El Badi Palace (meaning the incomparable palace),…
September 1578 CE
El Badi Palace (meaning the incomparable palace), built in Marrakech by the Saadian king Ahmad al-Mansur in 1578, is thought to have consisted of three hundred and sixty rooms, a courtyard of one hundred and thirty-five meters by one hundred and ten meters and a pool of ninety meters by twenty meters, richly decorated with Italian marbles and large amounts of gold imported from Sudan.
It also had a small, underground, tunnel-like jail with about four cells where the king kept his prisoners.
Unfortunately, this fairy-like palace, which will take approximately twenty-five years to construct, will be torn apart in the late seventeenth century by the Alaouite Sultan Moulay Ismail, who will use the materials to decorate his own palace in Meknes.