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Morocco’s capital, Rabat, was one of 26 sites inscribed onto the UNESCO World Heritage list in 2012.

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization recognised Rabat’s blend of historic significance and modern stature. It saluted the city’s “fertile exchange between the Arabo-Muslim past and Western modernism”.

 

 

The archaeological site of Chellah, the Kasbah of the Udayas, the Almohad gates and wall, the Hassan Mosque, the Medina, the modern town, and the Mausoleum of Mohammed V were all identified as precious features of the city to be protected and preserved.

Rabat is the ninth Moroccan site to be put on the list – no other African country has more. It joins the Medinas of Marrakech, Fes, Essaouira, and Tetouan; the Ksar of Aït Benhaddou; the historic city of Meknes; the archaeological site of Volubilis; the Portuguese fortified city of Mazagan (El Jadida).

 

 

Written by insider city guide series Hg2 | A Hedonist’s guide to…

(Featured image by YoTuT)

About the author

Brett AckroydBrett hopes to one day reach the shores of far-flung Tristan da Cunha, the most remote of all the inhabited archipelagos on Earth…as to what he’ll do when he gets there, he hasn’t a clue. Over the last 10 years, London, New York, Cape Town and Pondicherry have all proudly been referred to as home. Now it’s Copenhagen’s turn, where he lends his travel expertise to momondo.com.

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