In 859 C.E., a young woman in Fez made a decision that would echo through more than a thousand years of human learning. Using an inheritance from her father, Fatima al-Fihri funded the construction of a mosque and attached school for the immigrant community that had welcomed her family. That institution — Al-Karaouine — never stopped operating. It still stands today, recognized by UNESCO and Guinness World Records as the oldest continuously operating, degree-granting university in the world.
Key facts
- Al-Karaouine university: Founded in 859 C.E. in Fez, Morocco, it is recognized by UNESCO and Guinness World Records as the world’s oldest continuously operating, degree-granting university.
- Fatima al-Fihri: A Muslim woman from a family that had emigrated from Kairouan, Tunisia, she used her entire inheritance to fund the mosque and madrasa — naming both after her family’s home city.
- Medieval Islamic education: The institution began with Quranic instruction and expanded over centuries to include Arabic grammar, music, Sufism, medicine, and astronomy — long before European universities existed in their modern form.
Who was Fatima al-Fihri
Fatima al-Fihri was born in Kairouan, in what is now Tunisia. Her family emigrated to Fez, a city already becoming a hub of Islamic scholarship and trade. When her father died and left her a substantial inheritance, she chose not to keep it for herself. She spent every dirham on building a place of worship and learning for her community — and reportedly fasted every day of construction until the project was complete.
Her sister, Mariam, funded the nearby Andalusian Mosque at the same time. Both women were educated and devout, and both made founding institutions their life’s work. That two sisters from an immigrant family were responsible for two of Fez’s most important early institutions is a fact that history largely underreported for centuries.
The name “Al-Karaouine” comes from “Kairouan” — the city her family left behind. The university is, in a quiet way, a monument to the experience of migration and the desire to build something lasting in a new place.
What medieval Islamic education looked like
In its early centuries, Al-Karaouine focused on religious instruction — Quranic memorization, Islamic jurisprudence, and Arabic grammar. But it expanded well beyond those roots. By the medieval period, students could study music, Sufism, rhetoric, logic, astronomy, and medicine within its walls.
Instruction happened — and still happens — in a format called halqa: students arrange themselves in a semicircle around a scholar and engage directly with primary texts. This method of close reading and oral transmission was how knowledge moved through the medieval Islamic world, and it shaped educational traditions that later influenced European scholasticism.
The mosque attached to the university can hold up to 22,000 worshippers, making it the largest mosque in Africa. For centuries, scholars came from across the Islamic world — from West Africa, Central Asia, and Andalusia — to study and teach here. The medina of Fez, where Al-Karaouine sits, is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, in part because of the university’s role in shaping the city’s intellectual and architectural character.
A thread connecting civilizations
Al-Karaouine was not an isolated phenomenon. It emerged from a broader flourishing of Islamic scholarship during the 9th century C.E. — a period when cities like Baghdad, Cairo, and Córdoba were producing breakthroughs in mathematics, medicine, optics, and philosophy. The knowledge preserved and developed in these centers would later travel to Europe through translation movements in Spain and Sicily, forming part of the foundation on which the European Renaissance was built.
The scholars who passed through Al-Karaouine were part of that larger web. Ibn Khaldun, the 14th-century historian and sociologist whose Muqaddimah is considered a founding work of historiography and social science, studied in Fez. Ibn Rushd (Averroes), whose commentaries on Aristotle shaped medieval European philosophy, was part of the same Andalusian-Maghrebi intellectual tradition. The university was a node in a network of learning that connected continents.
Students still come from across Morocco and West Africa, as well as parts of Muslim Central Asia. Admission requires, among other things, memorization of the entire Quran. The institution’s continuity — from 859 C.E. to the present — is itself a kind of achievement.
Lasting impact
The concept of a formal institution where students enroll, study under recognized scholars, and receive credentials — what we now call a university — has antecedents in several civilizations. But Al-Karaouine’s unbroken record of operation across 12 centuries makes it the oldest example that can be traced continuously to the present day. Oxford was founded roughly 200 years later. Bologna, often cited as Europe’s oldest university, came in the late 11th century C.E.
The university’s library holds some of the most important surviving manuscripts in the Islamic world, including rare copies of the Quran and works of early Islamic scholarship. In 2016, a major restoration of the library was led by Moroccan architect Aziza Chaouni — another woman shaping the institution’s future.
Al-Karaouine also challenges the assumption that formal higher education began in medieval Europe. It asks us to think more carefully about where ideas come from, and how often the answer crosses more borders than the textbooks suggest.
Blindspots and limits
The historical record on Fatima al-Fihri is thinner than the story’s fame might suggest. Primary sources documenting her life are sparse, and some scholars note that details have accumulated over centuries in ways that are difficult to verify independently. What is well-supported is that the institution was founded by a member of the al-Fihri family in 859 C.E. — the specific role of Fatima versus other family members is attested in Islamic historical sources but is not documented with the granularity of later institutional records.
The university’s evolution from madrasa to modern degree-granting institution was also gradual and uneven — it was integrated into Morocco’s state university system only in 1963 C.E., and the formal designation “University of Al-Karaouine” dates to 1965 C.E. The 859 C.E. founding date marks a beginning, not an instant transformation into the institution we recognize today. The Guinness and UNESCO designation reflects continuous operation from that founding — a meaningful distinction, but one worth understanding precisely.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Atlas Obscura — University of Al-Karaouine
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Marie Louise Eta becomes the first female head coach in men’s top-flight European football
- Ghana establishes a marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Morocco
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