La casbah d'Alger, communément appelée la Casbah (en arabe : القصبة, Al-qaṣabah, « la citadelle ») correspond à la vieille ville ou médina d'Alger, capitale de l'Algérie, dont elle forme un quartier historique inscrit au patrimoine mondial de l'humanité de l'Unesco depuis 1992. Administrativement, elle est située dans la commune de Casbah, au sein de la wilaya d'Alger. Probablement peuplée dès le néolithique comme divers sites du Sahel algérois, les premières mentions de la ville remontent à l'Antiquité, où elle est d'abord un port punique, puis berbère et enfin romain. Le cadre urbain actuel est conçu au Xe siècle par les Berbères sous la dynastie des Zirides, il est ensuite enrichi par les apports des autres dynasties berbères qui dominent successivement le Maghreb central. La Casbah atteint son apogée durant la période de la régence d'Alger, de laquelle elle est le siège du pouvoir politique. Colonisée par les Français en 1830, elle est progressivement marginalisée car les centres de pouvoir sont déplacés vers la nouvelle ville. Elle occupe un rôle central pendant la guerre d'Algérie, servant de bastion aux indépendantistes du FLN. À l'indépendance du pays, en 1962, elle ne retrouve pas son rôle central et redevient un espace marginalisé de la ville. Exemple d'architecture islamique et d'urbanisme des médinas arabo-berbères, elle est aussi un symbole de la culture algérienne, un objet d'inspiration artistique et le siège d'un savoir-faire artisanal ancestral. Des acteurs locaux se battent pour faire vivre son patrimoine matériel et immatériel.

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Serkadji Prison

Serkadji Prison, formerly Barberousse Prison, was a high-security prison in Algiers, Algeria; in 1995, about two-thirds of the 1,500 prisoners detained are (or were) accused or convicted of terrorism.
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117 m

Ben Farès Mosque

The Ben Farès Mosque, also known as Djamaa Ben Farès (Arabic: مسجد ابن فارس) and formerly as Djamâa Lihoud (Jewish Mosque), is a mosque located on Place Randon in Algiers, the capital of Algeria. The mosque is located in the Casbah of Algiers, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Built by Napoleon III in 1865 as a synagogue and named as the Great Synagogue of Algiers (French: Synagogue de Rue Randon), the structure was abandoned by Jews in 1962, during the independence of Algeria, and repurposed as a mosque.
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187 m

Ketchaoua Mosque

The Ketchaoua Mosque (Arabic: جامع كتشاوة), also known as Djamaa Ketchaoua, is a mosque in the city of Algiers, the capital of Algeria. Completed in the 17th century, during Ottoman period, the mosque is located at the foot of the Casbah of Algiers, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and is on the first of the Casbah's many steep stairways. Its construction was logistically and symbolically a cynosure of pre-colonial Algiers. The mosque is noted for its unique fusion of Moorish and Byzantine architecture. Built by Hayreddin Barbarossa as a mosque in 1020 AH (1611/1612 CE), in 1831 Muslims were evicted under French rule and the structure was converted to a Roman Catholic cathedral in 1832, renamed as the Cathedral of St Philippe (French: Cathédrale Saint-Philippe), which it remained until 1962. The former mosque-church was demolished between 1845 and 1860 and a new cathedral was built. Following Algerian independence in 1962, this structure was converted back into a mosque. In spite of these transitions, the mosque has retained its original grandeur and is one of the major tourist attractions of Algiers.
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196 m

Bank of Algeria

The Bank of Algeria (Arabic: بنك الجزائر, French: Banque d'Algérie) is the central bank of Algeria. The bank is located in Algiers and its current governor is Salah Eddine Taleb. It was established following Algerian independence in 1962 by Seghir Mostefai, expert for the "Exécutif provisoire" and member of the Algerian delegation at Evian negotiations, to take over the former activities in the country of the Banque de l'Algérie, the colonial central bank of French Algeria.
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200 m

Safir Mosque

The Safir Mosque (Arabic: مسجد سفير or جامع سفير) is a Sunni mosque in the city of Algiers, Algeria. The Moorish-style mosque was completed in 1534 CE and is located inside the medina quarter of the Casbah of Algiers, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.