Search for stays in Saadian TombsSearch in Saadian TombsMay 09 - May 10 • 2 guests
Find Hotels near Saadian Tombs
The Saadian Tombs were sealed up and forgotten for centuries until a French aerial survey rediscovered them in 1917. That long isolation preserved something extraordinary: the 16th-century mausoleum of Sultan Ahmad al-Mansur, with its twelve marble columns supporting a ceiling of gilded cedarwood and honeycomb muqarnas, remains one of the finest examples of Saadian-era decoration in Morocco. The tombs house around 66 members of the Saadian dynasty in two main mausoleums surrounded by a garden of roses and fruit trees.
The Hall of Twelve Columns is the highlight - Italian Carrara marble pillars frame elaborately carved tombs beneath a domed ceiling so detailed it could take an hour to study. The adjacent second mausoleum is simpler but holds the tombs of Sultan Ahmad al-Mansur's mother and other royal women. Entry costs 70 MAD (~€7), and the site is open daily 9:00-17:00. The narrow entrance passage creates bottlenecks, so expect queuing during busy periods.
Pro Tip: Arrive right at 9:00 AM opening or after 3:30 PM to minimise queuing. The entrance passage is so narrow that only a few people can view the Hall of Twelve Columns at a time, and midday waits of 20-30 minutes are common.