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HADRUMETUM

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 803 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HADRUMETUM  , a

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town of ancient Africa on the
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southern extremity of the sinus Neapolitanus (mod . Gulf of Hammamet) on the east coast of Tunisia . The site is partly occupied by the
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modern town of Susa (q.v.) . The form of the name Hadrumetum varied much in antiquity; the Greeks called it 'ASpbµals, 'ASpi5 ros, 'Abpap,br's, 'Abp6,.oros: the Romans Adrumetum, Adrimetum, Hadrumetum, Hadrymetum, &c.; inscriptions and coins gave Hadrumetum . The town was originally a Phoenician colony founded by Tyrians long before Carthage (Sallust,
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Jug . 19) . It became subject to Carthage, but lost none of its prosperity . Often mentioned during the Punic
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Wars, it was captured by Agathocles in 310, and was the
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refuge of Hannibal and the remnants of his army after the
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battle of Zama in 202 . During the last Punic War it gave assistance to the Romans; after the fall of Carthage in 146 it received an accession of territory and the title of civitas libera (Appian, Punica, xciv.; C.I.L. i. p . 84) . Caesar landed there in 46 B.C. on his way to the victory of
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Thapsus (De belle Afric. iii.; Suetonius, Div . Jul. lix.) .

In the organization of the

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African provinces Hadrumetum became a capital of the province of Byzacena . Its harbour was extremely busy and the surrounding country unusually fertile . Traja%made it a Latin colony under the title of Colonia Concordia Ulpia Trajana
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Augusta Frugifera Hadrumetina; a dedication to the emperor Gordian the Good, found by M . Cagnat at Susa in 1883 gives these titles to the town, and at the same time identifies it with Susa . Quarrels arose between Hadrumetum and its neighbour Thysdrus in connexion with the temple of
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Minerva situated on the
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borders of their respective territories (Frontinus, Gromatici,ed.Lachmannus,P.57);
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Vespasian when
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pro-consul of Africa had to repress a sedition among its I inhabitants (Suetonius, Vesp. iv.; Tissot,
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Fasces de la pron. d'Afrique, p . 66); it was the birthplace of the emperor Albinos . At this period the metropolis of Byzacena was after Carthage the most important town in
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Roman Africa . It was the seat of a bishopric, and its bishops are mentioned at the
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councils of 258, 348, 393 and even later . Destroyed by the Vandals in 434 it was rebuilt by Justinian and renamed Justinianopolis (Procop . De aedif. vi . 6) . The Arabic invasion at the end of the 7th century destroyed the
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Byzantine towns, and the place became the haunt of pirates, protected by the Kasbah (citadel); it was built on the substructions of the Punic, Roman and Byzantine acropolis, and is used by the French for military purposes .

The Arabic geographer

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Bakri gave a description of the chief Roman buildings which were
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standing in his time (Bakri, Descr. de 1'Afrique, tr. by de Slane, p . 83 et seq.) . The modern town of Susa, despite its commercial prosperity, occupies only a third of the old site . In 1863 the French engineer, A . Daux, discovered the jetties and the moles of the commercial harbour, and the
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line of the military harbour (Cothon); both harbours, which were mainly artificial, are entirely silted up . There remains a fragment of the fortifications of the Punic town, which had a
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total length of 6410 metres, and remains of the substructions of the Byzantine acropolis, of the circus, the theatre, the
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water cisterns, and of other buildings, notably the interesting Byzantine
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basilica which is now used as an Arab cafe (Kahwat-el-Kubba) . In the ruins there have been found numerous columns of Punic inscriptions, Roman inscriptions and mosaic, among which is one representing Virgil seated, holding the Aeneid in his hand; another represents the Cretan labyrinth with
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Theseus and the Minotaur (Heron de Villefosse, Revue de l'Afrique francaise, v., December 1887, pp . 384 and 394; Comptes rend us de 1'Acad.
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des Inscr. et Belles-Lettres, 1892, p . 318; other mosaics, ibid., 1896, p . J78; Revue archeol., 1897) . In 1904 Dr Carton and the abbe Leynaud discovered huge Christian catacombs with several miles of subterranean galleries to which access is obtained by a small vaulted chamber . In these catacombs we find numerous sarcophagi and inscriptions painted or engraved of the Roman and Byzantine periods (Comptes rendus de l'Acad. des Inscr. et Belles-Lettres, 1904-1907; Carton and Leynaud,
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Les Catacombes d'Hadrumete, Susa, 1905) .

We can recognize also the Punic and

Pagan-Roman cemeteries (C . R. de l'Acad. des Inscr. et Belles-Lettres, 1887; Bull. archeol. du Comite, 1885, p . 149; 1903, p . 157) . The town had no Punic coins, but under the Roman domination there were coins from the time of the Republic . These are of
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bronze and bear the name of the city in abbreviations, HADR or HADRVM accompanying the head of Neptune or the Sun . We find also the names of
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local duumvirs . Under Augustus the coins have on the obverse the imperial effigy, and on the
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reverse the names and often the effigies of the pro-consuls who governed the province, P . Quintilius Varus, L . Volusius Saturninus and Q .
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Fabius Maximus Africanus . After Augustus the mint was finally closed .

End of Article: HADRUMETUM
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