
Atlas Mountains Day Trip
Bab Atlas, Municipalité de Marrakech, 40000, Morocco
The Atlas Mountains rise directly behind Marrakech — a wall of peaks reaching over 4,000 metres that provides the city's most dramatic backdrop and the most accessible mountain experience in North Africa.

Bab Doukkala Mosque & Neighbourhood
Rue Bab Doukkala, Marrakesh, 40030, Morocco
Bab Doukkala is the medina gate that leads to the most authentically local neighbourhood in central Marrakech — a quarter of residential streets, neighbourhood mosques, and the daily food market that serves the surrounding community without any concession to tourism.

Café Culture & Mint Tea Ritual
Various cafés, Jemaa el-Fna & Medina, Marrakech
Mint tea (atay) is Morocco's national drink and Marrakech's social lubricant — a mixture of Chinese gunpowder green tea, fresh spearmint, and a quantity of sugar that would alarm a dentist, brewed in a silver teapot and poured from height (the higher the pour, the better the froth) into small glass cups.

Fondouk el-Nejjarine (Woodworkers' Fondouk)
Place des Ferblantiers, Marrakesh, 40034, Morocco
A fondouk (also spelled funduq or foundouk) is a medieval caravanserai — an inn and trading post where merchants stored goods and animals on the ground floor and slept on the upper floors.

Hammam Experience
Marrakesh, Morocco
The hammam is the quintessential Moroccan bathing ritual — a communal steam bath that has been a cornerstone of social and hygienic life in Marrakech since the city was founded.

Jemaa el-Fna
Jemaa el-Fna, Medina, Marrakech
Jemaa el-Fna is the most extraordinary public square in the world — a vast, irregular plaza at the entrance to Marrakech's medina that transforms from a daytime market of orange juice sellers, snake charmers, and henna artists into a nighttime open-air theatre of food stalls, storytellers, musicians, and the general spectacle of a city that has been performing for its own entertainment since the 11th century.

Mellah (Jewish Quarter)
Municipalité de Marrakech, Morocco
The Mellah is Marrakech's historic Jewish quarter — a walled neighbourhood established in 1558 when the Saadian sultan relocated the Jewish community from the medina to a separate quarter adjacent to the royal palace.

Palmeraie
Circuit de la Palmeraie, Marrakech
The Palmeraie is a 13,000-hectare palm grove on the northern edge of Marrakech — a landscape of over 100,000 date palms planted during the Almoravid dynasty in the 11th century that has been both an agricultural resource (the dates, olives, and gardens irrigated by the khettara system) and a recreational retreat for nine centuries.

Riad Architecture & Courtyard Culture
Various riads, Medina, Marrakech
The riad is Marrakech's defining architectural form — a traditional courtyard house built around a central garden (the word riad comes from the Arabic ryad, meaning garden) that turns its back on the street and opens inward to light, water, and plantings.

Souks of Marrakech
Souk Semmarine, Marrakesh, 40008, Morocco
The souks of Marrakech are the largest traditional market in Morocco — a labyrinth of covered alleyways radiating north from Jemaa el-Fna that is organised by trade: leather workers in one section, metalworkers in another, spice merchants, textile dealers, woodworkers, basket weavers, and the lamp shops whose pierced brass lanterns cast starfield patterns on the walls and ceiling.

Spice Market (Rahba Kedima)
Rahba Kedima, Medina, Marrakech
Rahba Kedima (the Old Square) is the spice market at the heart of Marrakech's souk system — a small, irregular plaza surrounded by stalls selling the spices, herbs, cosmetics, and traditional remedies that have been traded in this location since the city's founding.

Tanneries of Marrakech
Municipalité de Marrakech, Morocco
The tanneries of Marrakech are where leather is made the way it has been made for a thousand years — animal hides soaked in vats of pigeon dung, quicklime, and vegetable dyes in open-air pits that produce the leather goods sold throughout the souks.
Explore culture in Marrakech
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