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Morocco Beach and Bikini Girls

Here is , Morocco is the only one Islam country where women can ware Bikini in the beaches, Maybe It's the main reason of why there are many female travelers or tourists in Morocco. but One of my Moroccan friends said to me, Some of the Europe women come to Morocco to Find their new boyfriend too, I don't knot know it is really or not:) Is it they Named it as Sex Tourism?   9hab, maroc, morocco, zamel, sex, arabs, algerie, islam, nachat, tarjama, Msn, Yahoo, messenger , Prostitute, sexy, girl, banat,
3月25日

Attarin Madrasa in Madina Fes

Variant Names Madrasa al-Attarin, Madrasa al-'Attarin, Attarine Madrasa, Attarine Medersa, Madrasa of the Perfumers
Street Address Fez al Bali, Qayrawan area
Location Fez, Morocco
Date 1323
Style/Period Marinid
Century 14th
Building Type educational
Building Usage madrasa
The al-Attarin Madrasa was commissioned by the Marinid Sultan Uthman II b. Ya'qub, Abu Sa'id (r. 1310-31) in 1323 and completed in 1325. It is located in the spiritual centre of Fez, near the Mosque of al-Qarawiyyin. The madrasa's location at the entrance to the spice and perfume market gives al-Attarine, the madrasa of the perfumers, its name.

The Marinid Sultans were prolific patrons of madrasas, which served to promote Sunni teachings during their reign, perhaps meant to counterbalance thriving local Sufi practices. The al-Attarine madrasa, like the other Marinid madrasas of Fez, is celebrated for its rich decorative programme, concentrated in the rectangular arcaded courtyard. The courtyard opens onto a square prayer hall, and is luxuriously ornamented with glazed tile (zellij) dados and pavement, intricate carved stucco ornament on walls and piers, carved and painted wooden arches and cornices, and marble columns. The al-Attarin Madrasa, and the other Marinid madrasas, illustrate the translation of a palatial language of materials and decorations into a religious setting. Though the carved stucco and glazed tile revetment clearly evoke the Nasrid palace of Alhambra in Spain, their highly delicate, almost lace-like, treatment and tendency to ever smaller scale is unique to the Marinid foundations in Morocco. The contrast between sumptuous ornament in the courtyard and the spartan accommodations for the students at the al-Attarin and the other Marinid madrasas may reflect the multiple functions of these buildings. The madrasas often served as mosques for their respective quarters and as settings for official ceremonies. With the addition of associated charitable functions like guesthouses and waqfs, or endowed properties which supported the madrasa's upkeep, to their primary role as religious schools, the madrasas functioned as important centers of community life. The courtyard, as the most public of the spaces within the madrasa, was therefore the focus of the ornament that would highlight the generous image of the madrasa's founder.

3月22日

How can the Morocco goats climbing on? picture

How can the Morocco goats climbing on the tree? it's dangerous! Yesterday, the Moroccan Newspaper "al massai" said, the Moroccan government will do a big project to protect the goats and the Argan trees in South of Morocco. next week, maybe I will go to the South of Morocco, to see the Morocco goats......., I select more information about them, but i haven't see them by my own eyes. :) Thank god.

3月20日

Morocco Currency Gallery

Sorry, I haven't the 200 Dirhams' picture I will post the photos next time
Morocco 10 Dirhams 1987

Item Code: MA-63

Front: King Hassan II; ablution pavilion of the Qaraouiyne mosque; Back: A lute (Moroccan oud) and a marquee of the Medersa Attarine in Fès. Watermark: King Hassan II.
Moroccan Currency Gallery
Morocco 50 Dirhams 1987 (1991)

Item Code: MA-64

King Hassan II; flowers; cavallery.
Gallery

Morocco 20 Dirhams 1996

Item Code: MA-67

King Hassan II; Great Mosque of Casablanca.
Gallery
Morocco 20 Dirhams 2005

Item Code: MA-68

Obverse: King Mohammed VI; Bab Challah; Reverse: Panoramical view of the Oudayas; Watermark: Portrait of King Mohammed VI.
Moroccan Currency Gallery

Morocco 50 Dirhams 2002

Item Code: MA-69

Obverse: King Mohammed VI; King Mohammed V Dam; Reverse: Clay-made building Ksar (Ksour).
Gallery

Morocco 100 Dirhams 2002

Item Code: MA-70

Portraits of His Majesty The King Mohammed VI and Their Majesties The Kings Mohammed V and Hassan II; A view of Mohammed V Mausoleum. Representation of the Green March.
Gallery
GalleryGallery

THE MUSEUM OF MOROCCAN ARTS


The imposing silhouette of the Dar el Makhzen dominates the Tangier kasbah.

Formerly the governor's palace, it was built in the XVIIth century and is laid out around a splendid patio decorated with enamelled faience.
The Museum of Moroccan Arts is housed in the prince's apartments which are indeed princely: painted wooden ceilings, sculpted plaster work and mosaics, all of them exquisite.
A worthy setting for works of art from all over Morocco, which are honoured as prestigious ambassadors of their regions.

The north is represented by firearms decorated with marquetry and its pottery bearing subtle motifs of flowers or feathers, while from Rabat come the shimmering carpets with their characteristic central medallion...
the Fez room is quite dazzling... silks with their subtly shifting highlights, superbly bound illuminated manuscripts with the finest calligraphy, centuries-old dishes decorated in the most brilliant colours, from golden yellow right through the famous "Fez blue".
From the miniscule to the monumental, the Moroccan Museum of Arts is an entire universe of beauty.

LOCATION

Dar el Makhzen, Place de la Kasbah
Tangier
Tel. (212 9) 93 20 97

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Posted By Moroccan Beauty to Morocco Travel Information at 3/20/2008 09:07:00 AM