much of its current appearance. According to the Rawd al-Qirtas and other Marinid era sources, the Maghrawi emir Dunas Al-Maghrawi filled up the open spaces between the two medinas and the banks of the river dividing them with new constructions. Thus, the two cities grew into each other, being now only separated by their city walls and the river flowing through them. His sons fortified the city to a great extent. This could not keep the Almoravid emir Ibn Tashfin from conquering the city in 1070, after more than a decade of battling the Zenata warriors in the area and constant besieging of the city. ======================= Fez Travel Guide, Morocco Travel, Fez Tours, Morocco Tours, Vacation Fez, Vacations Morocco, Tourism Fez, Tourism Morocco, History Fez, History Morocco- published: 01 Feb 2014
- views: 0
10:04
Fez Marruecos 2/5
Fez (فـاس [Fās], en árabe, Fès en francés) es la tercera ciudad de Marruecos, después de C...
published: 13 Sep 2011
author: jamacor4
Fez Marruecos 2/5
Fez Marruecos 2/5
Fez (فـاس [Fās], en árabe, Fès en francés) es la tercera ciudad de Marruecos, después de Casablanca y Rabat, con una población de 946.815 habitantes según el...- published: 13 Sep 2011
- views: 4373
- author: jamacor4
9:25
Fez Marruecos 4/5
Fez (فـاس [Fās], en árabe, Fès en francés) es la tercera ciudad de Marruecos, después de C...
published: 13 Sep 2011
author: jamacor4
Fez Marruecos 4/5
Fez Marruecos 4/5
Fez (فـاس [Fās], en árabe, Fès en francés) es la tercera ciudad de Marruecos, después de Casablanca y Rabat, con una población de 946.815 habitantes según el...- published: 13 Sep 2011
- views: 1401
- author: jamacor4
8:23
Fez Marruecos 5/5
Fez (فـاس [Fās], en árabe, Fès en francés) es la tercera ciudad de Marruecos, después de C...
published: 13 Sep 2011
author: jamacor4
Fez Marruecos 5/5
Fez Marruecos 5/5
Fez (فـاس [Fās], en árabe, Fès en francés) es la tercera ciudad de Marruecos, después de Casablanca y Rabat, con una población de 946.815 habitantes según el...- published: 13 Sep 2011
- views: 1282
- author: jamacor4
9:49
Fez Marruecos 1/5
Fez (فـاس [Fās], en árabe, Fès en francés) es la tercera ciudad de Marruecos, después de C...
published: 13 Sep 2011
author: jamacor4
Fez Marruecos 1/5
Fez Marruecos 1/5
Fez (فـاس [Fās], en árabe, Fès en francés) es la tercera ciudad de Marruecos, después de Casablanca y Rabat, con una población de 946.815 habitantes según el...- published: 13 Sep 2011
- views: 14205
- author: jamacor4
13:07
Almanzor, caudillo de al-Ándalus 2/2
Las campañas del Magreb Almanzor prosiguió en el Magreb la política omeya con la intención...
published: 27 Sep 2011
author: jamacor4
Almanzor, caudillo de al-Ándalus 2/2
Almanzor, caudillo de al-Ándalus 2/2
Las campañas del Magreb Almanzor prosiguió en el Magreb la política omeya con la intención de controlar las salidas de las rutas comerciales del desierto, po...- published: 27 Sep 2011
- views: 1374
- author: jamacor4
10:39
Fez Marruecos 3/5
Fez (فـاس [Fās], en árabe, Fès en francés) es la tercera ciudad de Marruecos, después de C...
published: 13 Sep 2011
author: jamacor4
Fez Marruecos 3/5
Fez Marruecos 3/5
Fez (فـاس [Fās], en árabe, Fès en francés) es la tercera ciudad de Marruecos, después de Casablanca y Rabat, con una población de 946.815 habitantes según el...- published: 13 Sep 2011
- views: 2280
- author: jamacor4
5:10
Morocco : Fès En Nocturne .
Fes Fez ; The city was founded on a bank of the Fez River by Idris I in 789, founder of th...
published: 05 Jul 2011
author: sweetmorocco1
Morocco : Fès En Nocturne .
Morocco : Fès En Nocturne .
Fes Fez ; The city was founded on a bank of the Fez River by Idris I in 789, founder of the Idrisid dynasty, the works being continued on the opposite bank b...- published: 05 Jul 2011
- views: 908
- author: sweetmorocco1
0:35
Morocco: Old city of Taza haut
Taza is a city in northern Morocco, about 100 km east of Fez. It has a population of 13968...
published: 29 Apr 2009
author: tanana72
Morocco: Old city of Taza haut
Morocco: Old city of Taza haut
Taza is a city in northern Morocco, about 100 km east of Fez. It has a population of 139686 (2004 census) and is the capital of Taza Province. Visit Morocco...- published: 29 Apr 2009
- views: 10544
- author: tanana72
Youtube results:
2:35
Discover north of Africa - Morocco - Taza old city walls
Taza is a city in northern Morocco, about 100 km east of Fez. It has a population of 13968...
published: 06 May 2009
author: petithassan
Discover north of Africa - Morocco - Taza old city walls
Discover north of Africa - Morocco - Taza old city walls
Taza is a city in northern Morocco, about 100 km east of Fez. It has a population of 139686 (2004 census) and is the capital of Taza Province. Taza city, no...- published: 06 May 2009
- views: 1144
- author: petithassan
3:47
Meknes, Volubilis & Moulay Idriss
Meknes is a city in northern Morocco, located 130 kilometres from the capital Rabat and 60...
published: 28 Oct 2006
author: valpard
Meknes, Volubilis & Moulay Idriss
Meknes, Volubilis & Moulay Idriss
Meknes is a city in northern Morocco, located 130 kilometres from the capital Rabat and 60 kilometres from Fes. It is served by the A2 expressway between tho...- published: 28 Oct 2006
- views: 128846
- author: valpard
2:40
Morocco
Morocco: الهولندية رحلة على الطريق الى موريتانيا futch tv The earliest well-known Moroccan...
published: 30 May 2010
author: EIUS Projections
Morocco
Morocco
Morocco: الهولندية رحلة على الطريق الى موريتانيا futch tv The earliest well-known Moroccan independent state was the Berber kingdom of Mauretania under king ...- published: 30 May 2010
- views: 902
- author: EIUS Projections