Online Encyclopedia

TIMGAD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 989 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TIMGAD  , a ruined

city 23 M . S.E. of Batna in the department of
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Constantine, Algeria . Timgad, the Thamugas of the Romans, was built on the
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lower slopes of the
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northern side of the Aures Mountains, and was situated at the intersection of six roads . It was traversed by two main streets, the Cardo Maximus
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running north and south, and the Decumanus Maximus east and west . The residential
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part of the
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town was on a lower level than the capitol and most of the other public buildings . The ruins of the capitol occupy a prominent position in the south-west of the city . Some of the columns of the
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facade (which are of the Corinthian order and 45 ft. high) have been re-erected . The dimensions of the capitol correspond with those of the Pantheon at Rome . Immediately north of the capitol are the remains of a large market; to the east are the ruins of the forum,
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basilica and theatre . The auditorium of the theatre, which held nearly 4000 persons, is
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complete . A little west of the theatre are
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baths, containing paved and mosaic floors in perfect preservation . Ruins of other and larger thermae are found in all four quarters of the city, those on the north being very extensive .

Across the Decumanus Maximus just north-east of the market is the

arch of Trajan—still erect, and restored in 1900 . The arch is of the Corinthian order, and has three openings, the central one being 11 ft. wide . Each facade has four fluted columns 19 ft. high . The chief material used in
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building the arch was
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sandstone . The fluted columns are of
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fine white
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limestone and smaller columns are of coloured marble . At the other (eastern) end of the street are the remains of another triumphal arch . West of the capitol are the ruins of a large church, a square building with circular apse, built in the 7th century . There are also remains of six other churches . About 400 yds. south of the city, the walls nearly entire, is a ruined citadel, a quadrangular building 36o ft. by 295 ft., with eight towers . It was built (or rebuilt) by the
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Byzantine army in the 6th century . Near the northern thermae is the house of the director of the excavations and a museum containing small
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objects found in the ruins . Numerous inscriptions have been found on the ruins, and from them many events in the
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history of Thamugas have been learnt .

In the

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year A.U . 100 the emperor Trojan gave orders to build a city on the site of a fortified
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post on the road between Theveste and Lambaesis . This city, called Colonia Marciana Trajana Thamugas (Marciana in honour of Trojan's
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sister) appears from the inscriptions to have been completed, as far as the
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principal buildings were concerned, in seventeen years . A legion' of
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Parthian veterans was stationed in the newly founded city . From the time of its foundation to the 4th century Thamugas seems to have enjoyed a peaceful and prosperous existence . Numerous inscriptions testify to the manner of
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life of the citizens . In the 3rd century Thamugas became a centre of Christian activity, and in the next century espoused the cause of the
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Donatists . The city declined in importance after the Vandal invasion in the 5th century, and was found in a ruinous condition by the Byzantine general Solomon, who occupied it A.D . 535• It is believed that the
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Berbers from the neighbouring mountains destroyed the city, hoping thus to prevent it being used as a stronghold from which to harry them . Thamugas was, however, repeopled, and in the 7th century was a Christian city . After the defeat of Gregorius, governor of Africa, by the
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Arabs in 647, Thamugas passes from history . After centuries of neglect -James Bruce, the
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African traveller, visited the spot (1765), made careful drawings of the monuments and deciphered some of the inscriptions .

Bruce was followed, more than a century later (1875), by

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Sir R . Lambert Playfair,
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British consul-general at Algiers, and soon afterwards (1875-1876) Professor Masqueray published a report on the state of the ruins . Since 1881 Thamugas has been systematically explored, and the ruins excavated under the direction of the Service
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des monuments hisloriques . Among the objects discovered are a series of standard measures—five cavities hollowed out of a stone slab . . Seventeen miles west of Timgad, on the site of the
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Roman city Lambaesis, is
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Lambessa (q.v.) . See G . Boeswillwald, R . Cagnat and A . Ballu, Timgad, une cite a ricaine sous l'
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empire remain; and A . Ballu, Guide illustre de Timgad (Faris, 1903) .

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