The Bath Museum is located in Morocco, in the city of Fes, in the building of the Bath Palace, built at the end of the 19th century by Sultan Mulay Hassan I. The palace served as the summer royal residence, later the Sultan Moulay Abdelaziz rebuilt and expanded the palace in the Spanish-Moorish style. In 1915, the Museum of Arts and Folk Traditions of the Fez Region (Bath Museum) was opened in the palace, and in 1924 the historical building was classified as a monument of national heritage. The museum has opened archaeological and ethnographic exhibitions introducing the culture, art, crafts and traditions of the spiritual capital of Morocco. The museum collection has 6,500 exhibits - national costumes, embroidery, carpets, wooden furniture, metal products, mosaic from Moroccan zelig tiles, musical instruments, astrolabes, jewelry, prayer books. The pride of the museum is the collection of blue pottery Fes. Back in the 10th century, pottery masters Fez invented the famous blue shade "fez blue" (Fez blue), which was obtained by adding cobalt to the dye. Fez decorative ceramics is characterized by a background of white enamel, on which a delicate floral pattern was applied with “blue Fez”. The artisan of Fez sacredly kept the secret of making blue ceramics and passed it from father to son. Museum visitors have the opportunity to stroll through the Andalusian palace garden, created in 1915 according to the project of the famous landscape architect Jean-Claude Nicolas Forestier.