
El Badi Palace in Marrakech
'El Badi Palace' () is located in
Marrakech,
Morocco, and nowadays it consists of the remnants of a magnificent palace built by the
Saadian king
Ahmed el-Mansour in
1578. The original building is thought to have consisted of 360 rooms, a courtyard of 135m by 110m and a pool of 90m by 20m, richly decorated with
Italian marbles and large amounts of gold imported from
Sudan. It also has a small, underground, tunnel-like jail with about four cells where the king kept his prisoners. Unfortunately, this fairy-like palace, which took approximately 25 years to construct, was torn apart by the alaouite
Sultan Mawlay Ismail who used the materials to decorate his own palace in
Meknes.
The design of the palace is influenced by the
Alhambra in Granada.
In one of the refurbished pavilions, the
Koutoubia minbar is now on exhibition.

El Badi Palace in Marrakesh
See also
★
Saadi Dynasty
★
Saadian Tombs
★
Ben Youssef Medrassa
External links
★
Page of the holy Qoran "executed in the Mosque of the Al-Badi Palace in Marrakech, and finished on the 13th day of the month of Rab'ia in the year 1008 after the Hegira during the reign of Sultan Ahmed el-Mansour, father of moulay Zidan Abu Maali" (retrieved on 20-12-2006)
★ Museum with no frontiers (extensive information): http://www.museumwnf.net/database_item.php?id=monument;ISL;ma;Mon01;13;en