Online Encyclopedia

CORNUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 179 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CORNUS  , an

ancient
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town of Sardinia, of Phoenician origin, on the west coast, 18 m. from
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Tharros, and the same from
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Bosa . At the time of the Second Punic War it is spoken of as the
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principal city of the
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district, and its capture by the Romans was the last act in the suppression of the
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rebellion of 215 B.C., it having served as a place of
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refuge for the fugitives after the defeat of the combined forces of the rebels and the Carthaginians . The site of the ancient acropolis, covered with debris, may still be made out . Here were found three inscriptions in 1831, with dedications by the ordo, or town council, of Cornus to various patrons, from one of which it seems that it was a colony, though when it became so is unknown (Th . Mommsen, Corp . Inscr .
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Lat . X . 7915 sqq.) . Unimportant remains of an aqueduct and (perhaps) of a church exist . Excavations in the
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necropolis of the
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Roman period are recorded by F . Nissardi, Notizie degli Scavi, 1887, p .

47 . Phoenician

rock-cut tombs may also be seen .

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