the heart of the medina of Chefchaouen
"Piazza Uta el Hamman", "Piazza Uta el Hamman", the heart of the medina of Chefchaouen (Morocco) towards which the main streets that run through the labyrinthine old city converge.
"How do you know, when you think blue – when you say blue – that you are talking about the same color that everyone thinks.
Blue is elusive.
Blue, or azure, is the sky, the sea, the eye of a god, the tail of a devil, a birth, a cyanotic face, a bird, a joke, the song
saddest, brightest day.
Blue is astute, sly, sneaks into the room sideways, it's sneaky and shrewd.
This story is about the color blue, and like blue there is none of it true.
Blue is beauty, not truth. In English they say true blue, but it's a joke, a rhyme: now it's here, now it's gone. It's a deeply ambiguous color, blue.
Even the deepest blue has its shades.
Blue is glory and power, a wave, a particle, a vibration, a resonance, a spirit, a passion, a memory, a vanity, a metaphor, a dream.
Blue is a similarity.
Blu, she, is like a woman. "
[Christopher Moore]
Chefchaouen is a city in Morocco, capital of the province of the same name, in the Tangier-Tetouan-Al Hoceima region. The inhabitants belong to the Rif Berber tribes and Arabs (minority). Defined as the "blue pearl" due to the typical blue color of its houses, the city was considered a "holy city", where foreigners were forbidden to enter. There are many imaginative theories on the reasons for choosing the characteristic blue color of the buildings. Some argue that they were painted blue by the Jews who wanted to give them the color of paradise to remember God. While according to others, this color is used either to keep mosquitoes and flies away or to represent the sea or to keep houses cool during the summer.
The city was founded in 1471. Its original population was composed mainly of Andalusian exiles, both Muslims and Jews, coming mainly from the provinces of Cadiz and Malaga and for this reason the old part of the city has an appearance very similar to that of Andalusian towns, with small streets with an irregular layout. (Morocco) towards which the main streets that run through the labyrinthine old city converge. "How do you know, when you think blue – when you say blue – that you are talking about the same color that everyone thinks.
Blue is elusive.
Blue, or azure, is the sky, the sea, the eye of a god, the tail of a devil, a birth, a cyanotic face, a bird, a joke, the song
saddest, brightest day.
Blue is astute, sly, sneaks into the room sideways, it's sneaky and shrewd.
This story is about the color blue, and like blue there is none of it true.
Blue is beauty, not truth. In English they say true blue, but it's a joke, a rhyme: now it's here, now it's gone. It's a deeply ambiguous color, blue.
Even the deepest blue has its shades.
Blue is glory and power, a wave, a particle, a vibration, a resonance, a spirit, a passion, a memory, a vanity, a metaphor, a dream.
Blue is a similarity.
Blu, she, is like a woman. "
[Christopher Moore]
Chefchaouen is a city in Morocco, capital of the province of the same name, in the Tangier-Tetouan-Al Hoceima region. The inhabitants belong to the Rif Berber tribes and Arabs (minority). Defined as the "blue pearl" due to the typical blue color of its houses, the city was considered a "holy city", where foreigners were forbidden to enter. There are many imaginative theories on the reasons for choosing the characteristic blue color of the buildings. Some argue that they were painted blue by the Jews who wanted to give them the color of paradise to remember God. While according to others, this color is used either to keep mosquitoes and flies away or to represent the sea or to keep houses cool during the summer.
The city was founded in 1471. Its original population was composed mainly of Andalusian exiles, both Muslims and Jews, coming mainly from the provinces of Cadiz and Malaga and for this reason the old part of the city has an appearance very similar to that of Andalusian towns, with small streets with an irregular layout.

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