Thapsus

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This article is about the North African city. For the medicinal herb see Verbascum thapsus.

Thapsus (less commonly, Tapsus) was an ancient city in what is modern day Tunisia. Its ruins still exist at Ras Dimas near Bekalta, approx. 200 km SE of Carthage. Originally founded by Phoenicians, it served as a marketplace on the coast of the province Byzacena in Africa Propria. Thapsus was established near a salt lake on a point of land eighty stadia (14.8 km) from the Island of Lampadusa.

In 46 BC, Julius Caesar defeated Metellus Pius Scipio and the Numidian King Juba with a tremendous loss of men near Thapsus (see Battle of Thapsus). Caesar exacted a payment of 50,000 sesterces from the vanquished. Their defeat marked the end of opposition to Caesar in Africa. Thapsus then became a Roman colony.

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