Top 10 Things to do in Rissani, Meknes-Tafilalet Region

November 29, 2021 Vergie Nakamoto

Coordinates: 31°17′09″N 4°16′30″W / 31.285948°N 4.275093°W / 31.285948; -4.275093
Restaurants in Rissani

1. Fes Desert Tours

Excellent
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5.0 based on 29 reviews

Fes Desert Tours

Morocco Fez Desert Tours are a reputable Moroccan tour operator based in Fes with more than 15 years of experience in organising Moroccan tours and excursions. We strive to design and tailor-made tour packages that suit your travel needs from budget to luxury. Either you are couples, friends, small group, family with kids, independent travellers, women or men, we have tours and excursions.

1 Route Merzouga,Cite my Idriss Bp-09, Rissani 52450 Morocco +212 613-346446 [email protected]
Excellent
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5.0 based on 6 reviews

Sahara Gallery Rissani

Sahara Gallery Rissani is an antique store specialized in old objects of the Tafilalet Region and the southern part of Morocco. The store contains thousands of old objects and a variety of Berber Touareg jewelry, fossils and minerals ...

3. Maison du Sud Antiquites et Arts

Souk Rissani n9 Rissani, Rissani 52450 Morocco +212 677-762047
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5.0 based on 1 reviews

Maison du Sud Antiquites et Arts

4. Souqs of Rissani

Rissani Morocco
Excellent
53%
Good
41%
Satisfactory
5%
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4.5 based on 74 reviews

Souqs of Rissani

Reviewed By Marf13669 - Ogdensburg, United States

The date market located off of the main intersection in town is the place to be in early October. They hold a 3-day festival there every year just after the date harvest. You can try them before you purchase. There are many varieties to test out, but the Medjools are the largest, sweetest and juiciest of them all. The festival involves both prayers and entertainment as well as a food fest. People come from all over the region to participate. The date is one of the first foods eaten after each day of fast during Ramadan, even before partaking of Harissa soup. It is offered as a token of welcome and friendship to anyone who enters a Muslim home in addition to mint tea. We were there during the day watching the transactions between farmers and vendors who either sell directly to the public or to dried fruit and nut merchants in the country's Medinas. You can purchase them by the crate, still on the stalk like bananas or already packaged in either a single variety or mixed packages. We had fun walking from vendor to vendor trying their fruit. We finally negotiated a price for several pounds that we would eat during our travels and have mixed into some tagine dishes for sweetness. Oh, but they were good and nutritious too. Yuuummmmm!

5. Rissani Market

Souk Rissani - Merzouga, Rissani 52450 Morocco
Excellent
45%
Good
36%
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4.0 based on 58 reviews

Rissani Market

Reviewed By elizabethnilsoni - Boston, United States

We were lucky because it was day Market and we got to see a local Market where the locals and neighbors come too. We would recommend it toanyone who’s interested in visiting local Market.

6. Ksar El Fida

Rissani, Rissani 52450 Morocco
Excellent
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4.0 based on 10 reviews

Ksar El Fida

7. Moulay Ali Cherif Mausoleum

600 Metres From N13, Rissani 52450 Morocco +212 670-912536 http://www.sijilmassatours.com/
Excellent
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Good
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Satisfactory
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4.0 based on 67 reviews

Moulay Ali Cherif Mausoleum

Sijilmassa (pronounced see-jill-moss-uh), a national historic site recognized by Morocco's Ministry of Culture, was the fabled and ancient Berber capital of the Tafilalet Kingdom located at the northern edge of the Sahara desert that once rivaled Marrakech. Founded in A.D. 757 On the banks overlooking the Oued Ziz, a river in the oasis region of the Sahara desert, Sijilmassa grew wealthy and powerful during the Middle Ages as a gold-trade-route city strategically located at the exit-point of the western Trans-Saharan caravan trade route -- which extended from the Niger River in the Sudan to Tangier in northern Morocco.

Reviewed By 11KarenS - New York City, United States

The mausoleum and mosque is only open for Moslem visitors but we got a peek of the inner courtyard. It was so peaceful and quiet. There were a lot of people but as the place is so big you didn’t feel crowded

8. Ksar Oulad Abdelhalim

Rissani 54252 Morocco +212 677-762047 http://www.morocco-private-tour.com
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4.0 based on 10 reviews

Ksar Oulad Abdelhalim

Reviewed By Marf13669 - Ogdensburg, United States

Moulay Er-Rachid, brother and Caliph of Sultan Hassan I, lived and governed here from 1847. He sided with Vichy France in WWII while the King's family sided with the Allies. The ruins of Ksar Oulad Abdelhalim are part of the former palace complex. Scions of the Alaouite dynasty are still living here and live in fear that they be imprisoned or killed someday for the roll they played during the war. We wandered through this historic and cultural site admiring what used to have been. It was very interesting to walk thru what now are people's living quarters and observe the faded splendor of the past.

9. Sijilmassa

Rissani Morocco +(212)670912536 [email protected] http://www.sijilmassatours.com/
Excellent
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4.0 based on 22 reviews

Sijilmassa

Sijilmassa (pronounced see-jill-moss-uh), a national historic site recognized by Morocco's Ministry of Culture, was the fabled and ancient Berber capital of the Tafilalet Kingdom located at the northern edge of the Sahara desert that once rivaled Marrakech. Founded in A.D. 757 on the banks overlooking the Oued Ziz, a river in the oasis region of the Sahara desert, Sijilmassa grew wealthy and powerful during the Middle Ages as a gold-trade-route city strategically located at the exit-point of the western Trans-Saharan caravan trade route -- which extended from the Niger River in the Sudan to Tangier in northern Morocco. From the 10th to the 12th centuries Sijilmassa was the center of the Gold trade between Morocco and the Sudan, and its legendary glory owes much to this position. Even after its fall as a great commercial center and caravan endpoint, the region of Sijilmassa remained instrumental in the minting of gold brought from the Sudan. Until the 10th century, control over the right to mint coins was held by the central government in the Orient as a means to control the vast expanses of the Arab world. Gold became a key resource in managing the growth of Arab and European economies in the North, and when confronted with the lack of it in their own territories, they started spinning myths about the abundance of gold south of the Sahara that greatly increased caravan commerce. As the flow of gold increased, the temptation to refine and mint it on the way, rather than at its final destination also increased. The minting of gold in Sijilmassa was one of the first acts of rebellion of the Fatimid dynasty, who originated from what is modern day Tunisia (Ifriqiya). In doing so, they directly opposed the ruling government in Baghdad. Sudanese gold refined in Sijilmassa also made it to Europe, where it was minted into European coins. The identical quality and gold proportion between European and Moroccan coins attests to the importance of trade between these regions- and it seems that Europeans minted similar coins precisely to purchase Maghrebi luxury goods. Sijilmassa was initially destroyed in 1363 and rebuilt by Sultan Moulay Isma'il, one of the first rulers (1672 - 1727) of the Alaouite dynasty that governs Morocco today. Ultimately, the city of Sijilmassa was conquered by Ait Atta nomads in 1818. The Roman ruins and Grand Mosque, which was last rebuilt in 1796 and serves as the central feature of this medieval town, are made of unbaked brick that require continual maintenance to preserve. In 1996 Sijilmassa was included on the very first World Monuments Watch "List of 100 Most Endangered Sites", a list created to focus international attention on the cultural significance and threats to endangered locations worldwide, as well as to help raise the necessary funds for preservation. The Watch is a program of the World Monuments Fund (WMF), a New York-based non-profit organization dedicated to preserving and protecting endangered works of art and architecture around the globe.

10. Mezguida

Ksar Mezguida, Rissani 52450 Morocco +212 699-458867 [email protected] http://www.mezguida.com
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4.0 based on 2 reviews

Mezguida

Mezguida is a mud brick building village, it was built at the age of Sultan Moulay Ismail who ruled the kingdom of Morocco back then. Mezguida has a diverse ethnic tribes living in harmony with each other that's what make Mezguida distinguishes from other villages in the oasis of Tafilalet.

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