Sabratha

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Panoramic image of a part of the archaeological site
Panoramic image of a part of the archaeological site


Archaeological Site of Sabratha*
UNESCO World Heritage Site

Sabratha - the theatre
State Party Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Type Cultural
Criteria iii
Reference 184
Region Arab States
Inscription history
Inscription 1982  (6th Session)
* Name as inscribed on World Heritage List.
Region as classified by UNESCO.

Sabratha, in the Zawia district in the northwestern corner of modern Libya, was the westernmost of the "three cities" of Tripolis. It lies on the Mediterranean coast about 65km (40 miles) west of Tripoli (ancient Oea). The extant archaeological site was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1982.

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[edit] Ancient Sabratha

Sabratha - the Seaward Baths
Sabratha - the Seaward Baths

Sabratha's port was established, perhaps about 500 BC, as a Phoenician trading-post that served as a coastal outlet for the products of the African hinterland. Sabratha became part of the short-lived Numidian Kingdom of Massinissa before being Romanized and rebuilt in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD. The Emperor Septimus Severus was born nearby in Leptis Magna, and Sabratha reached its monumental peak during the rule of the Severans. The city was badly damaged by earthquakes during the 4th century, particularly the quake of AD 365. It was rebuilt on a more modest scale by Byzantine governors. Within a hundred years of the Arab conquest of the maghreb, trade had shifted to other ports and Sabratha dwindled to a village.

[edit] The archaeological site

Theatre building
Theatre building

Besides its magnificent late 3rd century theatre, that retains its three-storey architectural backdrop, Sabratha has temples dedicated to Liber Pater, Serapis and Isis. There is a Christian basilica of the time of Justinian and remnants also of some of the mosaic floors that enriched elite dwellings of Roman north Africa (for example, at the Villa Sileen, near Al-Khoms), although these are most clearly preserved in the coloured patterns of the seaward (or Forum) baths, directly overlooking the shore, and in the black and white floors of the Theatre baths.

There is an adjacent museum containing some treasures from Sabratha, but others can be seen in the national museum in Tripoli.

[edit] Max Mallowan at Sabratha

In 1943, during the Second World War, archaeologist Max Mallowan, husband of novelist Agatha Christie, was based at Sabratha as assistant to the Senior Civil Affairs Officer of the Western Province of Tripolitania. His main task was to oversee the allocation of grain rations, but it was, in the words of Christie's biographer, a "glorious attachment", during which Mallowan lived in an Italian villa with a patio overlooking the sea and dined on fresh tunnyfish and olives [1].

[edit] References

  1. ^ Janet Morgan (1984) Agatha Christie: a Biography
  • Philip Ward, Sabratha: a guide for visitors

[edit] External links

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Coordinates: 32°47′N, 12°29′E