Meknès, city, north-central Morocco. It lies about 70 miles (110 km) from the Atlantic Ocean and 36 miles (58 km) southwest of Fès. One of Morocco’s four imperial cities, it was founded in the 10th century by the Zanātah tribe of the Meknassa Imazighen (Berbers) as Meknassa al-Zaytūn (“Meknès of the Olives”), a group of villages among olive groves; it grew around Takarart, an 11th-century Almoravid citadel. Meknès became the Moroccan capital in 1673 under Mawlāy Ismāʿīl, who built palaces and mosques that earned for Meknès the name “Versailles of Morocco.” His city wall, fortified by four-cornered towers and pierced by nine ornamented gates, still stands. After his death the city declined. In 1911 it was occupied by the French, who built a new quarter, separated from the old by the Bou Fekrane River. Meknès has massive buildings of a heavy splendour, the Roua (stables said to have housed 12,000 horses), and celebrated gardens irrigated by water from a 10-acre (4-hectare) artificial lake.

Meknès is a commercial centre for the surrounding fertile agricultural plateau region and is also a market for fine embroidery and carpets, woven chiefly by Amazigh women of the Middle Atlas (Moyen Atlas) mountains. The city is linked by road to Rabat and by rail with Rabat, Fès, Tangier (Tanger), and Casablanca. The ruins of the Roman Volubilis and the holy city of Idrīs, who founded the Idrīsid dynasty, are nearby.

Grapes, cereals (primarily wheat), citrus fruits, olives, sheep, goats, and cattle are raised in the surrounding region. Fluorite is mined near Meknès. Pop. (2004) 536,232.

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ancient Rome

Volubilis, North African archaeological site, located near Fès in the Jebel Zerhoun Plain of Morocco. Under the Mauretanian king Juba II in the 1st century bc and the 1st century ad, Volubilis became a flourishing centre of late Hellenistic culture. Annexed to Rome about ad 44, it was made a municipium (a community that exercised partial rights of Roman citizenship) as a reward for supporting Rome during the revolt of Aedmon, and it became the chief inland city of the Roman province of Mauretania Tingitana. Ancient Volubilis and its hinterland were deserted about 285, when Diocletian reorganized Mauretania Tingitana. Known to the Arabs as Oulili, Walīla, or Walīlī, it became the capital of Idrīs I (founder of the Idrīsid dynasty) after 788.

Roman ruins on the site are extensive; among the most noteworthy are a forum, a 2nd-century ad basilica, and the Arch of Caracalla (ad 217).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.
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