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Morocco Imperial Cities Tour from Fez

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Morocco Imperial Cities Tour from Fez
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Morocco Imperial Cities Tour from Fez

A fascinating and adventurous tour for first time travelers to Morocco - enjoy this tour with your private guide and a private car. Spending 7 nights in 4- 3 star hotels or charming Riad accommodations with daily breakfast. Explore Fez, Casablanca, Rabat, Meknes, Volubilis and Marrakech.

Optional 4/5* hotel available

Itinerary

Day 1: Arrival Fez

Pass By: Fes Sais International Airport, Aéroport Fes Saïss Oulad Tayeb, Maroc، Fes 30000, Morocco
Airport arrival, warme welcoming by your Driver and transfer to your hotel or Riad

No meals included on this day.
Accommodation included: overnight in hotel or Riad

Day 2: Fez Visit

Stop At: Medina of Fez, Fes 30000 Morocco
After breakfast, the whole day will be devoted to discovering Fez, a Unesco World Heritage and the oldest of the imperial cities, home to the world’s first university dating from the 9th century and one of the most complete medieval cities in existence. Surrounded by huge defensive walls, it seems suspended in a time warp, somewhere between the Middle Ages and the modern. But it’s more than that, it is a living city almost devoid of tourists, where whilst wandering amongst its amazing 9,000 tiny streets you experience its noisy hawkers selling everything from colorful vegetables, to delicious middle eastern pastries flavored with cinnamon and honey. Mind your backs for the passing of the only transport-mule or donkey! The haunting sound of the call to prayer resonates over the traditional rooftops whilst skilled artisans noisily beat metal into pans and intricate metal-ware as they have for centuries. . Visit of the medieval Medina. You will also explore the famous souks where craftsmen still labor in the age-old oriental tradition. Lunch on your own. Continue sightseeing in the afternoon. Return to hotel and overnight.(4* hotel or Riad an a aristocratic house (B,B)

Within the medina, we will the following historical sites:

►Medersa Bou Inania: An (Islamic school) founded by Abu Inan Faris that is highly decorated from floor to ceiling. The medersa is one of the few religious places in Morocco that is accessible to non-Islamic tourists.

►Kairaouine Mosque: Morocco’s second largest mosque was built by Fatima in 857. The Kairaouine Mosque became the home of the West's first university and the world's foremost center of learning at the beginning of the second millennium.

►University of Al-Karaouine: Founded in 859, this university is one of the leading spiritual and educational centers of the Muslim world and is considered the oldest continuously operating institution of higher learning in the world.

Fes is not easily engaged To reach it, it is necessary to enter by the main entrance, at once visible and veiled, of the sacred. Because Fes is a sanctuary. It is so moreover that soufis, these initiated of the Islam, always called her: Zaouïa. The traveler who came by far knew that by arriving near the city, it is to his founder and to his very patron saint that he asked for the hospitality. For him, Fes is the city of Moulay Idriss. Many of fassis still know by heart what the commentators report as being the words, during the inaugural prayer, during the saint: " Ô Dieu, You know that I did not build this city by vanity, by desire of fame or by pride. But I would want that you are liked there, that Your Book is Read to it and Your Law applied as long as will last the world. Ô Dieu, guide towards the good those who live there and helps to carry out him, veil for them the sword of the anarchy and the dissidence … "
Duration: 5 hours

Meals included:
• Breakfast
Accommodation included: Overnight in hotel or Riad

Day 3: Fez- Meknes - Rabat

Stop At: Bab Mansour Gate, 17, Rue Ain El Anboub et Rue Lalla Aicha Adouia Quartier HAMMAM JDID, Meknes 52000 Morocco
After breakfast route to Meknès

"it is a place made for painters ... the beautiful abounds ... the beautiful runs the streets, I am stunned by all that I saw, I am at this moment like a man who dreams. "

Eugene de Lacroix said of Meknes

Breakfast, guided visit to MEKNEs, a Unesco World Heritage, the 16th century capital whose ruler, Moulay Ismail, modelled himself on France’s ‘Sun King’, Louis XIV. After plundering his entire country he opened his amazing palace decorated with the most intricate colourful stucco work, huge beautifully detailed bronze doors and stunning mosaics

The tour of this "Moroccan Versaille" and sightseeing includes Bab El Mansour, considered as the finest gateway in Morocco. First we will pass through the triumphal arch Standing at sixteen meters high with an eight meter long arch, the intricately patterned triumphal arch is argued to be the most beautiful in Morocco. Enter Place El-Hedime (Square of Ruins) which links the medina and the kasbah. The square is lined with modern residential buildings and a covered food souk (market).. Continue to The tour of this "Moroccan Versaille" and sightseeing includes Bab El Mansour, considered as the finest gateway in Morocco. First we will pass through the triumphal arch Standing at sixteen meters high with an eight meter long arch, the intricately patterned triumphal arch is argued to be the most beautiful in Morocco. Enter Place El-Hedime (Square of Ruins) which links the medina and the kasbah. The square is lined with modern residential buildings and a covered food souk (market).. Continue to Volibulis

The Romans began building the city of Volubilis around 40AD in order to keep control of this North African region which was successively occupied by the Greeks, Berbers, Jews and the Carthaginian merchants. In the second and third centuries, the region began to develop more rapidly when the Romans began cultivating grain. The victory Arch, facing the main route and built in 217 in honour of the Roman emperor Caracalla, formally had a bronze chariot after route for Rabat capitole of Morocco, arrival and night in hotel
Duration: 6 hours

Meals included:
• Breakfast
Accommodation included: Overnight in hotel

Day 4: Rabat - Casablanca

Stop At: Hassan Tower, Boulevard Mohamed Lyazidi, Rabat 10030 Morocco
After breakfast, we visit Rabat, a Unesco World Heritage, the first of the Imperial Cities where we see the city’s Medina and the Mausoleum of Mohammed V. Guarded by two mounted, traditionally robed spear-carrying ‘lancers’, it is built in traditional style, the grandfather and father of the present king are buried here and its contemporary mosaics and spiral designs make a fascinating comparison with the adjacent Hassan Mosque, a wonder of the medieval Moorish world with its great minaret left unfinished when its founder died in 1199. If completed it would have been the largest building in the world at that time. The harbour is full of traditional fishing boats and on the opposite river bank is Sale, Rabat’s twin city where Robinson Crusoe was enslaved before his final escape to Brazil. Route for Casablanca

we visit the richly decorated Hassan II Mosque, (exterior, inside visit 12€ in spot) one of the largest religious building in the world after the mosque in Mecca, it would comfortably fit Rome’s St Peter’s inside.

The statistics are staggering: it is over 200 metres long, 100 metres wide, 65 metres wide, has the tallest Minaret in the world at 210 metres and can accommodate 25,000 worshippers, plus an impossible to imagine 80,000 outside. 35,000 master craftsmen laboured night and day to create this exquisite masterpiece. You enter through one of the huge bronze or titanium doors decorated with traditional inscriptions, but the real draw is inside. Onyx columns, marble of every imaginable shade, intricate stucco work, a remarkable carved cedar roof, huge expenses of elaborate ceramics combine with fine metalwork and flamboyant Venetian glassware to create at once a harmonious and yet astonishing Moroccan architectural masterpiece.(entrance fees 11€ payable in spot)

Night in hotel
Duration: 4 hours

Meals included:
• Breakfast
Accommodation included: Overnight in hotel

Day 5: Casablanca - Marrakesh

Stop At: Koutoubia Mosque, Rue el Ksour, Derb Sabai, 13, Marrakech 40000 Morocco
After breakfast, route for Marrakesh

guided visit of Marrakesh, an Unesco world Heritage, once an oasis on the caravan routes to the south, it became a natural centre of commerce and the capital city during medieval times. Wealth poured in from Moorish Spain and the city you see today was built. Surrounded by almost intact medieval walls little has changed and in the central square Jemaa el Fna is one of the world’s greatest spectacles. that is listed by UNESCO, as a Oral heritage of humanity. Here, especially atmospheric at dusk, street restaurants serve all kinds of delicacies with mouth-watering aromas filling the air, surrounded by what only can be described as a medieval circus. Storytellers recount tales of old, whilst fire-eaters and skilled acrobats entertain onlookers. Scribes write letters and open-air dentists and barbers industriously practice their trades. Have your shoes cleaned, watch snake-charmers and see herbalists dispensing mystical remedies. Musical troupes lithely move to the soulful heavy drumbeat which thuds hypnotically in the balmy warm of the Moroccan evening. This eclectic mix makes Marrakesh one of the most exciting and romantic places you will ever visit..

Visit the Bahia palace: (7€)

Is one of the outstanding Moroccan historical monuments that was built in the late nineteenth century. As most of the Arab-Andalusian palaces, it contains beautiful gardens and lovely patios, and has 150 rooms lavishly decorated. The construction of the palace was undertaken by the Moroccan architect El Mekki on behalf of the Grand Vizier Ba Ahmed ben Moussa called Ba Hmad(former slave) (1841-1900) to house his four wives and 24 concubines.

Under the French protectorate, General Lyautey, settled in the palace.

The Saadian tombs: (7€)

in Marrakech are to be originated in the period of the great sultan Ahmad al-Mansur Saadi (1578-1603). These tombs were discovered in 1917, then restored by the Fine Arts Department. These tombs impress visitors with their beautiful decoration. The mausoleum houses the body of a sixty Saadiens, including Al-Mansour, his followers and his family. The building consists of three rooms. The mausoleum is the most prestigious room of twelve columns. This room houses the tomb of Sultan Ahmed El Mansour son. Its dome carved cedar wood, and stucco are finely crafted, the graves are made from Carrara marble from Italy. This mausoleum is a beautiful example of Moorish decorative art. Outside, there are the graves of soldiers and servants, and a garden of the necropolis.

Marrakesh Souks:

A real labyrinth where the crowd snatches you, then brings you into the game of rays of light.

In a maze of shady streets, we cross the copper souk where dinandiers hammer the metal ancestral way. In the souk of the dyers they dry large skeins of wool with rich colors, stretched from one wall to another on poles. At the souk aux tapis, we sell at auction to the highest bidder.

And the potters souk presents tajine dishes, glazed pottery and beautiful ceramics. We also cross the souk of jewelers, leatherworkers and cabinetmakers. In the end the spice souk, there, the scents of saffron, cumin, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, orange blossoms daze the senses

Further on the shelves of apothecaries line up amber, musk, henna pots, jasmine or rose extract vials.

You will have the afternoon free to do whatever you please, whether it be shopping at the fabulous luxury shops or simply relaxing by the poolside at your hotel.
Duration: 5 hours

Meals included:
• Breakfast
Accommodation included: Overnight in hotel or Riad

Day 6: Marrakesh

Pass By: Jemaa el-Fnaa, 38 Jemaa el-Fna, Rue El Ksour, Marrakech Morocco
You will have the day free to do whatever you please, whether it be shopping at the fabulous luxury shops or simply relaxing by the poolside at your hotel

Many optional activities and excursions available in spot

Meals included:
• Breakfast
Accommodation included: Overnight in hotel or Riad

Day 7: Marrakesh - Fez

Stop At: Medina of Fez, Fes 30000 Morocco
After breakfast departure for Fez, arrival and installation in your hotel or Riad. Time at your disposal, night in hotel or Riad
Duration: 6 hours

Meals included:
• Breakfast
Accommodation included: Overnight in hotel or Riad

Day 8: Airport Transfer

Pass By: Fes el-Bali, Fes 30110 Morocco
Flight home return

Meals included:
• Breakfast
No accommodation included on this day.



Duration:8 days
Commences in:Fes, Morocco
Country:Morocco
City:Fes-Boulemane Region

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