Bab Ksiba


Bab Ksiba is a gate in Marrakech, Morocco. Bab Ksiba and another more famous gate further north, Bab Agnaou, served as entrances to the royal Kasbah in the southern part of the medina of Marrakech, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Historical background

The name Ksiba,, in Berber refers to the Kasbah district of the Medina, where this gateway is located. Kasbah means "fortress" and ksiba means literally "Little-Fort".
The Kasbah of Marrakesh, built by the Almohad sultan Yaqub al-Mansour, is the site of the El Mansouria Mosque, the El Badi Palace and the Saadian Tombs. Bab Ksiba was the entrance to another small kasbah which was adjoined to the southwestern corner of the main kasbah in order to protect the western side of the Grand Mechouar and the Derb Chtouka neighbourhood. The date of its construction is unclear; it existed at the beginning of the 19th century and may have been built under Muhammad ibn Abdallah in the 18th century, but was almost certainly not part of the original Almohad kasbah.