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SUSA (Fr. Sousse)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 162 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SUSA (Fr. Sousse)  , a city of Tunisia, on the Gulf of Hammamet, in 350 49 N., 10° 39' E., 36 m. by
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rail E. by N. of Kairawan, of which it is the
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port, and 93 M . S. by E. by rail of
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Tunis . Susa, which occupies
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part of the site of the ancient
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Hadrumetum, is built on the side of a hill sloping seawards, and is surrounded by a crenellated wall, strengthened by towers . Recesses in the inner side of the wall are used as shops and warehouses . The kasbah, or citadel, built on the highest point within the
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town, was thoroughly restored by the French after their occupation of the country in 1881, and serves as military headquarters for the
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district, the camp for the troops being outside the walls west of the citadel . The native town has been little changed since the French occupation, but north of the port a
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European quarter has been created, and here are public buildings such as law courts, a museum and a town-hall . The museum contains many archaeological treasures, notable mosaics and sculptures . The most interesting buildings in the old town are the Kasrer-Ribat and the Kahwat-el-Kubba . The Kasr-er-Ribat is a square fortress with a high tower and seven bastions . Its date is uncertain, but is not later than the 9th century . The Kahwatel-Kubba (Cafe of the Dome) is a curious house, square at the
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base, then cylindrical, and surmounted by a fluted dome . It was probably a church during the
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Byzantine period .

Another domed

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building, now used as oil-mills,
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dates from
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Roman and Byzantine times . In the Bab-el-Gharbi (West
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Gate) a Roman sarcophagus of marble has been built into the wall, and serves as a drinking fountain . The
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grand mosque is in the north-east part of the town . The ancient harbours are silted up, but vestiges of the Roman breakwaters may be seen . The
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modern port, completed in 1901, enables steamers
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drawing 21 ft. to lie at the quays . Exports are chiefly
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phosphates and other minerals, olive oil, esparto and cereals; imports: cotton goods, building material, &c . The population, less than 10,000 at the time of the French occupation, had increased in 1907 to over 25,000, of whom 1500 were French and 4000 other Europeans, chiefly Italians and Maltese. was educated for the Church, first at Constance, then at Cologne, where he came under the influence of the greatest of the German mystics, Meister Eckart . He subsequently entered a monastery in Constance, where he subjected himself to the severest ordeals of
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asceticism . In 1335 he wandered through Swabia as a preacher, and won all
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hearts by his gentle, persuasive eloquence; the effusive lyricism of his language made him an especial favourite among the nuns . About 1348 he seems to have settled in
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Ulm, where he died on the 25th of
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January 1366 .
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Suso's first
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work, Das Bitchlein der Wahrheit, was written in Cologne about 1329; setting out from Eckart's doctrines, he presents the mystic faith from its speculative or theoretical side; whereas is El Jem, the site of the city of Thysdrus . Of the ancient city there are scarcely any remains save the amphitheatre—a magnificent ruin scarcely inferior to that of the Colosseum in Rome .

There is nc

record of the building of the amphitheatre, which is usually assigned to the reign of Gordian III . (A.D . 238-244) . It is made of
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limestone brought from Sallecta, 20 m. distant, bears evidence of hasty construction, and was probably never finished . It is of four storeys—three open arcades crowned by a
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fourth storey with windows . The first and third arcades are Corinthian ; the
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middle one Composite . Each of these galleries has sixty-four columns and the same number of arches . Constantly used as a fortress since the Arab invasion, the amphitheatre suffered much, and in 1697 the bey of Tunis made a
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great breach in its western end to prevent it being again used for defence ! But even in its
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present condition the amphitheatre—standing solitary in a desolate district—is grandly impressive . Its major axis is 488 ft., its minor axis 406 ft .

End of Article: SUSA (Fr. Sousse)
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