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Ancient City Of Timgad: Largest Roman Settlement Ever Built In North Africa

Ancient Great City Of Timgad And The Magnificent Arch Of Trajan

A. Sutherland - AncientPages.com - The great ancient city of Timgad is the largest Roman settlement ever built in North Africa.

In AD 100, Emperor Trajan created the city on the northern slopes of the Aures Massif, approximately 170 km south of the Mediterranean coast.

Arch of Trajan in Timgad. Image credit:  alioueche mokhtar  - CC BY-SA 4.0

The city's ancient name was Thamugadi. Its still impressive ruins are located at the intersection of six roads, it served as a Roman military garrison town, and its plan, laid out with great precision, illustrates the skills of Roman urban planners. The outpost, established on a perfectly square grid, had to control one of the passes through the Aures Mountains to the Sahara.

The town soon outgrew its original plan, and additional structures were added outside the grid. Timgad - inhabited mainly by Roman veterans - was a peaceful town for several hundred years.

From the 3rd century, it became a center of Christian activity. The city was walled but not fortified. Initially designed for around 15,000, the city quickly outgrew its original specifications and spilled beyond the orthogonal grid in a more loosely organized fashion.

Buildings constructed entirely of stone were frequently restored during the Empire's time. In Timgad, only Roman citizens could live comfortable lives. However, the Romans knew they had to do much more in the area and not only for the Empire's citizens.

Timgad - Current situation at the excavation site.  Image credit: Zenstar - CC BY-SA 4.0

The locals' resistance was strong, but the Romans managed to cope with the troublesome tribes by attracting these people to Timgad's buildings built entirely of stone, and the town had a much better social life than the surroundings.

They also offered suitable places to develop the commerce of local products. Soon, many natives joined the Roman Legion for a 25-year term to obtain Roman citizenship for themselves and their sons.

Pax Romana, a 200-Year-Long Period Of Stability within the Roman Empire, helped Timgad to become an attractive settlement. In just 50 years after Timgad's foundation,  indigenous people mainly inhabited the city.

Timgad Was A Strong And Thriving Colony

The city's rapid growth occurred by the middle of the 2nd century. In several quarters, there were many temples, markets, baths, and Capitolium.

Timgad . Detail of the arch, east side with niche architecture. Image credit: BachoundaCC BY-SA 3.0

Most of these buildings date from the Severan period (193 and 235 AD); it was a prosperous time when the city enjoyed its Golden Age, also attested by immense private residences.

Buildings constructed entirely of stone were frequently restored during the Empire: the Trajan Arch in the middle of the 2nd century, the Eastern gate in 146, and the Western gate under Emperor Marcus-Aurelius.

Timgad's underground reservoir collected water for the bathhouses, pools, and fountains, and there was also modern drainage, sewage system, and luxuries such as lavatories that could be heated during winter.

Timgad's theatre, a library, and a forum delivered many entertainments. People enjoyed fountains and bathhouses with walls and floors decorated with beautiful mosaics displaying pagan mythological scenes. Today, the city's marketplace, the so-called Timgadu Bazaar with benches and stone tables, is considered much better preserved than in other Roman cities.

Timgad Arch And Library With 3,000 Scrolls

One of the impressive ancient structures was the triumphal arch. The Arch of Trajan ( partially restored in 1900), also known as the Timgad Arch, was built with three arches and mainly of sandstone.

It remains unknown when the Library at Timgad was built, but it is known that it was a gift to the Roman people by Julius Quintianus Flavius Rogatianus.

Timgad - ruins. Three-quarter view of the west side. Image credit: Zinou2go - CC BY-SA 3.0

The library is a one-story building with niches for scrolls and cabinets containing a book warehouse. Initially, it occupied a rectangular area (eighty-one feet (24.69 meters long by seventy-seven feet (23.47 meters) wide. Once, it was a fully developed library system indicating the people's high standard of learning and culture. It is believed that it could have stored 3,000 scrolls.

In the city, the ruins of a huge amphitheater, sixty meters in diameter and able to accommodate 4,000 spectators, have been preserved.

The Destruction Of Timgad

Timgad was a celebrated bishopric during the Christian period, but the Vandal invasion of 430 destroyed the city's prosperity. Finally, the Arab invasion left Timgad totally destroyed. After the 8th century, the city ceased to be inhabited.

Written by – A. Sutherland  - AncientPages.com Senior Staff Writer

Updated on November 16, 2023

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