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Thuburbo Majus

Thuburbo Majus
TUNISIE THUBURBO MAJUS 01.jpg
Ruins of the Capitolium
Thuburbo Majus is located in Tunisia
Thuburbo Majus
Shown within Tunisia
Location Tunisia
Region Zaghouan Governorate
Coordinates 36°24′00″N 9°54′15″E / 36.40000°N 9.90417°E / 36.40000; 9.90417Coordinates: 36°24′00″N 9°54′15″E / 36.40000°N 9.90417°E / 36.40000; 9.90417

Thuburbo Majus (or Thuburbo Maius) is a large Roman site in northern Tunisia. It is located roughly 60 km southwest of Carthage on a major African thoroughfare. This thoroughfare connects Carthage to the Sahara. Other towns along the way included Sbiba, Sufes, Sbeitla, and Sufetula. Parts of the old Roman road are in ruins, but others do remain. Romans started to build

Thuburbo Majus or Colonia Julia Aurelia Commoda, its Roman name, was originally a Punic town, later founded as a Roman veteran colony by Augustus in 27 BC. Military veterans were sent to Thuburbo, among other sites, by Augustus to allow them to start their post-army lives with land of their own. Its strategic location and access to trade routes made it an important establishment. Ruins of the town are in the middle of the countryside with no towns in close proximity.

Most of the town was built around 150–200 and restored in the 4th century after a 3rd-century crisis. It received a Capitolium in 168. The town was a productive grower of grain, olives, and fruit. Under Hadrian it was made a municipium, helping cause a growth in wealth, and Commodus made it a colony.

A 1916 excavation found a tetrastyle temple. The building was decorated with statues of Apollo, Venus, Silvanus, Bacchus, the Dioscuri, and a satyr. Three perfume vases showed dogs pursuing rabbits.

In 1920 an inscription found in Thuburbo Majus written in honor of C. Vettius Sabinianus proved that several other inscriptions bearing that name were referring to the same person.


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