![]() Museums Bardo Carthage Dar Abdallah El Jem Monastir Raqquada Sousse |
![]() In the gallery surrounding the courtyard are exhibited mosaics and fragmentary sculptures and inscriptions. The most remarkable among the mosaics are those with geometric plant motifs, which attained their finest expression in this region in the late second and early third centuries. The visitor's attention is also captured by a peacock fanning its tail and by many other figurative motifs. The site was entirely devoid of water, and two inscriptions celebrate the structures built to bring water to the ancient city. Terra cotta tiles of the Paleo-Christian era give an idea of the traditional work produced in the region. The three large exhibition rooms contain showcases exhibiting many types of items: sculptures (Jupiter wearing a diadem, a trunk of Mercury, a Medusa's head, a lion's head, a young girl's head, a marble hand, a fragment of a face with the hair design bored into the stone); glassware (cups, goblets, bottles, tear-bottles, perfume vials); clear sigillate ceramics (vases, plates, etc.); terra cotta statuettes (numerous figurines of Venus, Eros and Psyche, a dog-shaped vase); many Roman and Paleo-Christian terra cotta lamps; coins; metal objects (a frying pan, a bronze mirror, handles, etc.). In these same rooms are also exhibited some marble statues, including one of Isis. The principal treasure of the El Jem Museum is, however, its impressive collection of mosaics. Geometric motifs, flowers and figurative scenes stand out by their enormous diversity and by the skill with which they were executed: Orpheus charming the animals with his music; the triumph of Bacchus; the nine Muses; drunken Silenus; the spirit of the year; the four seasons; Dionysus as a child riding a tigress; wild animal fights - all are among the finest mosaics ever discovered in Tunisia, a they provide an excellent overview of the work of the School of Byzacenus (the southern half of the country). The museum is currently being extended to accommodate the many mosaics that have been discovered more recently, as well as a large number of quite unique objects produced by the craftsmen of Thysdrus during the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD.
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