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词条 Chemtou
释义

  1. History

  2. Remains

     Mount Chimtou  Rock-reliefs  Roman bridge over the Medjerda   Turbine mill   Working Camp  Cisterns and Aqueducts  

  3. Ecclesiastical history

  4. Gallery

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Infobox ancient site
|name = Chemtou
|native_name =
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|image = File:Chimtou, Tempelberg.jpg
|alt =
|caption = View of Jebel Chemtou
|map_type = Tunisia
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|location = Tunisia
|region = Jendouba Governorate
|coordinates = {{Coord|36|29|31|N|8|34|34|E|type:city_region:TN|display=inline,title}}
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Chemtou or Chimtou was an ancient Roman-Berber town in northwestern Tunisia, located 20 km from the city of Jendouba near the Algerian frontier. It was known as Simitthu (or Simitthus in Roman period) in antiquity.

History

Chemtou was founded in the 4th to 5th century BC as a colony of the Berber kingdom of Numidia. It later became a Roman town in the province of Africa. The city was important enough to become a bishopric, before its eventual abandonment around 9th to 10th century.

Remains

It lies at the crossroad of two major highways: the one that connects Carthage and Hippo Regius (today Annaba), and the one that connects Thabraca (today Tabarka) and Sicca (today El Kef). The town is known for its quarries, where one of the most precious types of marbles in the Roman Empire, the antique yellow marble (marmor numidicum or giallo antico), was exploited.

With Chemtou's ruins dating from over a period of 1,500 years, the site covers over 80 hectares of area pending further excavations. After being partially excavated in the late 19th century, a series of excavations carried out since the late 1960s by a Tunisian-German archaeological team has uncovered new parts of the city, as well as the Roman road connecting it to Thabraca for the purpose of transporting marbles to the Mediterranean Sea. The excavated ruins are typical of Roman cities with temples, baths, an aqueduct, an amphitheatre, and housing for quarry workers whose number may exceed a thousand. The Chemtou Museum displays artifacts discovered in the area.

The testimonies of the long history of the settlement of Chimtous have been partly preserved on the rocky ridges and on their southern, western and northern slopes. In Simitthus there were all the buildings that are to be found in Roman cities: an amphitheater, a theater theater, a forum with forum basilica and fountain, a three- aisled market hall, a nymphaeum, at least three thermal baths. Byzantine church buildings and a building in the north-west of the city, interpreted as an imperial edifice, which is most probably a so-called Italian podium temple or temple italique . There were also two Roman sanctuaries, the temple districts of Dii Mauri on the eastern slope, and the Caelestis on the western slope at Djebel Bou Rfifa.

In addition, Simitthus also had a few buildings that stand out because of their uniqueness in the North African region:

Mount Chimtou

On the summit of the Temple Mount / Djebel Chimtou is a Numidian Shrine, which is attributed to the Numidian King Micipsa. Whose father Massinissa, who had been an Allied Roman since the Second Punic War, had seized power over the upper Medjerda valley in 152 BC. After his death, his son and successor, Micipsa, founded a ten-meter monumental monument on the highest point of the mountain in the late 2nd century BC. The marble was used as a building material, which at the same time meant the discovery of the "marmor numidicum". The ground plan of the sanctuary is a rectangle of about twelve to five and a half meters in length and width. It was erected on the planted rocky base, the crevices and bumps of which had been closed with strings . The building consisted of solid marble squares, connected with dowels, and had no interior. Only a few blocks of the foundations have been preserved in situ .[1]

The monument consisted of a high substructure, which was orientated towards the east to the rising sun. On its east long side a shining door was attached, which was led by a three-step base. On the substructure was a second storey, which was designed as a Doric column pavilion. The building was decorated with rich decorations, including a trophy relief . The fragments of the building decoration are among the most valuable examples of the very rarely preserved Numidian royal architecture and can be visited today in the Chimtou Museum to reconstruct the sanctuary.[2]

In Roman times, the Shrine was used as a sacred temple dedicated to the god Saturn . It was expanded in the late 2nd century AD by various additions. In the 4th century AD it was finally replaced by a small, three-aisled church, using the quader and architectural parts of the destroyed sanctuary.[3]

Rock-reliefs

Roman bridge over the Medjerda

The bridge had three arch openings, only one of which served as a water passage so that it was a dam at the same time. Only the southernmost bridge pillar still stands in its original position. The material used for the cuboids was green limestone from Bordj Helal, gray marble /limestone from Ain El Ksir and yellow stone blocks of unknown origin

Turbine mill

About a century after the inauguration of the bridge, a grain mill was installed on the left bank of the river. It is one of only two Roman turbine mills known in North Africa (the second is in Testour). It was a rectangular parallelepipedal building in the protection of the high bridgehead. The wooden turbines had horizontally mounted paddle wheels, three millstones were attached directly to the turbine axles. The construction, previously unknown from antiquity, worked in a refined way: if the river level and the flow velocity in summer were too low to propel the mill wheels, the water was first stowed in a controllable mill pond. Afterwards, it was passed into mills, which narrowed and accelerated like nozzles, so that the mill worked all year round. When the bridge collapsed in the first half of the 4th century AD, the mills' building was also destroyed and the mills pocketed, so that the facility was no longer functional.[5]

Working Camp

Cisterns and Aqueducts

As in every Roman city, there was an urban aqueduct in Simitthus, from which public and private baths, drinking water fountains, and vatoes were fed. In Simitthus, however, in contrast to other Roman cities, there was an increased demand for water, since not only the residential city had to be supplied with fresh spring water on a regular basis, but also the quarries: in the quarrying plant, in the working camp and in the Fabrica it was used for sawing, grinding, forging Of the tools and as drinking water for the workers.[10][11] Therefore, Simitthus had an unusually complex aqueduct: the water was transported to the city over a distance of over 30 kilometers with bridges, piers and underground canals. There it was headed into a "Castellum divisorum", located almost 2 kilometers outside the city. This is a huge domed seven- aisled water storage and distribution system with large window openings for ventilation. Here more than 10,000 cubic meters of water could be stored and distributed as required. The aqueduct led to the north wall, and on the slope side in the east, adjustable lines led southwards to the city and the quarries.[12]

Ecclesiastical history

. The Bishopric was founded during the Roman Empire and survived through the arian Vandal and Orthodox Byzantine empires, only ceasing to function with the Muslim conquest of the Maghreb.

The diocese was refounded in name at least in the 1930s. The bishopric of Simitthu, no longer a residential see, is included in the Catholic Church's list of titular sees.[13]

Gallery

References

1. ^Friedrich Rakob – Theodor Kraus: Chemtou , Du. The Kunstzeitschrift 3, 1979, p62.
2. ^Friedrich Rakob, Numidian Royal Architecture in North Africa , in: HG Horn – Ch. B. Rüger (Eds.), Die Numider (Bonn 1979) 119–171.
3. ^Friedrich Rakob – Theodor Kraus: Chemtou , Du. The Kunstzeitschrift 3, 1979, p63.
4. ^Friedrich Rakob – Theodor Kraus: Chemtou , Du. The Kunstzeitschrift 3, 1979, p68
5. ^Friedrich Rakob – Theodor Kraus: Chemtou , Du. The Kunstzeitschrift 3, 1979, p66
6. ^Azedine Besaouch among others: The quarries and the ancient city . Zabern, Mainz, 1993 (Simitthus, 1), {{ISBN|3-8053-1500-7}}
7. ^Michael Mackensen : Military camp or marble workshops. New investigations in the eastern part of the working and quarrying camp of Simitthus / Chemtou by Zabern, Mainz 2005, {{ISBN|3-8053-3461-3}} ( Simitthus, 3 ).
8. ^Friedrich Rakob – Theodor Kraus: Chemtou , Du. The Kunstzeitschrift 3, 1979, p55.
9. ^Friedrich Rakob – Theodor Kraus: Chemtou , Du. The Kunstzeitschrift 3, 1979, p57
10. ^Friedrich Rakob – Theodor Kraus: Chemtou , Du. The Kunstzeitschrift 3, 1979, p66.
11. ^Chimtou, Aquädukt.jpg
12. ^Friedrich Rakob – Theodor Kraus: Chemtou , Du. The Kunstzeitschrift 3, 1979, p67
13. ^Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2013, {{ISBN|978-88-209-9070-1}}), p. 973

External links

  • Museum and ancient site of Chimtou
  • Webpage about Chemtou
  • Anotherebpage about Chemtou (in German)
  • Roman mills of Chemtou and Testour (in German)
{{Romano-Berber cities in Roman Africa}}

3 : Archaeological sites in Tunisia|Jendouba Governorate|Catholic titular sees in Africa

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