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Museums
Bardo
Carthage
Dar Abdallah
El Jem
Monastir
Raqquada
Sousse |
 ![[Culture in Tunisia]](museums.jpg)

- Hours :04/01-09/15 :8:00-19:00
- Normal Hours :8:30-17:30
- Notes :Punic and Roman Museums and archeological sites
The National Museum of Carthage located on the Byrsa Hill,
contains a most interesting Punic and Roman collection from marble sarcophagi to everyday household items as well
as a model of Punic Carthage and the Roman Capitol and Tophet built on its ruins. Here again we find the curious
Punic colored glass paste masks with their large protruding eyes and the clay masks designed to ward off the evil
spirits as well as a lovely collection of jewelry.
The main ruins of Punic Carthage are here as well as in the
Carthage-Salambo area. It is believed that over 400,000
persons lived in this vast city surrounded by walls 13 meters
high. Today the view from the Byrsa hill overlooks the
modern Carthage ,the Punic Harbour, Tunis, and in the
distance the Bou Kournine mountain. Amid this
beauty it is hard to imagine the fall and destruction of Carthage in 146 BC.
".. for 17 days the city was in flames that devoured all, the
living and the dead and all that grew and once flourished...the land was cursed and strewn with salt and forbidden
to all mankind henceforth. " One hundred years later the Romans returned and upon the ruins erected Roman
Carthage with magnificent public buildings second only to Rome itself in importance and grandeur.
To the South of the Museum lies the Punic Quarter, an
ancient burial site, converted to an area of workshops and
houses. Excavations have shown the houses to be
in general two or three stories with indoor wells and cisterns.
Unfortunately even the ruins of the temple dedicated to
Eshmum were completely obliterated during the Roman
reconstruction.
To the east along the Rue Hannibal lies the Kothon- the Punic harbor -which sheltered the mightiest fleet of the
ancient Mediterranean. Composed of a commercial harbour which gave direct access to the sea through a narrow channel
and a military harbour surrounded by a high wall.
The entrance could be sealed by an enormous chain . Recent excavations on the small island in the middle of the
harbor from which the naval commander of the fleet directed and oversaw the operations, have revealed an incredible
system of dry docking and slips. A fascinating model of the boathouse, shrine and docks is now completed. As excavations
continue, the mastery with which Carthage, the "Queen of the Seas" ruled the Mediterranean will be further
confirmed.
Further down the Rue Hannibal in a lovely shady garden is the Tophet dedicated to Baal Haamon. The aura of peace
is
shattered by the view of row upon row, layer upon layer of
funeral steles and urns containing the ashes of sacrificed
children. The steles bear inscriptions in Punic, magical
symbols and stylized representations of gods. A model of the Tophet exists at the National Museum of Carthage.
Human sacrifice was practiced in the early days of Carthage and continued into the 3rd century, although some experts
believe that a sheep or veal was often substituted to a human child. However during times of war, plague or drought,
the practice was revived . The sanctuary itself covers about 2 hectares and is riddled with shafts and layer upon
layer of steles giving credence to the number of over 7000 sacrifices. A great controversy still rages over this
practice as some scholars
believe the stories of child sacrifice to be an slanderous
invention of the Roman writers and much exaggerated.
Leave this gloomy site and explore the imposing ruins of
the Baths of Antonin ,known to be the largest in the Roman
world, beside that of Rome itself. Set against the blue
background of the Mediterranean the last of the eight colossal columns that supported the central room, gives us
just a glimpse of the grandeur of these baths that covered almost 2 hectares. The nearby Archaeological Park demonstrates
the Roman love of order with its rectangular grid of streets serving the residential quarter. This site is of a
particular interest showing the successive layers of inhabitants with Punic graves, a Christian church, and a 7th
century burial chapel , as well as rounded limestone projectiles from Carthaginian armories.
The Roman Theater dating from the 2nd century AD seated 5000 spectators and is still in use for the Cartage Festival
held in July through August. On the hillside behind the theater, lies a Park containing the villas of wealthy Romans,
one of which the Villa Des Voilieres has been restored with its elegant peristyle and fine mosaics.
A stroll through the area will reveal the extent of Carthage under the Romans. At La Malaga about 1 km northwest
of Byrsa and near the road to Tunis, 24 enormous cisterns were built to hold the water brought by an aqueduct from
Zaghouan 132 km away. Only 15 or so remain, yet their impressive size is again a testimony of the Roman genius
for construction. Nearby the ruins of the Amphitheater - built in the 2nd century for over 50,000 spectators, it
was the scene for the martyrdom of Christians in the 3rd century. Although only the underground rooms and a part
of the foundations remain, they bear witness of its grandeur and magnitude.
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Tunisian National Tourism Office.
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