التراث

Intangible Heritage

Official sources: Morocco's 16 inscriptions on the intangible cultural heritage of humanity (UNESCO 2008–2025). Cf. UNESCO · State of Morocco · Ministry of Culture.
UNESCO16 elements · 2008–2025

Everything that cannot be touched.

التراث اللامادي للإنسانية

From the Tan-Tan Moussem, inscribed in 2008, to the Moroccan caftan enshrined in December 2025, Morocco has had 16 elements inscribed on the lists of the intangible cultural heritage of humanity. It is also the space of Jemaa el-Fna — inscribed in 2008 — that inspired, in 2003, the very creation of this convention.

The Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage was adopted by UNESCO in 2003. It protects the practices, representations, expressions, knowledge and know-how "that communities, groups and, in some cases, individuals recognise as part of their heritage".

Morocco ratified the Convention as early as 2006. It has sat twice on the Intergovernmental Committee — from 2010 to 2014, then from 2020 to 2024 — and chaired the 17th session of that Committee, held in Rabat in 2022.

This page lists the sixteen elements, ordered from the most recent to the oldest. Each element opens a detailed page — history, geography, transmission, sources.

01

The sixteen inscriptions, in reverse chronological order.

Source · ich.unesco.org/state/MA
2025 · Clothing

Moroccan caftan

القفطان المغربي

Art, traditions and know-how of the caftan. An inscription led by Morocco, celebrating the schools of Fès, Rabat and Tétouan.

UNESCO · 2025
2024 · Ritual

Henna

الحناء

Rituals, aesthetic and social practices. A multinational inscription bringing together several states of the region.

UNESCO · 2024
2023 · Metals

Metal engraving

النقش على المعادن

Gold, silver, copper. Recognises the guilds of Fès, Marrakech, Meknès, Tiznit, Essaouira.

UNESCO · 2023
2023 · Music

Malhun

الملحون

A popular poetic and musical art, passed down in urban guilds since the 14th century.

UNESCO · 2023
2022 · Nature

Date palm

النخيل

Knowledge, know-how, traditions and practices linked to the palm. A multinational inscription (11 Arab states).

UNESCO · 2022
2021 · Equestrian

Tbourida

التبوريدة

A 16th-century equestrian performance. A re-enactment of military parades following Arab-Amazigh conventions.

UNESCO · 2021
2021 · Writing

Arabic calligraphy

الخط العربي

Knowledge, skills and practices. A multinational Arab inscription — the Maghribi school specific to Morocco.

UNESCO · 2021
2021 · Living

Falconry

البيزرة

A living human heritage. A multinational inscription bringing together 18 nations including Morocco.

UNESCO · 2021
2020 · Meal

Couscous

الكسكس

Production and consumption. A shared Maghreb inscription (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Mauritania).

UNESCO · 2020
2019 · Music

Gnawa

كناوة

Trance, guembri, qraqeb. A music-memory of the trans-Saharan trade and of sub-Saharan Africa in Morocco.

UNESCO · 2019
2017 · Urgent

Taskiwin

تاسكيوين

A martial dance of the western High Atlas — inscribed on the List of Urgent Safeguarding (under threat).

UNESCO · 2017 — Urgent
2014 · Botany

Argan tree

الأركان

Practices and know-how linked to the argan tree, to its oil and to the women of the Souss.

UNESCO · 2014
2013 · Diet

Mediterranean diet

الحمية المتوسطية

Olive oil, pulses, sharing. A multinational inscription of 7 Mediterranean countries.

UNESCO · 2013
2012 · Festival

Sefrou cherries

مهرجان حب الملوك

An annual festival: music, dance, fantasia, election of the Cherry Queen.

UNESCO · 2012
2008 · Square

Jemaa el-Fna

جامع الفنا

A cultural space of Marrakech. The element that, by mobilising its people, inspired the creation of the Convention.

UNESCO · 2008
2008 · Moussem

Tan-Tan Moussem

موسم طانطان

A great annual gathering of the Saharan nomad tribes — Morocco's first inscription.

UNESCO · 2008

ii. Representative list and urgent safeguarding

UNESCO distinguishes two main lists:

  • The Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, which gathers the practices states wish to see recognised for their representative value.
  • The List of Urgent Safeguarding, which sets apart elements whose viability is threatened and which call for international mobilisation.

For Morocco, 15 inscriptions concern the representative list; only one — the taskiwin dance, inscribed in 2017 — appears on the urgent safeguarding list. The taskiwin, a martial dance of the men of the western High Atlas, is threatened by globalisation, the departure of young people to the cities and the decline of the associated crafts (horns, belts, drums).

iii. Tentative list — the future candidates

Besides the elements already inscribed, Morocco maintains a tentative list of 13 properties for tangible heritage and is working on several files for the intangible. Among the known leads:

  • Fès and Tétouan zellige — a joint candidacy is being prepared to recognise hand-cut mosaic as a full element of human heritage.
  • Mint tea — a social practice with multicultural roots (Morocco, Mauritania, Algeria).
  • The oud (Arab lute) — a multinational inscription envisaged for 2026, already mentioned by UNESCO as an "on-going nomination".

iv. And the tangible heritage?

Besides the intangible, Morocco has 9 sites inscribed on UNESCO's tangible World Heritage:

  • Medina of Fès (1981) — a medieval city founded in the 9th century.
  • Medina of Marrakech (1985) — Almoravid and Almohad capital.
  • Ksar of Aït Ben Haddou (1987) — a fortified pre-Saharan ksar.
  • Medina of Tétouan (1997) — Andalusian heritage.
  • Medina of Essaouira (2001) — the port city of Mogador.
  • Archaeological site of Volubilis (1997) — Roman remains.
  • Historic city of Meknès (1996) — Alaouite capital.
  • Portuguese city of Mazagan (2004) — present-day El Jadida.
  • Rabat, modern and historic capital (2012) — shared heritage.

Together, this makes Morocco one of the African countries most represented on the world heritage lists.

Sources

  1. UNESCO, Intangible Cultural Heritage — Morocco, status of elements as of 7 December 2025, ich.unesco.org
  2. UNESCO, World Heritage List — Morocco, whc.unesco.org
  3. Wikipedia, List of Intangible Cultural Heritage elements in Morocco, updated January 2026.
  4. Moroccan National Tourism Office, Heritage of Humanity, visitmorocco.com