Althiburos (
Punic: 𐤏𐤋𐤕𐤁𐤓𐤔, ʿltbrš[1] or 𐤀𐤋𐤕𐤁𐤓𐤔, ʼltbrš[2]) was an ancient
Berber,
Carthaginian, and
Roman settlement in what is now the
Dahmani Delegation of the
Kef Governorate of
Tunisia.[3][4] During the reign of emperor
Hadrian, it became a municipality with Italian rights. It was the
seat of a
Christian bishop from the 4th to 7th centuries. The settlement was destroyed during the
Muslim invasions and the area's population center moved to
Ebba Ksour on the plain. This left Althiburos's ruins largely intact; they were rediscovered by travelers in the 18th century.
Althiburos was an ancient
Numidian city at the confluence of two local rivers when it passed into
Punic influence and then control. It formed part of the road linking
Carthage to
Theveste.
After the
Punic Wars ended in
Roman victory, Althiburos formed part of
Africa. It retained a local Punic-style dual magistracy under
sufetes well into the early empire, although at one point the city conceived a regional innovation and installed three executives at once.[7] In the 2nd century, under the emperor
Hadrian, it was granted
municipal status and Italian rights under the name Municipium Aelium Hadrianum Augustum Althiburitanum.[8] from
EmperorHadrian (117-138).[9] It was prosperous in the 2nd and 3rd centuries.
It was the
seat of a
Christian bishop from the 4th to 7th centuries. The settlement was destroyed during the
Muslim invasions and the area's population center moved to Ebba Ksour (
Dahmani) on the plain. This left Althiburos's ruins largely intact; they were rediscovered by travelers in the 18th century.
Archaeology
Apart from travel stories that describe it, the site has seen few archaeological excavations. Excavations begun in 1908, interrupted and resumed in 1912, reveal part of the
forum, a
main street and a monumental door to a bay, with an inscription dedicated to
Hadrian.[10][11] A
Punic inscription found at the site is now at the
Louvre Museum in
Paris.
Capitolium and
Forum (44.6 by 37.15 meters (146.3 ft × 121.9 ft)) on a paved
esplanade (23.35 by 30.8 meters (76.6 ft × 101.0 ft)) surrounded by a
porch with 10 x 12
columns.
A
triumphal arch is mostly in ruins, but the façade is partly conserved. It was excavated in 1912 and dated between 185 and 191.
There is a second temple (dedicated to an unknown god or gods) on the opposite side of the Forum, of which only the podium and some
Corinthian architectural elements remain; From an
inscription, it seems datable to 145. In the northeast corner there is a complex of buildings including a house with a
peristyle of 16
columns and
geometric mosaics on the four
porticos; Other mosaics are in the
Bardo Museum. To the southeast of the square, a 10 x 7 meter building that was probably a
factory and a monumental
fountain
The house of the Muses, with outstanding mosaics.
The house of the Peixos scene, on the other side of the river
Oued Oum El Abid, with
mosaics representing scenes of
fish.
The
Roman Theatre is located on top of a hill. Remains partially buried remain in the middle of scattered blocks only a series of 19 arcades of which only go beyond the top, surmounted by five arcades of the first floor. René Cagnat and Henri Saladin at the end of the 19th century gave the following dimensions for this theater: 60 meters (200 ft) in
diameter and 35 meters (115 ft) in
width. The archaeological activities carried out since 2007 have as objective the survey of the ruins and the reconstruction of the theater.[13][14]
Bishopric
The Roman city was also the seat of an ancient
bishopric which existed until the end of the 7th century.[15][16] The diocese was reestablished in 1933 as a
titular episcopal see. Known bishops include:
^Mongi Ennaïfer, « La cité d'Althiburos et l'édifice des Asclepieia », Bibliothèque archéologique, vol. 1, éd. Institut national d'archéologie et d'art, Tunis, 1976
^Richard Stillwell, The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites (
Princeton University Press, 14 Mar. 2017)
p44.
^Richard Stillwell, William L. MacDonald, Marian Holland McAllister, Stillwell, Richard, MacDonald, William L., McAlister, Marian Holland, Ed.,
ALTHIBUROS, The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites.
^Ilẹvbare, J.A. (June 1974). "The Impact of the Carthaginians and the Romans on the Administrative System of the Maghreb Part I". Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria. 7 (2): 187–197.
JSTOR41857007.
^Alfred Merlin, « Fouilles à Althiburos (Medeina) », CRAI, vol. 56, no 6, (1912), p.420
^A. Merlin, “Forum et maisons d'Althiburos,” Notes et Documents, VI (1913).