- Taza
Taza is a city in northern
Morocco , about 100 km east of Fez. It has a population of 139,686 (2004 census) and is the capital of Taza Province.Taza city, north-central Morocco. Located south of the
Rif Mountains, the city is composed of two formerly separate towns built on separate terraces overlooking a mountain valley. The old town (medina) is at an elevation of 1,919 feet (585 m) above sea level and is surrounded by fortifications; the newer town, established by the French in 1920, is located in a fertile plain at an elevation of 1,460 feet (445 m).Fossil remains indicate that caves in the area were inhabited as early as thePaleolithic Period .The city is located in a mountain pass known as the "Taza Gap", through which successive waves of invaders moved westward onto the Atlantic coastal plains of northwestern Africa. Taza was founded by
Miknasa Berbers (approximately at the time of the late7th century Arab Muslim conquest), who gave allegiance to the Idrisids in 790 and later joined with theFatimids ofKairouan . The Almoravids took over Taza in 1074 and were replaced by the Almohads in 1132. In 1248 the city was captured by the Marinids. Although Taza barred the route of Turks fromAlgiers seeking conquest in what is nowMorocco , it fell to the French in 1914. The medina houses barbican monuments, mosques, and a14th-century madrasah (school). Population in 1982 stood at 77,216. Population now estimated about 160,000.ights
The old town's main thoroughfare is enlivened by the Grain Market and the
Souk s where wickerwork, tapestries, jewellery, and a great variety of Berber handiwork from the mountains are offered for sale. The road terminates at a square doubling as a parade ground which sports the Al-Andalous Mosque. The Mosque's minaret, constructed in the14th century , is wider at the top than at its base.Bab el-Qebbour Street crosses the Kissaria (covered marketplace), then leads on to the Market Mosque where it meets up with Bab Jamaa gate, the main point of entry of Taza. Somewhat further south, across from Bab el-Rih, the Wind Gate, a bastion dating from the16th Century closes the ring around thekasbah . Taza's city walls, raised in the12th Century and frequently enlarged on later occasions were equipped with a Borj or fortified tower 26 metres (85 ft) wide at the base by the Saadi Ahmed el-Mansour in the16th Century . The gate with iron grate and thecasemate s with terraced roofs are clearly influenced by European military architecture of the time.References
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ee also
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Great Mosque of Taza
*Bou Hamara - early 20th century pretender to the throne of Morocco, based in TazaExternal links
* [http://www.ville-taza.com Taza online] in French
* [http://www.mosquee.taza.free.fr Great Mosque of Taza] in French
* [http://www.tazantan.free.fr Taza d'antan] in French
* [http://www.tazekka.com Tazekka National Parc] in French* [http://www.aitsadden.com/index.php?option=com_frontpage&Itemid=1 Aït Sadden] in French
* [http://www.maroc-hebdo.press.ma/MHinternet/Archives_474/pdf_474/page28.pdf] Taza lives in misery, article by Abdelatif el Azizi, in French
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