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CHERCHEL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 83 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHERCHEL  , a seaport of

Algeria, in the arrondissement and department of Algiers, 55 M . W. of the capital . It is the centre of an agricultural and
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vine-growing
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district, but is commercially of no
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great importance, the
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port, which consists of
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part only of the inner port of
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Roman days, being small and the entry difficult . The
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town is chiefly noteworthy for the extensive ruins of former cities on the same site . Of existing buildings the most remarkable is the great Mosque of the
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Hundred Columns, now used as a military hospital . The mosque contains 89 columns of diorite, surmounted by a variety of capitals brought from other buildings . The population of the town in 1906 was 4733; of the commune of which Cherchel is the centre I r,o88 . Cherchel was a city of the Carthaginians, who named it Jol . Juba II . (25 B.C.) made it the capital of the Mauxetanian
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kingdom under the name of Caesarea . Juba's tomb, the so-called Tombeau de la Chretienne (see ALGERIA), is 71 M . E. of the town .

Destroyed by the

Vandals, Caesarea regained some of its importance under the Byzantines . Taken by the
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Arabs it was renamed by them Cherchel . Khair-ed-Din Barbarossa captured the city in 1520 and annexed it to his Algerian pashalik . In the early years of the 18th century it was a commercial city of some importance, but was laid in ruins by a terrible
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earthquake in 1738 . In 1840 the town was occupied by the French . The ruins suffered greatly from vandalism during the early period of French
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rule, many portable
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objects being removed to museums in Paris or Algiers, and most of the monuments destroyed for the
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sake of their stone . Thus the dressed stones of the ancient theatre served to build barracks; the material of the hippodrome went to build the church; while the portico of the hippodrome, supported by granite and marble columns, and approached by a
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fine
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flight of steps, was destroyed by Cardinal Lavigerie in a search for the tomb of St Marciana . The fort built by Arouj Barbarossa, elder
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brother of Khair-ed-Din, was completely destroyed by the French . There are many fragments of a white marble temple . The ancient cisterns still supply the town with
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water . The museum contains some of the finest statues discovered in Africa . They include
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colossal figures of Aesculapius and Bacchus, and the
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lower
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half of a seated
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Egyptian divinity in black
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basalt, bearing the cartoache of Tethmosis (Thothmes) I .

This statue was found at Cherchel, and is held by some archaeologists to indicate an Egyptian

settlement here about 1500 B.C . See AFRICA, ROMAN, and the description of the museum by P . Gauckler in the Musees et collections archeologiques de l'Algerie .

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