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Bab Agnaou

Bab Agnaou
Bab Agnaw
Bab Agnaou.jpg
Alternative names Bab al Kohl or Bab al Qsar
General information
Type City Gate
Architectural style Almohad
Location Rue Moulay Ismail, Marrakesh
Coordinates 31°37′03″N 7°59′27″W / 31.6175°N 7.9907°W / 31.6175; -7.9907Coordinates: 31°37′03″N 7°59′27″W / 31.6175°N 7.9907°W / 31.6175; -7.9907
Construction started 12th Century

Bab Agnaou (Arabic: باب اكناو; Berber: Bab Agnaw or Tawurt n Wegnaw) is one of the nineteen gates of Marrakesh, Morocco. It was built in the 12th century in the time of the Almohad dynasty.

While Bab er Robb was the official entrance to the city, Bab Agnaou gives entrance to the royal kasbah in the southern part of the medina of Marrakech. The kasbah, built by the Almohad sultan Abu Yusuf Yaqub al-Mansur, is the site of El Mansouria (the kasbah mosque), the El Badi Palace and the Saadian Tombs.

The most common theory is that the name Agnaou, like Gnaoua, is thought to come from the Berber word "agnaw" which literally means "deaf man, mute man" and which is used for 'non-Berber people' (who can't understand or speak the Berber language) and usually it denotes Sub-Saharan 'black people'. This can be explained by the gate facing south, away from Berber North Africa and towards sub-Saharan Africa. Some sources dispute this and translate Agnaou from Berber as 'the mute ram without horns'.

Bab (/ˈbɑːb/, Arabic: باب‎‎) comes from the Arabic meaning 'Gate' or 'Door'.

The gate was called Bab el-Kuḥel (also referring to black people) or Bab Leqṣer (palace gate) in some historical sources.

The function of the gate, as royal entrance, was primarily decorative. The façade consists of alternating sections of stone, likely quarried not too far from Marakesh, and brick surrounding the horseshoe arch. The corner-pieces are decorated with floral decorations extending around a shell. This ornamentation is framed by three panels and on these panels is an inscription from the Quran in Maghribi, foliated Kufic letters.


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