Baths of Antoninus, Carthage
| |
Location | Tunisia |
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Region | Tunis Governorate |
Coordinates | 36.8528°N 10.3233°ECoordinates: 36.8528°N 10.3233°E |
Type | Cultural |
Criteria | ii, iii, vi |
Designated | 1979 (3rd session) |
Reference no. | 37 |
State Party | Tunisia |
Region | North Africa |
Carthage was the center or capital city of the ancient Carthaginian civilization, on the eastern side of the Lake of Tunis in what is now the Tunis Governorate in Tunisia. Carthage was widely considered the most important trading hub of the Ancient Mediterranean and was arguably one of the most affluent cities of the classical world.
The city developed from a Phoenician colony into the capital of a Punic empire which dominated large parts of the Southwest Mediterranean during the first millennium BC. The legendary Queen Alyssa or Dido is regarded as the founder of the city, though her historicity has been questioned. According to accounts by Timaeus of Tauromenium, she purchased from a local tribe the amount of land that could be covered by an oxhide. Cutting the skin into strips, she laid out her claim and founded an empire that would become, through the Punic Wars, the only existential threat to Rome until the coming of the Vandals several centuries later.
The ancient city was destroyed by the Roman Republic in the Third Punic War in 146 BC and then re-developed as Roman Carthage, which became the major city of the Roman Empire in the province of Africa. The city was sacked and destroyed by Umayyad forces after the Battle of Carthage in 698 to prevent it from being reconquered by the Byzantine Empire. It remained occupied during the Muslim period and was used as a fort by the Muslims until the Hafsid period when it was taken by the Crusaders with its inhabitants massacred during the Eighth Crusade. The Hafsids decided to destroy its defenses so it could not be used as a base by a hostile power again. It also continued to function as an episcopal see.
The regional power had shifted to Kairouan and the Medina of Tunis in the medieval period, until the early 20th century, when it began to develop into a coastal suburb of Tunis, incorporated as Carthage municipality in 1919. The archaeological site was first surveyed in 1830, by Danish consul Christian Tuxen Falbe. Excavations were performed in the second half of the 19th century by Charles Ernest Beulé and by Alfred Louis Delattre. The Carthage National Museum was founded in 1875 by Cardinal Charles Lavigerie. Excavations performed by French archaeologists in the 1920s first attracted an extraordinary amount of attention because of the evidence they produced for child sacrifice. There has been considerable disagreement among scholars concerning whether child sacrifice was practiced by ancient Carthage. The open-air Carthage Paleo-Christian Museum has exhibits excavated under the auspices of UNESCO from 1975 to 1984.
Name
The name Carthage /ˈkɑːrθɪdʒ/ is the Early Modern anglicisation of Middle French Carthage /kar.taʒ/, from Latin Carthāgō and Karthāgō (cf. Greek Karkhēdōn (Καρχηδών) and Etruscan *Carθaza) from the Punic qrt-ḥdšt (𐤒𐤓𐤕 𐤇𐤃𐤔𐤕) "new city", implying it was a "new Tyre". The Latin adjective pūnicus, meaning "Phoenician", is reflected in English in some borrowings from Latin—notably the Punic Wars and the Punic language.
The Modern Standard Arabic form قرطاج (Qarṭāj) is an adoption of French Carthage, replacing an older local toponym reported as Cartagenna that directly continued the Latin name.
Topography
Carthage was built on a promontory
with sea inlets to the north and the south. The city's location made it
master of the Mediterranean's maritime trade. All ships crossing the
sea had to pass between Sicily
and the coast of Tunisia, where Carthage was built, affording it great
power and influence. Two large, artificial harbors were built within the
city, one for harboring the city's massive navy of 220 warships and the
other for mercantile trade. A walled tower overlooked both harbors. The
city had massive walls, 37 km (23 mi) in length, longer than the walls
of comparable cities. Most of the walls were located on the shore, thus
could be less impressive, as Carthaginian control of the sea made attack
from that direction difficult. The 4.0 to 4.8 km (2.5 to 3 mi) of wall
on the isthmus to the west were truly massive and were never penetrated. The city had a huge necropolis
or burial ground, religious area, market places, council house, towers,
and a theater, and was divided into four equally sized residential
areas with the same layout. Roughly in the middle of the city stood a
high citadel called the Byrsa.
Carthage was one of the largest cities of the Hellenistic period and was among the largest cities in preindustrial history. Whereas by AD 14, Rome had at least 750,000 inhabitants and in the following century may have reached 1 million, the cities of Alexandria and Antioch numbered only a few hundred thousand or less. According to the not-always-reliable history of Herodian, Carthage rivaled Alexandria for second place in the Roman empire.
On top of Byrsa hill, the location of the Roman Forum,
a residential area from the last century of existence (early second
century BC) of the Punic city was excavated by the French archaeologist
Serge Lancel. The neighborhood, with its houses, shops, and private
spaces, is significant for what it reveals about daily life there over
2,100 years ago.
The remains have been preserved under embankments, the
substructures of the later Roman forum, whose foundation piles dot the
district. The housing blocks are separated by a grid of straight streets
about 6 m (20 ft) wide, with a roadway consisting of clay; in situ
stairs compensate for the slope of the hill. Construction of this type
presupposes organization and political will, and has inspired the name
of the neighborhood, "Hannibal district", referring to the legendary Punic general or sufet (consul) at the beginning of the second century BC.
The habitat is typical, even stereotypical. The street was often
used as a storefront/shopfront; cisterns were installed in basements to
collect water for domestic use, and a long corridor on the right side of
each residence led to a courtyard containing a sump,
around which various other elements may be found. In some places, the
ground is covered with mosaics called punica pavement, sometimes using a
characteristic red mortar.
The merchant harbor at Carthage was developed, after settlement of the nearby Punic town of Utica.
Eventually the surrounding countryside was brought into the orbit of
the Punic urban centers, first commercially, then politically. Direct
management over cultivation of neighbouring lands by Punic owners
followed. A 28-volume work on agriculture written in Punic by Mago,
a retired army general (c. 300), was translated into Latin and later
into Greek. The original and both translations have been lost; however,
some of Mago's text has survived in other Latin works. Olive trees (e.g., grafting), fruit trees (pomegranate, almond, fig, date palm), viniculture, bees, cattle, sheep, poultry, implements, and farm management were among the ancient topics which Mago discussed. As well, Mago addresses the wine-maker's art (here a type of sherry).
In Punic farming society, according to Mago, the small estate
owners were the chief producers. They were, two modern historians write,
not absent landlords. Rather, the likely reader of Mago was "the master
of a relatively modest estate, from which, by great personal exertion,
he extracted the maximum yield." Mago counselled the rural landowner,
for the sake of their own 'utilitarian' interests, to treat carefully
and well their managers and farm workers, or their overseers and slaves.
Yet elsewhere these writers suggest that rural land ownership provided
also a new power base among the city's nobility, for those resident in
their country villas.
By many, farming was viewed as an alternative endeavour to an urban
business. Another modern historian opines that more often it was the
urban merchant of Carthage who owned rural farming land to some profit,
and also to retire there during the heat of summer.
It may seem that Mago anticipated such an opinion, and instead issued
this contrary advice (as quoted by the Roman writer Columella):
"The man who acquires an estate must sell his house, lest he prefer to live in the town rather than in the country. Anyone who prefers to live in a town has no need of an estate in the country." "One who has bought land should sell his town house, so that he will have no desire to worship the household gods of the city rather than those of the country; the man who takes greater delight in his city residence will have no need of a country estate."
The issues involved in rural land management also reveal underlying features of Punic society, its structure and stratification.
The hired workers might be considered 'rural proletariat', drawn from
the local Berbers. Whether there remained Berber landowners next to
Punic-run farms is unclear. Some Berbers became sharecroppers. Slaves
acquired for farm work were often prisoners of war. In lands outside
Punic political control, independent Berbers cultivated grain and raised
horses on their lands. Yet within the Punic domain that surrounded the
city-state of Carthage, there were ethnic divisions in addition to the
usual quasi feudal
distinctions between lord and peasant, or master and serf. This
inherent instability in the countryside drew the unwanted attention of
potential invaders. Yet for long periods Carthage was able to manage these social difficulties.
The many amphorae
with Punic markings subsequently found about ancient Mediterranean
coastal settlements testify to Carthaginian trade in locally made olive oil and wine.
Carthage's agricultural production was held in high regard by the
ancients, and rivaled that of Rome—they were once competitors, e.g.,
over their olive harvests. Under Roman rule, however, grain production ([wheat] and barley) for export increased dramatically in 'Africa'; yet these later fell with the rise in Roman Egypt's
grain exports. Thereafter olive groves and vineyards were
re-established around Carthage. Visitors to the several growing regions
that surrounded the city wrote admiringly of the lush green gardens,
orchards, fields, irrigation channels, hedgerows (as boundaries), as well as the many prosperous farming towns located across the rural landscape.
Accordingly, the Greek author and compiler Diodorus Siculus
(fl. 1st century BC), who enjoyed access to ancient writings later
lost, and on which he based most of his writings, described agricultural
land near the city of Carthage circa 310 BC:
"It was divided into market gardens and orchards of all sorts of fruit trees, with many streams of water flowing in channels irrigating every part. There were country homes everywhere, lavishly built and covered with stucco. ... Part of the land was planted with vines, part with olives and other productive trees. Beyond these, cattle and sheep were pastured on the plains, and there were meadows with grazing horses."
The Chora (farm lands of Carthage) encompassed a limited area: the north coastal tell, the lower Bagradas river valley (inland from Utica), Cape Bon, and the adjacent sahel
on the east coast. Punic culture here achieved the introduction of
agricultural sciences first developed for lands of the eastern
Mediterranean, and their adaptation to local African conditions.
The urban landscape of Carthage is known in part from ancient authors,
augmented by modern digs and surveys conducted by archeologists. The
"first urban nucleus" dating to the seventh century, in area about 10
hectares (25 acres), was apparently located on low-lying lands along the
coast (north of the later harbors). As confirmed by archaeological
excavations, Carthage was a "creation ex nihilo", built on
'virgin' land, and situated at what was then the end of a peninsula.
Here among "mud brick walls and beaten clay floors" (recently uncovered)
were also found extensive cemeteries, which yielded evocative grave
goods like clay masks. "Thanks to this burial archaeology we know more
about archaic Carthage than about any other contemporary city in the
western Mediterranean." Already in the eighth century, fabric dyeing operations had been established, evident from crushed shells of murex
(from which the 'Phoenician purple' was derived). Nonetheless, only a
"meager picture" of the cultural life of the earliest pioneers in the
city can be conjectured, and not much about housing, monuments or
defenses. The Roman poet Virgil (70–19 BC) imagined early Carthage, when his legendary character Aeneas had arrived there:
"Aeneas found, where lately huts had been,
marvelous buildings, gateways, cobbled ways,
and din of wagons. There the Tyrians
were hard at work: laying courses for walls,
rolling up stones to build the citadel,
while others picked out building sites and plowed
a boundary furrow. Laws were being enacted,
magistrates and a sacred senate chosen.
Here men were dredging harbors, there they laid
the deep foundations of a theatre,
and quarried massive pillars... ."
The two inner harbours [called in Punic cothon] were located
in the southeast; one being commercial, and the other for war. Their
definite functions are not entirely known, probably for the
construction, outfitting, or repair of ships, perhaps also loading and
unloading cargo. Larger anchorages existed to the north and south of the city. North and west of the cothon were located several industrial areas, e.g., metalworking and pottery (e.g., for amphora), which could serve both inner harbours, and ships anchored to the south of the city.
About the Byrsa, the citadel area to the north,
considering its importance our knowledge of it is patchy. Its prominent
heights were the scene of fierce combat during the fiery destruction of
the city in 146 BC. The Byrsa was the reported site of the Temple of Eshmun (the healing god), at the top of a stairway of sixty steps. A temple of Tanit
(the city's queen goddess) was likely situated on the slope of the
'lesser Byrsa' immediately to the east, which runs down toward the sea. Also situated on the Byrsa were luxury homes.
South of the citadel, near the cothon (the inner harbours) was the tophet, a special and very old cemetery, which when begun lay outside the city's boundaries. Here the Salammbô was located, the Sanctuary of Tanit, not a temple but an enclosure for placing stone stelae.
These were mostly short and upright, carved for funeral purposes. The
presence of infant skeletons from here may indicate the occurrence of
child sacrifice, as claimed in the Bible, although there has been
considerable doubt among archeologists as to this interpretation and
many consider it simply a cemetery devoted to infants. Probably the tophet burial fields were "dedicated at an early date, perhaps by the first settlers." Recent studies, on the other hand, indicate that child sacrifice was practiced by the Carthaginians.
Between the sea-filled cothon for shipping and the Byrsa heights lay the agora [Greek: "market"], the city-state's central marketplace for business and commerce. The agora
was also an area of public squares and plazas, where the people might
formally assemble, or gather for festivals. It was the site of religious
shrines, and the location of whatever were the major municipal
buildings of Carthage. Here beat the heart of civic life. In this
district of the Carthage, more probably, the ruling suffets presided, the council of elders convened, the tribunal of the 104 met, and justice was dispensed at trials in the open air.
Early residential districts wrapped around the Byrsa from the south to the north east. Houses usually were whitewashed and blank to the street, but within were courtyards open to the sky.
In these neighborhoods multistory construction later became common,
some up to six stories tall according to an ancient Greek author. Several architectural floorplans of homes have been revealed by recent excavations, as well as the general layout of several city blocks. Stone stairs were set in the streets, and drainage was planned, e.g., in the form of soakways leaching into the sandy soil.
Along the Byrsa's southern slope were located not only fine old homes,
but also many of the earliest grave-sites, juxtaposed in small areas,
interspersed with daily life.
Artisan workshops were located in the city at sites north and west of the harbours. The location of three metal workshops
(implied from iron slag and other vestiges of such activity) were found
adjacent to the naval and commercial harbours, and another two were
further up the hill toward the Byrsa citadel. Sites of pottery kilns have been identified, between the agora and the harbours, and further north. Earthenware often used Greek models. A fuller's
shop for preparing woolen cloth (shrink and thicken) was evidently
situated further to the west and south, then by the edge of the city. Carthage also produced objects of rare refinement. During the 4th and 3rd centuries, the sculptures of the sarcophagi became works of art. "Bronze engraving and stone-carving reached their zenith."
The elevation of the land at the promontory on the seashore to the north-east (now called Sidi Bou Saïd),
was twice as high above sea level as that at the Byrsa (100 m and 50
m). In between runs a ridge, several times reaching 50 m; it continues
northwestward along the seashore, and forms the edge of a plateau-like
area between the Byrsa and the sea. Newer urban developments lay here in these northern districts.
Surrounding Carthage were walls
"of great strength" said in places to rise above 13 m, being nearly 10 m
thick, according to ancient authors. To the west, three parallel walls
were built. The walls altogether ran for about 33 kilometres (21 miles)
to encircle the city. The heights of the Byrsa were additionally fortified; this area being the last to succumb to the Romans in 146 BC. Originally the Romans had landed their army on the strip of land extending southward from the city.
Ancient history
Greek cities contested with Carthage for the Western Mediterranean culminating in the Sicilian Wars and the Pyrrhic War over Sicily, while the Romans fought three wars against Carthage, known as the Punic Wars, "Punic" meaning "Phoenician" in Latin, as Carthage was a Phoenician colony grown into a kingdom.
Punic Republic
The Carthaginian republic was one of the longest-lived and largest
states in the ancient Mediterranean. Reports relay several wars with
Syracuse and finally, Rome, which eventually resulted in the defeat and
destruction of Carthage in the Third Punic War. The Carthaginians were Phoenician settlers originating in the Mediterranean coast of the Near East. They spoke Canaanite, a Semitic language, and followed a local variety of the ancient Canaanite religion.
The fall of Carthage came at the end of the Third Punic War in 146 BC at the Battle of Carthage.
Despite initial devastating Roman naval losses and Rome's recovery from
the brink of defeat after the terror of a 15-year occupation of much of
Italy by Hannibal, the end of the series of wars resulted in the end of Carthaginian power and the complete destruction of the city by Scipio Aemilianus.
The Romans pulled the Phoenician warships out into the harbor and
burned them before the city, and went from house to house, capturing and
enslaving the people. About 50,000 Carthaginians were sold into slavery.
The city was set ablaze and razed to the ground, leaving only ruins and
rubble. After the fall of Carthage, Rome annexed the majority of the
Carthaginian colonies, including other North African locations such as Volubilis, Lixus, Chellah.
The legend that the city was sown with salt remains widely accepted despite a lack of evidence among ancient historical accounts; According to R.T. Ridley, the earliest such claim is attributable to B.L. Hallward's chapter in Cambridge Ancient History,
published in 1930. Ridley contended that Hallward's claim may have
gained traction due to historical evidence of other salted-earth
instances such as Abimelech's salting of Shechem in Judges 9:45.
B.H. Warmington admitted he had repeated Hallward's error, but posited
that the legend precedes 1930 and inspired repetitions of the practice.
He also suggested that it is useful to understand how subsequent
historical narratives have been framed and that the symbolic value of
the legend is so great and enduring that it mitigates a deficiency of
concrete evidence.
For many years but especially beginning in the 19th century, various texts claim that after defeating the city of Carthage in the Third Punic War (146 BC), the Roman general Scipio Aemilianus Africanus ordered the city be sacked, forced its surviving inhabitants into slavery,
plowed it over and sowed it with salt. However, no ancient sources
exist documenting the salting itself. The element of salting is
therefore probably a later invention modeled on the Biblical story of Shechem. The ritual of symbolically drawing a plow over the site of a city is mentioned in ancient sources, but not in reference to Carthage specifically. When Pope Boniface VIII destroyed Palestrina in 1299, he issued a papal bull that it be plowed "following the old example of Carthage in Africa" and also salted. "I have run the plough over it, like the ancient Carthage of Africa, and I have had salt sown upon it...."
Roman Carthage
When Carthage fell, its nearby rival Utica,
a Roman ally, was made capital of the region and replaced Carthage as
the leading center of Punic trade and leadership. It had the
advantageous position of being situated on the outlet of the Medjerda River, Tunisia's only river that flowed all year long. However, grain cultivation in the Tunisian mountains caused large amounts of silt to erode into the river. This silt accumulated in the harbor until it became useless, and Rome was forced to rebuild Carthage.
By 122 BC, Gaius Gracchus founded a short-lived colony, called Colonia Iunonia, after the Latin name for the Punic goddess Tanit, Iuno Caelestis. The purpose was to obtain arable lands for impoverished farmers. The Senate abolished the colony some time later, to undermine Gracchus' power.
After this ill-fated attempt, a new city of Carthage was built on the same land by Julius Caesar
in the period from 49 to 44 BC, and by the first century, it had grown
to be the second-largest city in the western half of the Roman Empire, with a peak population of 500,000. It was the center of the province of Africa, which was a major breadbasket of the Empire. Among its major monuments was an amphitheater.
Carthage also became a center of early Christianity (see Carthage (episcopal see)).
In the first of a string of rather poorly reported councils at Carthage
a few years later, no fewer than 70 bishops attended. Tertullian later broke with the mainstream that was increasingly represented in the West by the primacy of the Bishop of Rome, but a more serious rift among Christians was the Donatist controversy, which Augustine of Hippo spent much time and parchment arguing against. At the Council of Carthage (397), the biblical canon for the western Church was confirmed. The Christians at Carthage conducted persecutions against the pagans, during which the pagan temples, notably the famous Temple of Juno Caelesti, were destroyed.
The political fallout from the deep disaffection of African Christians is supposedly a crucial factor in the ease with which Carthage and the other centers were captured in the fifth century by Gaiseric, king of the Vandals, who defeated the Roman general Bonifacius and made the city the capital of the Vandal Kingdom. Gaiseric was considered a heretic, too, an Arian, and though Arians commonly despised Catholic Christians, a mere promise of toleration might have caused the city's population to accept him.
The Vandals during their conquest are said to have destroyed parts of Carthage by Victor Vitensis in Historia Persecutionis Africanae Provincia including various buildings and churches.
After a failed attempt to recapture the city in the fifth century, the Eastern Roman Empire finally subdued the Vandals in the Vandalic War in 533–534. Thereafter, the city became the seat of the praetorian prefecture of Africa, which was made into an exarchate during the emperor Maurice's reign, as was Ravenna
on the Italian Peninsula. These two exarchates were the western
bulwarks of the Byzantine Empire, all that remained of its power in the
West. In the early seventh century Heraclius the Elder, the exarch of Carthage, overthrew the Byzantine emperor Phocas, whereupon his son Heraclius succeeded to the imperial throne.
Islamic period
The Roman Exarchate of Africa was not able to withstand the seventh-century Muslim conquest of the Maghreb. The Umayyad Caliphate under Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan in 686 sent a force led by Zuhayr ibn Qays, who won a battle over the Romans and Berbers led by King Kusaila of the Kingdom of Altava on the plain of Kairouan, but he could not follow that up. In 695, Hassan ibn al-Nu'man captured Carthage and advanced into the Atlas Mountains. An imperial fleet arrived and retook Carthage, but in 698, Hasan ibn al-Nu'man returned and defeated Emperor Tiberios III at the 698 Battle of Carthage. Roman imperial forces withdrew from all of Africa except Ceuta. Fearing that the Byzantine Empire might reconquer it, they decided to destroy Roman Carthage in a scorched earth policy
and establish their headquarters somewhere else. Its walls were torn
down, the water supply from its aqueducts cut off, the agricultural land
was ravaged and its harbors made unusable.
The destruction of the Exarchate of Africa marked a permanent end to the Byzantine Empire's influence in the region.
It is visible from archaeological evidence, that the town of
Carthage continued to be occupied. The neighborhood of Bjordi Djedid
continued to be occupied. The Baths of Antoninus continued to function in the Arab period and the historian Al-Bakri
stated that they were still in good condition. They also had production
centers nearby. It is difficult to determine whether the continued
habitation of some other buildings belonged to Late Byzantine or Early
Arab period. The Bir Ftouha church might have continued to remain in use
though it is not clear when it became uninhabited. Constantine the African was born in Carthage.
The Medina of Tunis, originally a Berber settlement, was established as the new regional center under the Umayyad Caliphate in the early 8th century. Under the Aghlabids,
the people of Tunis revolted numerous times, but the city profited from
economic improvements and quickly became the second most important in
the kingdom. It was briefly the national capital, from the end of the
reign of Ibrahim II in 902, until 909, when the Shi'ite Berbers took over Ifriqiya and founded the Fatimid Caliphate.
Carthage remained a residential see until the high medieval period, mentioned in
two letters of Pope Leo IX dated 1053, written in reply to consultations regarding a conflict between the bishops of Carthage and Gummi.
In each of the two letters, Pope Leo declares that, after the Bishop of
Rome, the first archbishop and chief metropolitan of the whole of Africa is the bishop of Carthage.
Later, an archbishop of Carthage named Cyriacus was imprisoned by the Arab rulers because of an accusation by some Christians. Pope Gregory VII
wrote him a letter of consolation, repeating the hopeful assurances of
the primacy of the Church of Carthage, "whether the Church of Carthage
should still lie desolate or rise again in glory".
By 1076, Cyriacus was set free, but there was only one other bishop in
the province. These are the last of whom there is mention in that period
of the history of the see.
The fortress of Carthage was used by the Muslims until Hafsid era and was captured by the Crusaders during the Eighth Crusade.
The inhabitants of Carthage were slaughtered by the Crusaders after
they took it, and it was used as a base of operations against the
Hafsids. After repelling them, Muhammad I al-Mustansir decided to destroy Cathage's defenses completely to prevent a repeat.
Modern history
Carthage is some 15 kilometres (9.3 miles) east-northeast of Tunis; the settlements nearest to Carthage were the town of Sidi Bou Said to the north and the village of Le Kram to the south.
Sidi Bou Said was a village which had grown around the tomb of the eponymous sufi saint (d. 1231), which had been developed into a town under Ottoman rule in the 18th century. Le Kram was developed in the late 19th century under French administration as a settlement close to the port of La Goulette.
In 1881, Tunisia became a French protectorate, and in the same year Charles Lavigerie, who was archbishop of Algiers, became apostolic administrator of the vicariate of Tunis. In the following year, Lavigerie became a cardinal. He "saw himself as the reviver of the ancient Christian Church of Africa, the Church of Cyprian of Carthage", and, on 10 November 1884, was successful in his great ambition of having the metropolitan see of Carthage restored, with himself as its first archbishop. In line with the declaration of Pope Leo IX in 1053, Pope Leo XIII acknowledged the revived Archdiocese of Carthage as the primatial see of Africa and Lavigerie as primate.
The Acropolium of Carthage (Saint Louis Cathedral of Carthage) was erected on Byrsa hill in 1884.
Archaeological site
The Danish consul Christian Tuxen Falbe conducted a first survey of the topography of the archaeological site (published in 1833).
Antiquarian interest was intensified following the publication of Flaubert's Salammbô in 1858. Charles Ernest Beulé performed some preliminary excavations of Roman remains on Byrsa hill in 1860. A more systematic survey of both Punic and Roman-era remains is due to Alfred Louis Delattre, who was sent to Tunis by cardinal Charles Lavigerie in 1875 on both an apostolic and an archaeological mission.
Audollent (1901, p. 203)
cites Delattre and Lavigerie to the effect that in the 1880s, locals
still knew the area of the ancient city under the name of Cartagenna (i.e. reflecting the Latin n-stem Carthāgine).
Auguste Audollent divides the area of Roman Carthage into four quarters, Cartagenna, Dermèche, Byrsa and La Malga.
Cartagenna and Dermèche correspond with the lower city, including the
site of Punic Carthage; Byrsa is associated with the upper city, which
in Punic times was a walled citadel above the harbour; and La Malga is linked with the more remote parts of the upper city in Roman times.
French-led excavations at Carthage began in 1921, and from 1923
reported finds of a large quantity of urns containing a mixture of
animal and children's bones. René Dussaud identified a 4th-century BC stela found in Carthage as depicting a child sacrifice.
A temple at Amman (1400–1250 BC) excavated and reported upon by J.B. Hennessy
in 1966, shows the possibility of bestial and human sacrifice by fire.
While evidence of child sacrifice in Canaan was the object of academic
disagreement, with some scholars arguing that merely children's
cemeteries had been unearthed in Carthage, the mixture of children's
with animal bones as well as associated epigraphic evidence involving
mention of mlk led some to believe that, at least in Carthage, child sacrifice was indeed common practice.
However, though the animals were surely sacrificed, this does not
entirely indicate that the infants were, and in fact the bones indicate
the opposite. Rather, the animal sacrifice was likely done to, in some
way, honour the deceased.
In 2016, an ancient Carthaginian individual, who was excavated from a Punic tomb in Byrsa Hill, was found to belong to the rare U5b2c1
maternal haplogroup. The Young Man of Byrsa specimen dates from the
late 6th century BCE, and his lineage is believed to represent early
gene flow from Iberia to the Maghreb.
Commune
In 1920, the first seaplane base was built on the Lake of Tunis for the seaplanes of Compagnie Aéronavale. The Tunis Airfield opened in 1938, serving around 5,800 passengers annually on the Paris-Tunis route.
During World War II, the airport was used by the United States Army Air Force Twelfth Air Force as a headquarters and command control base for the Italian Campaign of 1943.
Construction on the Tunis-Carthage Airport, which was fully funded by France, began in 1944, and in 1948 the airport become the main hub for Tunisair.
In the 1950s the Lycée Français de Carthage was established to serve French families in Carthage. In 1961 it was given to the Tunisian government as part of the Independence of Tunisia, so the nearby Collège Maurice Cailloux in La Marsa, previously an annex of the Lycée Français de Carthage, was renamed to the Lycée Français de La Marsa and began serving the lycée level. It is currently the Lycée Gustave Flaubert.
After Tunisian independence in 1956, the Tunis conurbation gradually extended around the airport, and Carthage (قرطاج Qarṭāj) is now a suburb of Tunis, covering the area between Sidi Bou Said and Le Kram.
Its population as of January 2013 was estimated at 21,276,
mostly attracting the more wealthy residents. If Carthage is not the capital, it tends to be the political pole, a « place of emblematic power » according to Sophie Bessis, leaving to Tunis the economic and administrative roles. The Carthage Palace (the Tunisian presidential palace) is located in the coast.
The suburb has six train stations of the TGM line between Le Kram and Sidi Bou Said:
Carthage Salammbo (named for Salambo, the fictional daughter of Hamilcar), Carthage Byrsa (named for Byrsa hill), Carthage Dermech (Dermèche), Carthage Hannibal (named for Hannibal), Carthage Présidence (named for the Presidential Palace) and Carthage Amilcar (named for Hamilcar).
In literature
The scant remains of what was once a great city are reflected upon in Letitia Elizabeth Landon's poem, Carthage, published in 1836 with quotes from Sir Grenville Temple's Journal.
Trade and business
The merchants of Carthage were in part heirs of the Mediterranean
trade developed by Phoenicia, and so also heirs of the rivalry with
Greek merchants. Business activity was accordingly both stimulated and
challenged. Cyprus
had been an early site of such commercial contests. The Phoenicians
then had ventured into the western Mediterranean, founding trading
posts, including Utica and Carthage. The Greeks followed, entering the western seas where the commercial rivalry continued. Eventually it would lead, especially in Sicily, to several centuries of intermittent war.
Although Greek-made merchandise was generally considered superior in
design, Carthage also produced trade goods in abundance. That Carthage
came to function as a manufacturing colossus was shown during the Third Punic War
with Rome. Carthage, which had previously disarmed, then was made to
face the fatal Roman siege. The city "suddenly organised the manufacture
of arms" with great skill and effectiveness. According to Strabo (63 BC – AD 21) in his Geographica:
"[Carthage] each day produced one hundred and forty finished shields, three hundred swords, five hundred spears, and one thousand missiles for the catapults... . Furthermore, [Carthage although surrounded by the Romans] built one hundred and twenty decked ships in two months... for old timber had been stored away in readiness, and a large number of skilled workmen, maintained at public expense."
The textiles industry in Carthage probably started in private homes,
but the existence of professional weavers indicates that a sort of
factory system later developed. Products included embroidery, carpets,
and use of the purple murex dye (for which the Carthaginian isle of Djerba was famous). Metalworkers
developed specialized skills, i.e., making various weapons for the
armed forces, as well as domestic articles, such as knives, forks,
scissors, mirrors, and razors (all articles found in tombs). Artwork in
metals included vases and lamps in bronze, also bowls, and plates. Other
products came from such crafts as the potters, the glassmakers, and the goldsmiths. Inscriptions on votive stele indicate that many were not slaves but 'free citizens'.
Phoenician and Punic merchant ventures were often run as a family
enterprise, putting to work its members and its subordinate clients.
Such family-run businesses might perform a variety of tasks: own and
maintain the ships, providing the captain and crew; do the negotiations overseas, either by barter
or buying and selling, of their own manufactured commodities and trade
goods, and native products (metals, foodstuffs, etc.) to carry and
trade elsewhere; and send their agents
to stay at distant outposts in order to make lasting local contacts,
and later to establish a warehouse of shipped goods for exchange, and
eventually perhaps a settlement. Over generations, such activity might
result in the creation of a wide-ranging network of trading operations.
Ancillary would be the growth of reciprocity between different family firms, foreign and domestic.
State protection was extended to its sea traders by the Phoenician city of Tyre and later likewise by the daughter city-state of Carthage. Stéphane Gsell,
the well-regarded French historian of ancient North Africa, summarized
the major principles guiding the civic rulers of Carthage with regard to
its policies for trade and commerce:
- to open and maintain markets for its merchants, whether by entering into direct contact with foreign peoples using either treaty negotiations or naval power, or by providing security for isolated trading stations
- the reservation of markets exclusively for the merchants of Carthage, or where competition could not be eliminated, to regulate trade by state-sponsored agreements with its commercial rivals
- suppression of piracy, and promotion of Carthage's ability to freely navigate the seas
Both the Phoenicians and the Cathaginians were well known in antiquity for their secrecy in general, and especially pertaining to commercial contacts and trade routes. Both cultures excelled in commercial dealings. Strabo (63BC-AD21) the Greek geographer wrote that before its fall (in 146 BC) Carthage enjoyed a population of 700,000, and directed an alliance of 300 cities. The Greek historian Polybius (c.203–120) referred to Carthage as "the wealthiest city in the world".
Constitution of state
A "suffet" (possibly two) was elected by the citizens, and held
office with no military power for a one-year term. Carthaginian generals
marshalled mercenary armies and were separately elected. From about 550
to 450 the Magonid family monopolized the top military position; later
the Barcid family acted similarly. Eventually it came to be that, after a
war, the commanding general had to testify justifying his actions
before a court of 104 judges.
Aristotle (384–322) discusses Carthage in his work, Politica;
he begins: "The Carthaginians are also considered to have an excellent
form of government." He briefly describes the city as a "mixed
constitution", a political arrangement with cohabiting elements of monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy, i.e., a king (Gk: basileus), a council of elders (Gk: gerusia), and the people (Gk: demos). Later Polybius of Megalopolis (c.204–122, Greek) in his Histories would describe the Roman Republic in more detail as a mixed constitution in which the Consuls were the monarchy, the Senate the aristocracy, and the Assemblies the democracy.
Evidently Carthage also had an institution of elders who advised the Suffets, similar to a Greek gerusia or the Roman Senate.
We do not have a Punic name for this body. At times its members would
travel with an army general on campaign. Members also formed permanent committees.
The institution had several hundred members drawn from the wealthiest
class who held office for life. Vacancies were probably filled by
recruitment from among the elite, i.e., by co-option. From among its members were selected the 104 Judges
mentioned above. Later the 104 would come to evaluate not only army
generals but other office holders as well. Aristotle regarded the 104 as
most important; he compared it to the ephorate of Sparta
with regard to control over security. In Hannibal's time, such a Judge
held office for life. At some stage there also came to be independent
self-perpetuating boards of five who filled vacancies and supervised
(non-military) government administration.
Popular assemblies
also existed at Carthage. When deadlocked the Suffets and the
quasi-senatorial institution of elders might request the assembly to
vote; also, assembly votes were requested in very crucial matters in
order to achieve political consensus and popular coherence. The assembly
members had no legal wealth or birth qualification. How its
members were selected is unknown, e.g., whether by festival group or
urban ward or another method.
The Greeks were favourably impressed by the constitution of Carthage; Aristotle had a separate study of it made which unfortunately is lost. In his Politica
he states: "The government of Carthage is oligarchical, but they
successfully escape the evils of oligarchy by enriching one portion of
the people after another by sending them to their colonies." "[T]heir
policy is to send some [poorer citizens] to their dependent towns, where
they grow rich." Yet Aristotle continues, "[I]f any misfortune occurred, and the bulk of
the subjects revolted, there would be no way of restoring peace by
legal means." Aristotle remarked also:
"Many of the Carthaginian institutions are excellent. The superiority of their constitution is proved by the fact that the common people remain loyal to the constitution; the Carthaginians have never had any rebellion worth speaking of, and have never been under the rule of a tyrant."
Here one may remember that the city-state of Carthage, who citizens were mainly Libyphoenicians
(of Phoenician ancestry born in Africa), dominated and exploited an
agricultural countryside composed mainly of native Berber sharecroppers
and farmworkers, whose affiliations to Carthage were open to divergent
possibilities. Beyond these more settled Berbers and the Punic farming
towns and rural manors, lived the independent Berber tribes, who were
mostly pastoralists.
In the brief, uneven review of government at Carthage found in his Politica Aristotle mentions several faults. Thus, "that the same person should hold many offices,
which is a favorite practice among the Carthaginians." Aristotle
disapproves, mentioning the flute-player and the shoemaker. Also, that
"magistrates should be chosen not only for their merit but for their
wealth." Aristotle's opinion is that focus on pursuit of wealth will
lead to oligarchy and its evils.
"[S]urely it is a bad thing that the greatest offices... should be bought. The law which allows this abuse makes wealth of more account than virtue, and the whole state becomes avaricious. For, whenever the chiefs of the state deem anything honorable, the other citizens are sure to follow their example; and, where virtue has not the first place, their aristocracy cannot be firmly established."
In Carthage the people seemed politically satisfied and submissive,
according to the historian Warmington. They in their assemblies only
rarely exercised the few opportunities given them to assent to state
decisions. Popular influence over government appears not to have been an
issue at Carthage. Being a commercial republic fielding a mercenary
army, the people were not conscripted for military service, an
experience which can foster the feel for popular political action. But
perhaps this misunderstands the society; perhaps the people, whose
values were based on small-group loyalty, felt themselves sufficiently
connected to their city's leadership by the very integrity of the
person-to-person linkage within their social fabric. Carthage was very
stable; there were few openings for tyrants.
Only after defeat by Rome devastated Punic imperial ambitions did the
people of Carthage seem to question their governance and to show
interest in political reform.
In 196, following the Second Punic War (218–201), Hannibal Barca, still greatly admired as a Barcid military leader, was elected suffet.
When his reforms were blocked by a financial official about to become a
judge for life, Hannibal rallied the populace against the 104 judges.
He proposed a one-year term for the 104, as part of a major civic
overhaul. Additionally, the reform included a restructuring of the
city's revenues, and the fostering of trade and agriculture. The changes
rather quickly resulted in a noticeable increase in prosperity. Yet his
incorrigible political opponents cravenly went to Rome, to charge
Hannibal with conspiracy, namely, plotting war against Rome in league
with Antiochus the Hellenic ruler of Syria. Although the Roman Scipio Africanus
resisted such manoeuvre, eventually intervention by Rome forced
Hannibal to leave Carthage. Thus, corrupt city officials efficiently
blocked Hannibal Barca in his efforts to reform the government of
Carthage.
Mago (6th century) was King of Carthage; the head of state,
war leader, and religious figurehead. His family was considered to
possess a sacred quality. Mago's office was somewhat similar to that of
a pharaoh,
but although kept in a family it was not hereditary, it was limited by
legal consent. Picard, accordingly, believes that the council of elders
and the popular assembly are late institutions. Carthage was founded by
the king of Tyre who had a royal monopoly on this trading venture. Thus
it was the royal authority stemming from this traditional source of
power that the King of Carthage possessed. Later, as other Phoenician
ship companies entered the trading region, and so associated with the
city-state, the King of Carthage had to keep order among a rich variety
of powerful merchants in their negotiations among themselves and over
risky commerce across the Mediterranean. Under these circumstance, the
office of king began to be transformed. Yet it was not until the
aristocrats of Carthage became wealthy owners of agricultural lands in
Africa that a council of elders was institutionalized at Carthage.
Contemporary sources
Most
ancient literature concerning Carthage comes from Greek and Roman
sources as Carthage's own documents were destroyed by the Romans. Apart from inscriptions, hardly any Punic literature has survived, and none in its own language and script. A brief catalogue would include:
- three short treaties with Rome (Latin translations);
- several pages of Hanno the Navigator's log-book concerning his fifth century maritime exploration of the Atlantic coast of west Africa (Greek translation);
- fragments quoted from Mago's fourth/third century 28-volume treatise on agriculture (Latin translations);
- the Roman playwright Plautus (c. 250 – 184) in his Poenulus incorporates a few fictional speeches delivered in Punic, whose written lines are transcribed into Latin letters phonetically;
- the thousands of inscriptions made in Punic script, thousands, but many extremely short, e.g., a dedication to a deity with the personal name(s) of the devotee(s).
"[F]rom the Greek author Plutarch
[(c. 46 – c. 120)] we learn of the 'sacred books' in Punic safeguarded
by the city's temples. Few Punic texts survive, however." Once "the City Archives, the Annals, and the scribal lists of suffets" existed, but evidently these were destroyed in the horrific fires during the Roman capture of the city in 146 BC.
Yet some Punic books (Latin: libri punici) from the libraries of Carthage reportedly did survive the fires. These works were apparently given by Roman authorities to the newly augmented Berber rulers. Over a century after the fall of Carthage, the Roman politician-turned-author Gaius Sallustius Crispus or Sallust (86–34) reported his having seen volumes written in Punic, which books were said to be once possessed by the Berber king, Hiempsal II (r. 88–81).
By way of Berber informants and Punic translators, Sallust had used
these surviving books to write his brief sketch of Berber affairs.
Probably some of Hiempsal II's libri punici, that had escaped the fires that consumed Carthage in 146 BC, wound up later in the large royal library of his grandson Juba II (r.25 BC-AD 24). Juba II not only was a Berber king, and husband of Cleopatra's daughter, but also a scholar and author in Greek of no less than nine works. He wrote for the Mediterranean-wide audience then enjoying classical literature. The libri punici inherited from his grandfather surely became useful to him when composing his Libyka, a work on North Africa written in Greek. Unfortunately, only fragments of Libyka survive, mostly from quotations made by other ancient authors. It may have been Juba II who 'discovered' the five-centuries-old 'log book' of Hanno the Navigator, called the Periplus, among library documents saved from fallen Carthage.
In the end, however, most Punic writings that survived the
destruction of Carthage "did not escape the immense wreckage in which so
many of Antiquity's literary works perished."
Accordingly, the long and continuous interactions between Punic
citizens of Carthage and the Berber communities that surrounded the city
have no local historian. Their political arrangements and periodic
crises, their economic and work life, the cultural ties and social
relations established and nourished (infrequently as kin), are not known
to us directly from ancient Punic authors in written accounts. Neither
side has left us their stories about life in Punic-era Carthage.
Regarding Phoenician writings, few remain and these seldom
refer to Carthage. The more ancient and most informative are cuneiform
tablets, ca. 1600–1185, from ancient Ugarit, located to the north of Phoenicia
on the Syrian coast; it was a Canaanite city politically affiliated
with the Hittites. The clay tablets tell of myths, epics, rituals,
medical and administrative matters, and also correspondence. The highly valued works of Sanchuniathon,
an ancient priest of Beirut, who reportedly wrote on Phoenician
religion and the origins of civilization, are themselves completely
lost, but some little content endures twice removed. Sanchuniathon was said to have lived in the 11th century, which is considered doubtful. Much later a Phoenician History by Philo of Byblos (64–141) reportedly existed, written in Greek, but only fragments of this work survive.
An explanation proffered for why so few Phoenician works endured: early
on (11th century) archives and records began to be kept on papyrus, which does not long survive in a moist coastal climate. Also, both Phoenicians and Carthaginians were well known for their secrecy.
Thus, of their ancient writings we have little of major interest left to us by Carthage, or by Phoenicia
the country of origin of the city founders. "Of the various Phoenician
and Punic compositions alluded to by the ancient classical authors, not a
single work or even fragment has survived in its original idiom."
"Indeed, not a single Phoenician manuscript has survived in the original [language] or in translation."
We cannot therefore access directly the line of thought or the contour
of their worldview as expressed in their own words, in their own voice. Ironically, it was the Phoenicians who "invented or at least perfected and transmitted a form of writing [the alphabet] that has influenced dozens of cultures including our own."
As noted, the celebrated ancient books on agriculture written by Mago of Carthage survives only via quotations in Latin from several later Roman works.