Bab El Allouj (Arabic: باب العلوج) is one of the gates of the medina of Tunis.
Built under the Hafsid sultan Abū lshâq Ibrâhîm al-Mustansir (1349–1369), it was named Bab er-Rehiba or "the small esplanade gate". In 1435, it took the name of Bab El Allouj, when Sultan Abu Amr Uthman brought his mother's family from Italy (his mother was a former Italian captive) and installed her in the esplanade quarter which became Rahbat El Allouj, Arabic: allouj (in the singular Arabic: alij), describing white foreigners and often Christian slaves.[1]