Badia PalaceAs 16th-century Sultan Ahmed Al ... View this post on Instagram 📍Badia Palace📍 👉As 16th-century Sultan Ahmed Al Mansour (r 1578–1603) was paving the Badia Palace with gold, turquoise and crystal, his court jester wisecracked, ‘It’ll make a beautiful ruin.’ That jester was no fool: at the beginning of the 18th century, the place was destroyed by Sultan Moulay Ismail and materials carried off to then-capital Meknes. Today only remnants remain, watched over by nesting storks. There are magnificent views from the ramparts, and in 2018 an extensive renovation added some exhibitions. 👉Construction began in 1578, the same year the sultan ascended to the throne. Al Mansour came to be known as 'the golden king' and was the longest-ruling and most famous of all the Saadian dynasty rulers, as well as the last of his line. During Al Mansour's reign, Badia was the most impressive palace in the western reaches of the Muslim world – now only Badia's vast courtyard, with its four sunken gardens and reflecting pools, give a hint of its former majesty. A CGI film on loop in a room along the ruin's far eastern back wall shows what some areas of the palace would have looked like – historians believe it was designed in imitation of the grand Moorish palaces of Andalusia in southern Spain. 👇👇👇👇👇👇👇 Follow us and tag yourself if you are interested in sharing your most perfect pictures of our beautiful country @moroccofriendlytravel 👇👇👇👇👇👇👇 Credit:® @hafiidii.omaar@walidtighazoui @lonelyplanet #travel #travelphotography #photography #nature #travelgram #love #photooftheday #instagood #wanderlust #instatravel #adventure #travelblogger #trip #vacation #traveling #picoftheday #explore #instagram #travelling #ig #landscape #holiday #beautiful #like #beach #photo #naturephotography #art #sunset #history A post shared by 🇲🇦Morocco Friendly Travel🇲🇦 (@moroccofriendlytravel) on Mar 8, 2020 at 3:13pm PDT