Rabat
Capital of the nation since independence - and, before that,
from 1912 to 1956, of the French Protectorate - RABAT is in
many ways the city you'd expect: elegant in its spacious European
grid, slightly self-conscious in its civilized modern ways, and, as
an administrative centre, a little bit dull. If you arrive during
Ramadan, you'll find the main avenues and boulevards an astonishing
night-long promenade - at other times, it's hard to find a café
open past ten at night. Rabat, as they tell you in Casa, is
provincial.
None of this makes any difference to the considerable historic
and architectural interest in the city - and across the estuary in
Salé - which includes some of the finest and oldest Arab
monuments in the country, dating from the Almohad and Merenid
dynasties. You can spend an enjoyable few days looking round these,
and out on the local beaches, and there is a major plus in that,
unlike Fes or Marrakesh, you can get round the place quite happily
without a guide, and talk in cafés with people who do not depend on
tourist money.
Copyright Rough Guides Ltd as trustee for its authors. Published by Rough Guides. All rights reserved.
The Rough Guides name is a trademark of Rough Guides Ltd.