Fes Trip Overview
Our tour guides are very friendly, passionate about their culture and very well educated about the rich history of the city… Our tours are cultural and handicraft
Additional Info
* Duration: 3 to 6 hours
* Starts: Fes, Morocco
* Trip Category: Transfers & Ground Transport >> Private Drivers
Explore Promoted Experiences
What to Expect When Visiting Fes, Fes-Meknes, Morocco
Our tour guides are very friendly, passionate about their culture and very well educated about the rich history of the city… Our tours are cultural and handicraft
Itinerary
This is a typical itinerary for this product
Pass By: Fes el-Bali, Fes 30110 Morocco
Fes el Bali is the medina area and the city’s oldest neighborhood. It’s thought to be the largest intact surviving medina in the world.The main gate into the area is Bab Boujloud. As you approach this grand old gate you get wonderful views of the neighborhood’s famed landmark the minaret of the Medersa Bou Inania which sits just after the Bab Boujloud gate.Within its walls, the rambling derbs medina alleys spiral out into two distinctly different districts, divided by a meandering river.The left bank is home to the most historic monuments and the majority of the shopping souqs while the right bank may be scruffier but is full of local life and photogenic alleyways.The right bank also has some interesting buildings to search out, including the Al-Andalus Mosque built in 1321 and noted for its prominent green and white minaret which actually dates back to the 10th century.Nearby you’ll find a variety of interesting other monuments including an old fondouk and the crumbling Medersa Sahrij
Pass By: Borj Nord, Avenue des Merinides, Fes 30030 Morocco
For the best views over Fes el Bali, walk up the steep hill just outside the city ramparts, to the Borj Nord area.Here, you’ll find a 16th-century fortress, home to a military museum. The museum is worth a look for its collection of weapons, which includes some extremely rare pieces that represent armory from across the world. Amid the cache is the five-meter-long cannon (with a weight of 12 tons) that was used during the Battle of the Three Kings.After viewing the arms museum, keep heading up the hill to the summit where a scattering of golden-stoned Merenid tombs sits.Although the tombs are in a heavily ruined state today, you’re here for the views, which take in the entire walled medina area and out to the green hills beyond
Pass By: Royal Palace of Fez, Avenue Omar Ibnou Khattab, Fes 30004 Morocco
The Merenids built this “New City” in the 13th century, when they realized that Fes el Bali would be too small to contain their palaces.The grand Royal Palace takes center stage here. Its 80 hectares of grounds are not open to the public, though, you can stop and admire its ornately decorated entranceway.There’s a tranquil air to this small section of the city, which sits between bustling Fes el Bali and the European-style Ville Nouvelle, and it makes a welcoming, peaceful lull between these two faster-paced worlds.The mellah (Jewish quarter) is in the southern section of this district.
Pass By: Fez Mellah, Fes Morocco
The atmospheric old Mellah (Jewish Quarter) is in Fes el Jedid, just south of the Royal Palace.Throughout this compact district, the lanes are lined with fine (though highly dilapidated) examples of early 20th-century houses, which were once home to the vibrant Jewish community of Fes.Within the district, the small, restored Aben-Danan Synagogue is open for visitors.On the edge of the Mellah is the rambling Jewish cemetery, one of the city’s most tranquil spots, and a Jewish Museum housing a collection of objects highlighting Moroccan Jewish life and culture.
Pass By: Dar Batha Museum, Place du Batha Fez, Fes 30030 Morocco
The Batha Museum is inside a Hispano-Moorish summer palace built in the late 19th century.The museum collection traipses through a selection of traditional Moroccan craftsmanship, with wood carved doors, wrought-iron work, embroidery, carpets, and jewelry all on display.The centerpiece exhibit of the museum is the ceramics room, where the famous Fassi ceramic collection, colored with cobalt, is displayed.More interesting than the displays themselves is the building’s own original decoration and the lovely internal courtyard garden, which is full of shady trees and tall palms and is a true oasis within the city.The Batha Museum is in the southwest corner of the medina.
Pass By: Place Seffarine, Fes Morocco
This square is walled on one side by the grand, horseshoe-arched entrance to the al-Qarawiyyin Library, and centres on a gnarled plane tree.But it’s the sounds, as much as the sights, that make Place Seffarine special, as the rest of square is given over to copperware, a craft that goes back many centuries in Fez.You’ll hear the clang of craftsmen shaping and polishing their wares long before set foot on Place Saffarine.This handmade copperware hangs, glinting in the shopfronts, where you can haggle for buckets, pots, pans, tagines, trays, incense burners, couscous steamers, sieves, kettles, sugar boxes and a lot more besides.
Pass By: Souk el Henna, Fes Morocco
In the middle of the Medina you’ll happen upon a tight passageway beckoning you onto a square in the shade of large old plane trees and the high minaret of the Zaouia Moulay Idriss II.It’s thrilling to think that henna has been sold at this very place for centuries.You’ll see it traded here as leaves, which are dried and ground into a paste.Traditionally this is applied to women’s hands during wedding ceremonies.Stalls here are also laden with antimony (kohl), as well as other traditional cosmetics like rosewater, rhassoul, musk and lavender essence.
Pass By: Medina of Fez, Fes 30000 Morocco
For keen shoppers, the skinny souq (market) lanes of Fes el Bali are one of the major attractions of a Fes stay.Fes is renowned within Morocco for its artisan heritage, and you’ll find all types of Moroccan handicrafts here, from leatherwork to metalware and ceramics.The local ceramic tradition (called Fassi ceramics), made from local clay, tends towards blue tones and is usually hand-painted with intricate patterns and recurring motifs.The streets just west of the Qaraouiyine Mosque have the greatest concentration of shopping opportunities.As with Marrakesh, more tourist orientated shops, selling a range of souvenir-style giftware and more mass-produced items, as well as the big carpet emporiums, tend to line main roads in the medina such as Talaa Kebira. Specialty artisan workshops are usually found in smaller lanes.
Pass By: Bou Inania Medersa, Rue Talaa Sghira, Fes 30110 Morocco
The Medersa Bou Inania was built between 1350 and 1357 by the Merenid sultan Bou Inan.As one of the few religious buildings in the city that non-Muslims may enter, the Medersa (a “madrassa” is an Islamic school of learning) is one of the most popular monuments to visit in Fes and a must-do stop on any tour of the medina.Up until the 1960s, this was still a functioning theological school, and the restoration efforts that were carried out afterwards have carefully returned the medersa to its ornate original state.The carved woodwork and stucco decoration is magnificent and is a tribute to Morocco’s master artisans.
Pass By: Al-Attarine Madrasa, Rue Talaa Kebira, Fes Morocco
This fine example of Merenid-era architecture was built in 1325 by Abu Said.The Medersa el-Attarine’s central internal courtyard is a wonderful display of the intricate decoration from this period, with elaborate zellige tile work and cedar wood carvings.The upper floor is made up of a warren of cells that were once home to students studying theology at the neighboring Qaraouiyine Mosque, one of the world’s first universities.After admiring the building’s interior decoration, make sure to climb up onto the medersa’s rooftop from where you can get great views over the surrounding rooftops, including a close-up view of the green tiled roof of the Qaraouiyine Mosque next door.
Pass By: Mosque and University Karaouiyn, Fes, Morocco
Karaouiyne
Built in AD 857 by Tunisian immigrants from the holy city of Kairouan, the Qaraouiyine Mosque was a thriving center of theological study and one of the medieval period’s most distinguished universities.It vies for title of the oldest university in the world with the Al Azhar Mosque in Cairo, Egypt.Today, in its function as a working mosque, it is one of Morocco’s largest centers of worship with a prayer hall that can hold 20,000.
Pass By: Museo Nejjarine, Pl. Nejjarine, Fes 30030 Morocco
Drawing attention at one end of the Najjariyyin Square in the Old Medina is the magnificent five-metre gateway to this 17th-century khan (inn), crowned with an intricate cedar canopy.Over the portal are gossamer geometric and floral patterns, and incredibly detailed tilework.To the side is a 19th-century saqayya, a fountain for caravans, with astonishing zellige tiles and honeycomb plasterwork.The Funduq, commissioned by the Alaouite Sultan Ismail Ibn Sharif, is preserved as a museum for woodwork.You can go in to look up at the three storeys of galleries, and peruse a showcase of artful wood-carving from the city’s past.On display are furniture, doors, musical instruments, canopies and other architectural elements, as well as traditional woodworking tools.
Pass By: Sahrij Medersa, Andalusian Quarter, Fes 30030 Morocco
Near the Andalusian Mosque is a Madrasa ordered in 1321 by the Marinid Sultan Abu al-Hassan.Over time this complex became known by its sahrij, the ornamented ablution pool in its courtyard, which is where the name comes from.That rectangular courtyard is enriched with carved cedar, sculpted marble, multicoloured zellige tiles and stucco, all intended to evoke Granada’s fabled Alhambra palace complex.
Pass By: Zaouia of Moulay Idriss II, Fes 30030 Morocco
This shrine at Place de Marche Verte is considered one of the holiest sites in Morocco, holding the mausoleum of Idris II (791-828). Founder of the 200-year Idrisid Dynasty, Idris II is credited with establishing the first Islamic state of Morocco.The shrine, sitting below the tallest minaret in Old Fez, was built between 1717 and 1824, and is mainly for Fez residents, although visiting practising Muslims can also enter the mausoleum.The two-metre wooden bars indicated that the space was off limits for Christians and Jews, but also helped keep donkeys at bay.Now non-Muslims can enter the complex and admire the courtyard’s 18th-century white marble fountain, although the mausoleum at the south end is out of bounds.Pilgrims continue to visit the shrine for good luck, and Idris II has long been associated with fertility among women.From the mausoleum’s entrance, non-Muslims will be able to spot the tomb to the right through the doorway, draped in silk brocade.
Pass By: La Belle Vue de la Tannerie, 64 Derb Sidi Bouaza, Fes Morocco
The Chouara tanneries of Fes are one of the city’s most famous sights. Sitting in the northeast corner of Fes el Bali, just east of the Qaraouiyine Mosque, the tanneries have been the bustling center of the city’s leather industry since the medieval era.The only way to get the iconic bird’s-eye views over the dying pits, where hides are soaked in a multitude of colors to later become bags, clothing, shoes, and a variety of other products, is to head to the leather stores surrounding the tannery area, which offer views from their rooftops.You have to tip the leather shops for entry, and do expect them to try a bit of sales patter while you’re there.Come in the morning if you can, as this is when the tannery pits are still filled with a rainbow palette of dyes.
Pass By: Glaoui Palace, 1 Rue Hamia Douh, Fes 40000 Morocco
This semi-ruinous early-20th-century palace is a former residence of politician Thami El Glaoui (1879-1956) notorious for collaborating with the French and helping to overthrow Mohammed V.This negative association might be why the complex has been allowed to go into decline, but decades of wear and tear take little away from the palace’s beauty.In 2019 it was occupied by a self-taught artist, who charges a small fee for entrance.Within there’s radiant zellige decoration, painted woodcarving, stained glass and stucco work.
Pass By: Palais El Mokri, 34, Palais Elmokri, Ziat, Fes 30000 Morocco
This palace was commissioned by Mohammed El Mokri (d. 1957), finance minister for a succession of Sultans during the French Protectorate.El Mokri was cultured and well-travelled, staying at various courts around Europe and becoming the first Moroccan to import a grand piano.His descendants continue to live at the palace, welcoming visitors for tours, but also renting out rooms to guests.You’ll find out a bit more about El Mokri as you look around, marvelling at painted wooden ceilings, masterfully sculpted stucco work, chandeliers, Murano glass windows and a spectacular inner courtyard framed by two long horseshoe arcades with stunning zellige pillars and working fountains.