Medina (district)

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Entrance to the medina of Tangier
Medina of Fez

Medina , Arabic مدينة عتيقة, DMG madīna ʿatīqa  , old town ', is the name for the old town of Arab, mostly North African cities. In the Arabic language the word has the ultimate meaning “city”.

The largest medina in North Africa is that of the Moroccan city ​​of Fās (Fas), in second place is that of Tunis with an area of ​​87 hectares. The medina of the Tunisian city ​​of Al-Qairawān covers an area of ​​54 hectares.

The medinas are closely linked to Islam, as is clear from the following quote:

“Without reference to Islam, which gave the old Arab city founding its fixed forms and structures, the Medina [...] remains a chaotic-looking maze of alleys in which one inevitably loses one's orientation. In reality, every medina, from the Friday mosque , is organized according to irrefutable principles. Although the Friday mosque always marks the religious center of every old town, the largest house of prayer does not necessarily have to be in the center of the old town. The various districts, connected by winding main streets, are connected around the dominating Friday mosque. The quarters themselves are divided into several building groups, and access to the apartment entrances often ends in a cul-de-sac which, strictly speaking, only residents are allowed to enter. According to the Muslim Holy Book, each residential area, whose households each share an infrastructure consisting of an oven, hammam (bath), Koran school and grocery store, is reserved for a specific group of society. [...] The more distinguished city dwellers once lived near the Friday Mosque, with the highest-ranking family usually living in the building at the end of the cul-de-sac. "

- Thomas Veser

However, the medinas have changed a lot over the past hundred years. Numerous smaller medinas in southern Tunisia were abandoned at all. Thomas Veser says in his article that if this development continues, “the Medina will probably completely lose its role as the central reference system of Maghreb society in the foreseeable future ”.

Several Medinas were from UNESCO for World Heritage explained, such as the medinas of:

Year 1 Medina of the city ... in…
1981 Fez MoroccoMorocco Morocco
1985 Marrakech MoroccoMorocco Morocco
1996 Meknes MoroccoMorocco Morocco
1997 Tetouan MoroccoMorocco Morocco
2001 Essaouira MoroccoMorocco Morocco
1979 Tunis TunisiaTunisia Tunisia
1988 Sousse TunisiaTunisia Tunisia
1988 Kairouan TunisiaTunisia Tunisia
1993 Zabid YemenYemen Yemen
1986 Aleppo SyriaSyria Syria
1 Year of inclusion on the UNESCO list

See also

  • Mellah , the Jewish quarter of Moroccan cities

Web links

Commons : Medinas  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Thomas Veser: The chaos of god-willed order. Tunisia's old towns are losing their historical significance. In: Extra. Weekend supplement to the Wiener Zeitung. August 14, 1998, p. 8.
  2. See UNESCO World Heritage List .