Bou Inania Medersa★★★
The Bou Inania Medersa is the architectural jewel of Fes — and one of the few religious sites in Morocco that non-Muslims are allowed to enter. Built between 1351–1356 under the Marinid Sultan Bou Inan, it is both a Quranic school and a Friday mosque (a rare combination) and is considered the pinnacle of Marinid architecture.
The Architecture
What awaits you will take your breath away: A rectangular courtyard with an onyx marble floor, in the center of which stands a fountain. The walls are divided into three levels — below Zellij mosaics in geometric patterns, above stucco arabesques with Quranic verses and floral ornaments, and at the top carved cedarwood with muqarnas stalactites. Every surface is decorated, nothing is left bare — yet the whole appears harmonious rather than overloaded.
The water clock on the facade (13 wooden windows, from which a metal ball fell every hour) was a technological marvel of its time — the mechanism is lost today, but the windows are still visible.
Comparison with Marrakech
If you have seen the Medersa Ben Youssef in Marrakech: The Bou Inania is smaller but even more finely crafted. The proportions are more perfect, the details even more precise. The Marinid architecture in Fes is considered the pinnacle of Islamic architecture in Morocco — even ahead of the Saadian buildings in Marrakech.
💡 Tipp
The Bou Inania is located right on the Talaa Kebira, a few steps from Bab Bou Jeloud — perfect as a first stop. The light is best around 10:00–11:00 am when the sun shines into the courtyard and makes the mosaics glow. Plan for 30–45 minutes.
