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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: KRO-LAP |
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LAMBESSA , the ancient Lambaesa, a village
village
establishment
standing
original
standing
peristyle half the height of the wall
inscriptions (Renier edited 1500, and there are 4185 in the Corpus Inscr. Lat. vol. viii.); and, though a very large proportion are epitaphs of the barest kind, the more important pieces supply an outline of the history of the place. Over 2500 inscriptions relating to the camp have been deciphered. In a museum in the village are objects of antiquity discovered in the vicinity. Besides inscriptions,' statues, &c., are some fine mosaics found in 1905 near the arch of Septimius Severus. The statues includethose of Aesculapius and Hygieia, taken from the temple of Aesculapius. Lambaesa was a military foundation. The camp of the third legion (Legio III. 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 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, 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) ; Sir L. Playfair, Travels in the Footsteps of Bruce (London, 1877) ; A. Graham, Roman Africa (London, 1902). End of Article: LAMBESSA If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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