When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Historic house architecture in Morocco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historic_house...

    A courtyard house in Fes. Traditional Moroccan houses can be divided into two categories: the dar (Arabic: دار) and the riyad or riad (Arabic: رياض). Both are organized around a central courtyard or patio, known as the wast ad-dar (Arabic: وسط الدار, lit. 'middle of the house').

  3. Muharraq - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muharraq

    Muharraq is home to Muharraq Club, which is Bahrain's most successful football club. It is home to the famous Siyadi House. The city is also known for its souq (traditional market) and as a home of traditional arts and music; Ali Bahar, a popular and successful Bahraini singer is from Muharraq.

  4. Moroccan architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moroccan_architecture

    Traditional Moroccan houses were typically centered around a courtyard or patio, often surrounded by a gallery, from which other rooms and sections branched off. [ 134 ] [ 117 ] Courtyard houses have historical antecedents in the houses and villas of the Greco-Roman Mediterranean world and even earlier in the ancient Middle East . [ 117 ]

  5. Bahrain Pearling Trail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahrain_pearling_trail

    It consists of three oyster beds in the northern waters of Bahrain, a segment of the coast and the seafront Bu Mahir fort in the southern tip of Muharraq Island, [2] and 17 buildings in historical section of Muharraq connected by a 3.5 km visitor pathway. [3] The site is Bahrain's second World Heritage Site after the Bahrain Fort. [4]

  6. Siyadi House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siyadi_House

    Siyadi House, also known as Bayt Siyadi (Arabic: بيت سيادي) is a historic building in Muharraq City, Kingdom of Bahrain. It is part of a larger complex of buildings constructed for the pearl merchant Abdullah bin Isa Siyadi, which further includes a mosque and a majlis .

  7. Riad (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riad_(architecture)

    The riad is one of two main types of traditional Moroccan houses, often with two or more stories around an interior symmetrical garden centered around a fountain. [ 10 ] : 55–58 Riads were the stately city homes of the wealthiest citizens such as merchants and courtiers who were able to build mansions which included interior gardens.

  8. Al-Muharraqa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Muharraqa

    The houses of the village were constructed of mud bricks, and there was a mosque and a school; the latter opened in 1945 with an enrollment of 60 students. The mosque, school, and a number of small shops constituted al-Muharraqa's nucleus.

  9. Bahraini art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahraini_art

    The wind tower, which generates natural ventilation in a house, is a common sight on old buildings, particularly in the old districts of Manama and Muharraq. [5] The Isa ibn Ali Al Khalifa house is an example of traditional architecture in Bahrain. A traditional Bahraini house was made up of a series of pavilions around a courtyard ...