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LAMBESSA

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 110 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LAMBESSA  , the

ancient Lambaesa, a
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village of Algeria, in the arrondissement of Batna and department of
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Constantine, 7 M . S.E. of Batna and 17 W. of
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Timgad . The
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modern village, the centre of an agricultural colony founded in 1848, is noteworthy for its
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great convict establishment (built about 185o) . The remains of the
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Roman
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town, and more especially of the Roman camp, in spite of wanton vandalism, are among the most interesting ruins in
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northern Africa . They are now preserved by the Service
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des Monuments historiques and excavations have resulted in many interesting discoveries . The ruins are situated on the
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lower terraces of the Jebel Aures, and consist of triumphal arches (one to Septimius Severus, another to Commodus), temples, aqueducts, vestiges of an amphitheatre,
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baths and an immense quantity of
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masonry belonging to private houses . To the north and east lie extensive cemeteries with the stones
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standing in their
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original alignments; to the west is a similar
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area, from which, however, the stones have been largely removed for
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building the modern village . Of the temple of Aesculapius only one column is standing, though in the
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middle of the 19th century its
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facade was-entire . The capitol or temple dedicated to
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Jupiter,
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Juno and
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Minerva, which has been cleared of debris, has a portico with eight columns . On level ground about two-thirds of a mile from the centre of the ancient town stands the camp, its site now partly occupied by the penitentiary and its gardens . It
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measures 164o ft . N. to S. by 1476 ft .

E. to W., and in the middle rise the ruins of a building commonly called, but incorrectly, the praetorium . This

noble building, which
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dates from A.D . 268, is 92 ft. long by 66 ft. broad and 49 ft. high; its
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southern facade has a splendid peristyle
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half the height of the wall, consisting of a front row of massive Ionic columns and an engaged row of Corinthian pilasters . Behind this building (which was roofed), is a large court giving access to other buildings, one being the
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arsenal . In it have been found many thousands of projectiles . To the S.E. are the remains of the baths . The ruins of both city and camp have yielded many inscriptions (Renier edited 1500, and there are 4185 in the Corpus Inscr .
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Lat. vol. viii.); and, though a very large proportion are epitaphs of the barest kind, the more important pieces supply an outline of the
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history of the place . Over 2500 inscriptions
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relating to the camp have been deciphered . In a museum in the village are
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objects of antiquity discovered in the vicinity . Besides inscriptions,' statues, &c., are some
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fine mosaics found in 1905 near the arch of Septimius Severus . The statues include those of Aesculapius and
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Hygieia, taken from the temple of Aesculapius .

Lambaesa was a military

foundation . The camp of the third legion (Legio III .
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Augusta), to which it owes its origin, appears to have been established between A.D . 123 and 129, in the time of Hadrian, whose address to his soldiers was found inscribed on a pillar in a second camp to the west of the great camp still extant . By 166 mention is made of the decurions of a vicus, to curiae of which are known by name; and the vicus became a municipium probably at the time when it was made the capital of the newly founded province of
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Numidia . The legion was removed by Gordianus, but restored by Valerianus and Gallienus; and its final departure did not take place till after 392 . The town soon afterwards declined . It never became the seat of a bishop, and no Christian inscriptions have been found among the ruins . About 2 M . S. of Lambessa are the ruins of Markuna, the ancient Verecunda, including two triumphal arches . See S . Gsell,
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Les Monuments antiques de l'Algerie (Paris, 19ot) and L'Algerie mans l'antiquite (Algiers, 19o3); L .

Renier, Inscriptions romaines de l'Algerie (Paris, 1855) ; Gustav Wilmann, "

Die rom . Lagerstadt Afrikas," in Commentetiones Phil. in honorem Th . Mommseni (Berlin, 1877) ;
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Sir L . Playfair, Travels in the Footsteps of Bruce (
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London, 1877) ; A . Graham, Roman Africa (London, 1902) .

End of Article: LAMBESSA
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