Monuments
& History in Rabat Morocco
Acting as Morocco’s capital city for since the
French protectorate, which ended in the 1950s,
Rabat is more of a laid-back
coastal town more than it is a booming metropolis
like its much bigger sister city, Casablanca. The
capital city has a lot to offer, especially in
the way of monuments and historical sites worth
visiting. Additionally, Rabat has a medina that
is worth exploring. While it is minute when
compared to the medina of
Fez, for example, it is hassle-free and
you can get real bargains on Moroccan crafts
and even Berber rugs.
While Rabat is booming in an economic, political,
and administrative sense, it is a place where
learning and the arts are highly respected. The
monuments here speak of an ancient and fertile
past that links the country to both the
Phoenicians and the Carthaginians. When the
Romans moved into the area to create what would
become their farthest colony south of Rome, they
left artifacts and ruins that can still be
visited. Eventually, Arab rulers took over the
city and built a fortified kasbah that they
called a ribat, which is where
modern-day Rabat got its name. When the Almohad
Dynasty moved in around the twelfth century, they
rebuilt the kasbah and used it as their war base
while taking over the south of Spain.
The Citadel of Chellah Gardens:
While Rabat has many impressive
monuments and sites to see, the most beautiful
are the Chellah Gardens that are
open daily to the public. In the springtime, the
flowers inside the garden are blooming with
colors and heavenly scents. Unlike Menara
Gardens in Marrakesh, which were never
inhabited, the Chellah was left completely
empty by the 1200s because more people were
moving to the more popular city of Sale, which
is separated from Rabat by the Bou Regreg
River.
The Sanctuary of the Chellah Gardens was used as
royal burial grounds. The Almohads who had the
door decorated and inscribed with Arabesque
calligraphy created the remarkable entrance into
Chellah. The Roman ruins of the Chellah
Gardens, much like the ruins of Volubilis are
also open to the public and many travelers are
surprised at how freely tourists can roam
around the area. With minimal observation from
the workers and security working there, it is
up to travelers to make sure they respect
certain areas.
The Sanctuary of the Chellah Gardens are the true
home of the Islamic artifacts that were uncovered
here. A minaret made of stone is a nice
centerpiece. The Abou Youssef Mosque is now in
ruins and was a small structure to begin with.
However, the area is near the royal tombs, where
Abou El Hassan and other historical leaders of
importance are buried.
Mohammed V Mausoleum & the Hassan
Mosque:
The Mausoleum of Mohammed V is
also a mosque was, strangely enough, designed by
a Vietnamese architect who wanted to capture the
more traditional Moroccan art techniques, while
still asserting an air of modernity. The
Mausoleum is one holy place that foreigners and
non-Muslims are allowed to enter.
The Hassan Mosque in Rabat was
started as an ambitious project to be one of the
largest mosques in the world. The mosque was
designed to be a symbol to the success of
Morocco over
its battles with Spain. Like the Kairouine
Mosque in Fez does, this mosque
would have held tens of thousands of
worshippers. However, it was brought down and
left unfinished when the Lisbon earthquake
also brought down several structures along
Morocco’s coast with it. The structure is
unique and each of its different faces gives
way to a different type of architecture,
namely a motif called Shabka that is
still popular today.