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{{Short description|Roman colony in northwest Africa}} |
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{{Infobox ancient site |
{{Infobox ancient site |
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|name = |
|name = Ad Septem Fratres |
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|native_name = |
|native_name = |
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|alternate_name = |
|alternate_name = Septem, Abyla |
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|image = Restos de la Basílica Tardorromana de Ceuta.jpg |
|image = Restos de la Basílica Tardorromana de Ceuta.jpg |
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|alt = |
|alt = |
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|caption = Ruins of |
|caption = Ruins of an [[Early Christianity|early Christian]] basilica in Ceuta |
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|map_type = Spain |
|map_type = Spain |
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|map_alt = |
|map_alt = |
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|latitude = 35.888333 |
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|longitude = -5.315556 |
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|map_size = 250 |
|map_size = 250 |
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|location = [[Spain]] |
|location = [[Ceuta]], [[Spain]] |
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|region = |
|region = |
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|coordinates = {{Coord|35.888333|-5.315556|display=title}} |
|coordinates = {{Coord|35.888333|-5.315556|format=dms|display=title,inline}} |
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'''Abyla''' (called even '''Ad Septem Fratres''' or simply "Septem") was a Roman colony in [[Mauretania Tingitana]]. It was an ancient city that existed in what is now the downtown of [[Ceuta]]. |
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'''Abyla''' was the pre-Roman name of '''Ad Septem Fratres''' (actual [[Ceuta]] of [[Spain]]). Ad Septem Fratres, usually shortened to ''Septem'' or ''Septa'', was a [[Roman Empire|Roman]] [[Roman colonia|colony]] in the [[Roman province|province]] of [[Mauretania Tingitana]] and a [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] outpost in the [[exarchate]] of [[Exarchate of Africa|Africa]]. Its ruins are located within present-day Ceuta, an autonomous Spanish city in [[northwest Africa]]. |
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==Characteristics== |
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{{anchor|Etymology|Name}} |
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Septem's location in the southern side of the [[Gibraltar Strait]] has made it an important commercial trade and military way-point for many cultures, beginning in the fifth century BC with the Carthaginians (who called for the first time the city with the name "Abyla"). |
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==Names== |
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It was not until the [[Roman empire|Romans]] took control of the region in 42 AD that the port city, then named "Septem Fratres", assumed an almost exclusively military purpose. The city become a [[Colonia (Roman)|Roman colonia]] with full rights for the citizens under emperor [[Claudius]]. |
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The name '''Abyla''' is said to have been a [[Punic language|Punic]] name ("Lofty Mountain"{{sfnp|Cauvin & al.|1843}} or "Mountain of [[El (deity)|God]]") for [[Jebel Musa (Morocco)|Jebel Musa]],{{sfnp|Bonney & al.|1907|p=26}} the southern [[Pillars of Hercules|Pillar of Hercules]].{{sfnp|Smith|1854}} It appears in [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] variously as ''Abýla'' ({{lang|grc|Ἀβύλα}}), ''Abýlē'' ({{lang|grc|Ἀβύλη}}), ''Ablýx'' ({{lang|grc|Ἀβλύξ}}), and ''Abílē Stḗlē'' ({{lang|grc|Ἀβίλη Στήλη}}, "Pillar of Abyla"){{sfnp|Smith|1854}} and in [[Latin]] as Mount Abyla (''{{lang|la|Abyla Mons}}'') or the Pillar of Abyla (''{{lang|la|Abyla Columna}}''). |
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Septem flourished economically in the Roman Empire and developed one of the main production places for fish salting commerce and industry. The city was connected with southern Roman [[Hispania]] not only for commerce, but even administratively. Efficient Roman roads connected Septem with [[Tingis]] and [[Volubilis]], facilitating trade for even military movements of legions. |
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The settlement below Jebel Musa was later renamed for the seven hills around the site, collectively referred to as the "Seven Brothers"{{sfnp|Smedley & al.|1845|p=49}} ({{langx|grc|Ἑπτάδελφοι}}, ''Heptádelphoi'';<ref>[[Claudius Ptolemy|Ptolemy]], ''[[Ptolemy's Geography|Geography]]'', IV.i.5.</ref> {{langx|la|Septem Fratres}}).<ref>In, e.g., [[Pomponius Mela]].</ref> In particular, the Roman stronghold at the site took the name "Fort at the Seven Brothers" (''{{lang|la|Castellum ad Septem Fratres}}'').{{sfnp|Smith|1854}} This was gradually shortened to Septem ({{lang|grc|Σέπτον}}, ''Sépton'') or, occasionally, '''Septa'''.{{sfnp|Dyer|1873}} It continued as ''Sebtan''{{sfnp|Smedley & al.|1845|p=49}} or ''Sabta'' ({{langx|ar|سبتة}}) during the Middle Ages. |
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In the beginning of the first century, under [[Augustus]], the citizens of Septem used mainly the [[Phoenician language]]. Soon started the process of [[Romanization (cultural)|Romanization]] of the inhabitants. Consequently, most of the Septem population spoke [[Latin language|Latin]] in the fourth century, but there was a huge community of local romanised [[berbers]] who spoke their berber dialect mixed with some Phoenician loanwords. When the city fell to the Bizantines in the sixth century the Greek was added to the Latin as the official language. |
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Septem was an important [[christianity|Christian]] center in Mauretania Tingitana since the fourth century (as recent discovered ruins of a Roman basilica show <ref>[http://www.ceutaturistica.com/basilica/basilica.html Roman basilica article, with related video]</ref>), and consequently it is the only place in the actual [[Maghreb]] where [[Legacy of the Roman Empire|Roman heritage]] (represented by Christianity) has continuously been present and survived until our days. |
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==History== |
==History== |
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===Punic=== |
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The [[Phoenicians]] found a small [[Berbers|Berber]] settlement on the [[Strait of Gibraltar]] at Ceuta but, because the extremely narrow isthmus joining the [[Peninsula of Almina]] to the African mainland makes the site imminently defensible, they swiftly made it their own. Abyla was one of a number of settlements in the area{{mdash}}including [[Tingis|Tinga]] ([[Tangiers]]), [[Carteia|Kart]] ([[San Roque, Cádiz|San Roque]]), and Gadir ([[Cadiz]]){{mdash}}that helped the Phoenicians and [[Carthaginians]] control maritime trade between the Atlantic and the Mediterranean. |
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===Mauretanian=== |
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When [[Phoenicians]] arrived in what is now Ceuta, they found a small Berber settlement. [[Carthago]] created and used the little port of Abyla but were the Romans who made it an important port and city. They named it "Septem Frates" because of the seven little hills (that looked like seven brothers, or 'septem frates' in Latin) of the promontory where the city lies. |
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After the [[Battle of Carthage (c. 149 BC)|fall]] of [[ancient Carthage|Carthage]] in the [[Punic Wars]], most of [[northwest Africa]] was left to the [[Roman Republic|Roman]] [[client state]]s of [[Numidia]] and [[Mauretania]] but [[Punics|Punic culture]] continued to thrive in Septem, whose residents mostly continued to speak [[Punic language|Punic]] into the reign of [[Augustus]]. |
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===Roman=== |
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From the times of [[Augustus]] the city started to grow with the name of Septem (or even "Septa"). Some Italian colonists moved to Septem and started the use of Latin, but the population -made mostly of [[Berbers]]- continued to use the [[Phoenician language]] mixed with local berberisms. In the second century the romanization of Septem was nearly complete, and the use of the phoenician disappeared. Under [[Septimius Severus]] the economy enjoyed a huge development, fueled by the fish conserve & salting industry. Septem had nearly 10,000 inhabitants in the late fourth century, under emperor [[Theodosius I]] and was nearly fully Christian and Latin speaking according to historian [[Theodore Mommsen]].<ref>Theodore Mommsen. "The Provinces of the Roman Empire". Section: Africa</ref> |
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Rome began exerting increasing control over the region, though, first through traders and advisors and then{{mdash}}particularly after [[Battle of Thapsus|Thapsus]]{{mdash}}through the incorporation of more and more towns and regions into directly administered [[Roman provinces|provinces]]. Roman settlement at Septem began under [[Augustus]]. [[Caligula]] assassinated the Mauretanian king [[Ptolemy of Mauretania|Ptolemy]] in AD{{nbsp}}40 and seized his kingdom. [[Claudius]] organized the new territories in 42, placing Septem in the province of [[Mauretania Tingitana]] (administered from [[Tingis]], present-day Tangiers) and raising it to the level of a [[Roman colonia|colony]], which gave [[Roman citizenship]] to its residents. Wealthy Romans from [[Claudius]]'s and [[Nero]]'s reigns are attested in funerary inscriptions found around the Septem basilica. |
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Controlling commercial and military access to the [[Gibraltar Strait]], Septem flourished under the empire. Around AD{{nbsp}}100, under [[Trajan]], a local senate was made organized from the local nobles (''{{lang|la|ordo decurionum}}''). The town was particularly known for its salt and [[salted fish]], which expanded greatly after about AD{{nbsp}}140 as new production centers opened up around the town forum. The salt, salted fish, and [[Pickling|salted produce]] were exported{{mdash}}mainly across the strait to [[Hispania|Roman Spain]]{{mdash}}in [[Roman pottery|jars]] manufactured around the city. [[Roman road]]s also connected it over land with Tingis and [[Volubilis]], increasing inland trade and security from Berber raiding. By the 2nd century, [[romanization (cultural)|romanization]] was nearly complete and [[Latin]] appears in most surviving inscriptions. Alongside the Roman colonists, however, there remained a sizable community of romanized Berbers whose primary tongue continued to be [[Berber languages|local dialects]] mixed with Punic and Latin loanwords; this eventually became [[African Romance]]. |
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Around 140 AD in Septem there was an expansion of its industry of salting, with new factories located near the Forum. The heyday extends until the second half of the third century. After these years there were factories abandoned until the full recovery of the empire (in the 4th and 5th centuries), according even to studies by Enrique Cravioto on monetary use.<ref>Cravioto, Enrique. "La circulación monetaria alto-imperial en el norte de la Mauretania Tingitana"</ref> Salting production was exported in jars manufactured in places near the city. These exports were directed mainly towards [[Hispania]], with whom Septem had an intense business contact. |
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Socially was soon seen -in [[Claudius]] and [[Nero]] times- the presence in Septem of rich Roman citizens who enjoyed the "ius romanum" or right to full citizenship, which has been documented by the funerary inscriptions found around the Septem basilica. In the second century under [[Trajan]] a local Senate was made available for Septem rich members of the "Ordo decurionum" (that in Roman society was the highest nobility). |
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Around AD{{nbsp}}200, the [[Leptis Magna|African]] emperor [[Septimus Severus]] included the town in some of the largesse with which he favored the region. The town's prosperity continued into the late 3rd century, after which production centers were abandoned and the use of money falls off.<ref>Cravioto, Enrique. "La circulación monetaria alto-imperial en el norte de la Mauretania Tingitana"</ref> |
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Septem changed hands again approximately after four centuries of Roman domination, when [[Vandal]] tribes ousted the Romans in 426 AD according to historian Vilaverde.<ref>[http://www.uam.es/personal_pdi/filoyletras/afuen/trabajos/ceuta/Marcos%20Perez,%20Alvaro%20-% Septem byzantine]</ref> After being controlled by the [[Visigoths]], it then became an outpost of the Byzantine Empire (called in [[Ancient Greek]]: Άβυλα). |
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Septem was an important [[Early Christianity|Christian]] center by the 4th century; one of the basilicas from this time has recently been rediscovered.<ref>[http://www.ceutaturistica.com/basilica/basilica.html Roman basilica article, with related video]</ref>) In the late 4th century, under {{nowrap|[[Theodosius I]]}}, the city still had 10,000 inhabitants, nearly all Christian and Latin-speaking.<ref>Theodore Mommsen. ''The Provinces of the Roman Empire'', "Africa".</ref><ref>[http://www.tarifit.info/pdfbooks/thisholyseed.pdf Christianity of Romanized Berbers]</ref> |
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All the territory west of Caesarea had already been lost by the Vandals to the Berbers "Mauri", but a re-established "Dux Mauretaniae" kept a Byzantine military unit at Septem. This was the last Byzantine [[Hispania|outpost]] in Mauretania Tingitana; the rest of what had been the Roman province was united with the Byzantine part of Andalusia, under the name, "Prefecture of Africa". Most of the North African coast was later organised as the civilian [[Exarchate of Carthage]], a special status in view of the outpost defense needs. |
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===Vandal=== |
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Around 710 AD, as Muslim armies approached the city, its Byzantine governor, [[Julian, count of Ceuta|Julian]] (described even as King of the [[Ghomara people|Ghomara]] Berbers) changed his allegiance, and exhorted the Muslims to invade the Iberian Peninsula. Under the leadership of the Berber general [[Tariq ibn Ziyad]], the Muslims used Ceuta as a staging ground for an assault on Visigothic [[Iberian Peninsula]]. After Julian's death, the Berbers took direct control of the city, which the indigenous Berber tribes resented. They destroyed Ceuta during the [[Kharijite]] rebellion led by [[Maysara al-Matghari]] in 740 AD. |
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Septem fell to the [[Vandal Kingdom|Vandals]] in 426.<ref>{{citation|title=Septem en la Tardoantigüedad |url=http://www.uam.es/personal_pdi/filoyletras/afuen/trabajos/ceuta/Marcos%20Perez,%20Alvaro%20-%20septem_bizantina.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160422040554/http://www.uam.es/personal_pdi/filoyletras/afuen/trabajos/ceuta/Marcos%20Perez,%20Alvaro%20-%20septem_bizantina.pdf|archive-date=22 April 2016|last=Maros Pérez|first=Alváro|page=23}}</ref> |
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===Byzantine=== |
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Septem remained as a small village (populated even by a few Christians) nearly all in ruins until it was resettled in the ninth century by Mâjakas, chief of the Majkasa Berber tribe, who started the short-lived [[Banu Isam]] dynasty.<ref>Hamilton Alexander Rosskeen Gibb; Johannes Hendrik Kramers; Bernard Lewis; Charles Pellat; Joseph Schacht (1994). "The Encyclopaedia of Islam". Brill. p. 690</ref> |
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By the time of [[Belisarius]]'s [[Vandalic War|reconquest of North Africa]], the Vandals had already lost Septem to local Berber (''{{lang|la|Mauri}}'') revolts. The Byzantines retook the entire coastline, then established their "Commander of Mauretania" (''{{lang|la|Dux Mauretania}}'') at the more defensible Septem instead of the old capital at Tingis. Mauretania and the Byzantine holdings in [[Andalusia]] were nominally part of the [[Exarchate of Africa]] but so distant that it is likely the garrison at Septem was forced to do homage to [[Visigothic Spain]]. |
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===Muslim=== |
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The episode of the martyrdom of Saint Daniele Fasanella<ref>[http://www.belvederemarittimo.com/link1.htm San Daniele Fasanella martyrdom (in Italian)]</ref> and his Franciscans in 1227 AD, showed that Christians were still present in "Septa" (as was called in Arab) in the thirteenth century: this Christian continuity remained in the outskirts of the city until the arrival of the Portuguese in the 15th century. Since then the city -renamed Ceuta- has remained in Christian hands (Portuguese and Spanish) and now has a majority of population speaking [[Spanish language|Spanish]], a neolatin language. |
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There are no reliable contemporary histories concerning the end of the [[Islamic conquest of the Maghreb]] around the year 710. Instead, the rapid [[Islamic conquest of Spain|Muslim conquest of Spain]] produced [[medieval romance|romances]] concerning [[Julian, count of Ceuta|Count Julian]] of Septem and his betrayal of Christendom in revenge for the dishonors that befell his daughter at the Visigothic court of [[Roderic|King{{nbsp}}Roderick]]. Allegedly with Julian's encouragement and instructions {{cn|date=May 2024}}, the Berber convert and freedman [[Tariq ibn Ziyad]] took his garrison from Tangiers across the strait and overran the Spanish so swiftly that both he and his Persian master [[Musa bin Nusayr]] fell afoul of [[Sulayman ibn Abd al-Malik|a jealous caliph]], who stripped them of their wealth and titles.{{cn|date=May 2024}} |
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After the death of Julian, sometimes also described as a king of the [[Ghomara people|Ghomara Berbers]], Berber converts to Islam took direct control of Septa. It was then destroyed during [[Berber Revolt|their great revolt]] against the Caliphate around 740. |
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Indeed, the Berber Christians of Mauretania's Septem, who seem to have been assimilated in the Christianity of nearby Spain, are considered the only survivors until today of the Christian autochthonous faith in Roman Africa according to Robin Daniel,<ref>[http://www.tarifit.info/pdfbooks/thisholyseed.pdf Christianity of Romanized Berbers]</ref> even if we have no confirmed proofs of their existence (using perhaps also the disappeared [[African Romance]] language) for a century from the thirteenth century until the first arrival of the Portuguese in the late fourteenth century. |
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Septa subsequently remained a small village of Muslims and Christians surrounded by ruins until its resettlement in the 9th century by Mâjakas, chief of the Majkasa Berber tribe, who started the short-lived [[Banu Isam]] dynasty.<ref>Hamilton Alexander Rosskeen Gibb; Johannes Hendrik Kramers; Bernard Lewis; Charles Pellat; Joseph Schacht (1994). "The Encyclopaedia of Islam". Brill. p. 690.</ref> The continuing existence of an embattled Christian community is attested by the martyrdom of [[Daniel and companions|St.{{nbsp}}Daniel Fasanella and his Franciscans]] in 1227;<ref>[http://www.belvederemarittimo.com/link1.htm San Daniele Fasanella martyrdom (in Italian)]</ref> it subsequently survived until the town's capture by the [[Kingdom of Portugal|Portuguese]] reëstablished the [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Ceuta]] on 4 April 1417. The [[Ceuta Cathedral]] was then raised on the site of old Septem's 6th-century church.<ref name="Griffin2010">{{cite book|author=Hugh Griffin|title=Ceuta Mini Guide|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WZgaLegj_YAC&pg=PA14|access-date=8 July 2013|date=1 February 2010|publisher=Horizon Scientific Press|isbn=978-0-9543335-3-9|pages=14–}}</ref> |
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[[Ceuta]] was an important Christian center since the fourth century (as recent discovered ruins of a Roman basilica show<ref>[http://www.ceutaturistica.com/basilica/basilica.html Roman basilica article, with related Video]</ref>), and consequently is the only place in the [[Maghreb]] where the [[Romanization (cultural)|Roman heritage]] has survived continuously until modern times. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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* [[ |
* [[Ceuta]] |
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* [[Mauretania Tingitana]] |
* [[Tingis]] & [[Mauretania Tingitana]] |
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* [[Tamuda]] |
* [[Tamuda]] |
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* [[Rusadir]] |
* [[Rusadir]] |
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* [[Ceuta]] |
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== |
==References== |
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===Citations=== |
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<references/> |
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{{reflist|30em}} |
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==Bibliography== |
===Bibliography=== |
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* {{citation |last=Bonney |first=Thomas George |author2=Eustace Alfred Reynolds-Ball |author3=Henry Duff Traill |author4=Grant Allen |author5=Arthur Griffiths |author6=Robert Brown |display-authors=1 |url=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/41263/41263-8.txt |title=The Mediterranean: Its Storied Cities and Venerable Ruins |location=New York |publisher=James Pott & Co |date=1907 |ref={{harvid|Bonney & al.|1907}} }}. |
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* {{citation |editor-last=Cauvin |editor-first=Joseph |title=Lempriere's Classical Dictionary... |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yvQDAAAAQAAJ |editor2=Edmund Henry Barker |display-editors=1 |date=1843 |location=London |publisher=Longman, Brown, Green, & Longmans |contribution=Abila |contribution-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yvQDAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA3 |ref={{harvid|Cauvin & al.|1843}} }}. |
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* {{citation |last=Dyer |first=Thomas H. |editor=William Smith |display-editors=0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=j3gPAAAAYAAJ&pg=PP9 |title=A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography... |volume=II |location=London |publisher=John Murray |date=1873 |contribution-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=j3gPAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA965 |page=965 |contribution=Septem Fratres }}. |
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* Mommsen, Theodore. ''The Provinces of the Roman Empire'', Section Africa. Ed Barnes & Noble. New York, 2005 |
* Mommsen, Theodore. ''The Provinces of the Roman Empire'', Section Africa. Ed Barnes & Noble. New York, 2005 |
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* Noé Villaverde, Vega. ''Tingitana en la antigüedad tardía, siglos III-VII: autoctonía y romanidad en el extremo occidente mediterráneo''. Ed. Real Academia de la Historia. Madrid, 2001 ISBN |
* Noé Villaverde, Vega. ''Tingitana en la antigüedad tardía, siglos III-VII: autoctonía y romanidad en el extremo occidente mediterráneo''. Ed. Real Academia de la Historia. Madrid, 2001 {{ISBN|8489512949}} |
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* Robin, Daniel. ''Faith, Hope and love in the early churches of North Africa (This Holy Seed)''. Tamarisk Publications, Chester, United Kingdom ISBN |
* Robin, Daniel. ''Faith, Hope and love in the early churches of North Africa (This Holy Seed)''. Tamarisk Publications, Chester, United Kingdom {{ISBN|978 0 9538565 3 4}} |
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* {{citation |editor-last=Smedley |editor-first=Edward |editor2=Hugh James Rose |editor3=Henry John Rose |display-editors=1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I1I_AQAAMAAJ |title=Encyclopaedia Metropolitana... |volume=XXII |location=London |publisher=B. Fellowes & al. |date=1845 |contribution=Mauritania |contribution-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I1I_AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA48 |pages=48–49 |ref={{harvid|Smedley & al.|1845}} }}. |
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* {{citation |last=Smith |first=Philip |title=Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography... |editor=William Smith |display-editors=0 |location=London |publisher=Walton & Maberly |date=1854 |contribution=Abyla |contribution-url=https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0064:entry=abyla-geo&highlight=abyla }}. |
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* Talbi, Mohammed. ''Le Christianisme maghrébinin "Indigenous Christian Communities in Islamic Lands"''. M. Gervers and R. Bikhazi. Toronto, 1990. |
* Talbi, Mohammed. ''Le Christianisme maghrébinin "Indigenous Christian Communities in Islamic Lands"''. M. Gervers and R. Bikhazi. Toronto, 1990. |
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{{Romano-Berber cities in Roman Africa}} |
{{Romano-Berber cities in Roman Africa}} |
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{{Ceuta}}{{Phoenician cities and colonies|state=collapsed}} |
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{{Ceuta}} |
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[[Category:Mauretania Tingitana]] |
[[Category:Mauretania Tingitana]] |
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[[Category:Roman towns and cities]] |
[[Category:Roman towns and cities in Spain]] |
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[[Category:Phoenician colonies in Spain]] |
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[[Category:History of Ceuta]] |
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[[Category:Roman towns and cities in Mauretania Tingitana]] |
Latest revision as of 16:59, 28 November 2024
Alternative name | Septem, Abyla |
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Location | Ceuta, Spain |
Coordinates | 35°53′18″N 5°18′56″W / 35.888333°N 5.315556°W |
Abyla was the pre-Roman name of Ad Septem Fratres (actual Ceuta of Spain). Ad Septem Fratres, usually shortened to Septem or Septa, was a Roman colony in the province of Mauretania Tingitana and a Byzantine outpost in the exarchate of Africa. Its ruins are located within present-day Ceuta, an autonomous Spanish city in northwest Africa.
Names
[edit]The name Abyla is said to have been a Punic name ("Lofty Mountain"[1] or "Mountain of God") for Jebel Musa,[2] the southern Pillar of Hercules.[3] It appears in Greek variously as Abýla (Ἀβύλα), Abýlē (Ἀβύλη), Ablýx (Ἀβλύξ), and Abílē Stḗlē (Ἀβίλη Στήλη, "Pillar of Abyla")[3] and in Latin as Mount Abyla (Abyla Mons) or the Pillar of Abyla (Abyla Columna).
The settlement below Jebel Musa was later renamed for the seven hills around the site, collectively referred to as the "Seven Brothers"[4] (Ancient Greek: Ἑπτάδελφοι, Heptádelphoi;[5] Latin: Septem Fratres).[6] In particular, the Roman stronghold at the site took the name "Fort at the Seven Brothers" (Castellum ad Septem Fratres).[3] This was gradually shortened to Septem (Σέπτον, Sépton) or, occasionally, Septa.[7] It continued as Sebtan[4] or Sabta (Arabic: سبتة) during the Middle Ages.
History
[edit]Punic
[edit]The Phoenicians found a small Berber settlement on the Strait of Gibraltar at Ceuta but, because the extremely narrow isthmus joining the Peninsula of Almina to the African mainland makes the site imminently defensible, they swiftly made it their own. Abyla was one of a number of settlements in the area—including Tinga (Tangiers), Kart (San Roque), and Gadir (Cadiz)—that helped the Phoenicians and Carthaginians control maritime trade between the Atlantic and the Mediterranean.
Mauretanian
[edit]After the fall of Carthage in the Punic Wars, most of northwest Africa was left to the Roman client states of Numidia and Mauretania but Punic culture continued to thrive in Septem, whose residents mostly continued to speak Punic into the reign of Augustus.
Roman
[edit]Rome began exerting increasing control over the region, though, first through traders and advisors and then—particularly after Thapsus—through the incorporation of more and more towns and regions into directly administered provinces. Roman settlement at Septem began under Augustus. Caligula assassinated the Mauretanian king Ptolemy in AD 40 and seized his kingdom. Claudius organized the new territories in 42, placing Septem in the province of Mauretania Tingitana (administered from Tingis, present-day Tangiers) and raising it to the level of a colony, which gave Roman citizenship to its residents. Wealthy Romans from Claudius's and Nero's reigns are attested in funerary inscriptions found around the Septem basilica.
Controlling commercial and military access to the Gibraltar Strait, Septem flourished under the empire. Around AD 100, under Trajan, a local senate was made organized from the local nobles (ordo decurionum). The town was particularly known for its salt and salted fish, which expanded greatly after about AD 140 as new production centers opened up around the town forum. The salt, salted fish, and salted produce were exported—mainly across the strait to Roman Spain—in jars manufactured around the city. Roman roads also connected it over land with Tingis and Volubilis, increasing inland trade and security from Berber raiding. By the 2nd century, romanization was nearly complete and Latin appears in most surviving inscriptions. Alongside the Roman colonists, however, there remained a sizable community of romanized Berbers whose primary tongue continued to be local dialects mixed with Punic and Latin loanwords; this eventually became African Romance.
Around AD 200, the African emperor Septimus Severus included the town in some of the largesse with which he favored the region. The town's prosperity continued into the late 3rd century, after which production centers were abandoned and the use of money falls off.[8]
Septem was an important Christian center by the 4th century; one of the basilicas from this time has recently been rediscovered.[9]) In the late 4th century, under Theodosius I, the city still had 10,000 inhabitants, nearly all Christian and Latin-speaking.[10][11]
Vandal
[edit]Septem fell to the Vandals in 426.[12]
Byzantine
[edit]By the time of Belisarius's reconquest of North Africa, the Vandals had already lost Septem to local Berber (Mauri) revolts. The Byzantines retook the entire coastline, then established their "Commander of Mauretania" (Dux Mauretania) at the more defensible Septem instead of the old capital at Tingis. Mauretania and the Byzantine holdings in Andalusia were nominally part of the Exarchate of Africa but so distant that it is likely the garrison at Septem was forced to do homage to Visigothic Spain.
Muslim
[edit]There are no reliable contemporary histories concerning the end of the Islamic conquest of the Maghreb around the year 710. Instead, the rapid Muslim conquest of Spain produced romances concerning Count Julian of Septem and his betrayal of Christendom in revenge for the dishonors that befell his daughter at the Visigothic court of King Roderick. Allegedly with Julian's encouragement and instructions [citation needed], the Berber convert and freedman Tariq ibn Ziyad took his garrison from Tangiers across the strait and overran the Spanish so swiftly that both he and his Persian master Musa bin Nusayr fell afoul of a jealous caliph, who stripped them of their wealth and titles.[citation needed]
After the death of Julian, sometimes also described as a king of the Ghomara Berbers, Berber converts to Islam took direct control of Septa. It was then destroyed during their great revolt against the Caliphate around 740.
Septa subsequently remained a small village of Muslims and Christians surrounded by ruins until its resettlement in the 9th century by Mâjakas, chief of the Majkasa Berber tribe, who started the short-lived Banu Isam dynasty.[13] The continuing existence of an embattled Christian community is attested by the martyrdom of St. Daniel Fasanella and his Franciscans in 1227;[14] it subsequently survived until the town's capture by the Portuguese reëstablished the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ceuta on 4 April 1417. The Ceuta Cathedral was then raised on the site of old Septem's 6th-century church.[15]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Cauvin & al. (1843).
- ^ Bonney & al. (1907), p. 26.
- ^ a b c Smith (1854).
- ^ a b Smedley & al. (1845), p. 49.
- ^ Ptolemy, Geography, IV.i.5.
- ^ In, e.g., Pomponius Mela.
- ^ Dyer (1873).
- ^ Cravioto, Enrique. "La circulación monetaria alto-imperial en el norte de la Mauretania Tingitana"
- ^ Roman basilica article, with related video
- ^ Theodore Mommsen. The Provinces of the Roman Empire, "Africa".
- ^ Christianity of Romanized Berbers
- ^ Maros Pérez, Alváro, Septem en la Tardoantigüedad (PDF), p. 23, archived from the original (PDF) on 22 April 2016
- ^ Hamilton Alexander Rosskeen Gibb; Johannes Hendrik Kramers; Bernard Lewis; Charles Pellat; Joseph Schacht (1994). "The Encyclopaedia of Islam". Brill. p. 690.
- ^ San Daniele Fasanella martyrdom (in Italian)
- ^ Hugh Griffin (1 February 2010). Ceuta Mini Guide. Horizon Scientific Press. pp. 14–. ISBN 978-0-9543335-3-9. Retrieved 8 July 2013.
Bibliography
[edit]- Bonney, Thomas George; et al. (1907), The Mediterranean: Its Storied Cities and Venerable Ruins, New York: James Pott & Co.
- Cauvin, Joseph; et al., eds. (1843), "Abila", Lempriere's Classical Dictionary..., London: Longman, Brown, Green, & Longmans.
- Conant, Jonathan. Staying Roman : conquest and identity in Africa and the Mediterranean (pp. 439–700). Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521196973. Cambridge, 2012
- Cravioto, Enrique. La circulación monetaria alto-imperial en el norte de la Mauretania Tingitana. Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha. Cuenca, 2007.
- Dyer, Thomas H. (1873), "Septem Fratres", A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography..., vol. II, London: John Murray, p. 965.
- Mommsen, Theodore. The Provinces of the Roman Empire, Section Africa. Ed Barnes & Noble. New York, 2005
- Noé Villaverde, Vega. Tingitana en la antigüedad tardía, siglos III-VII: autoctonía y romanidad en el extremo occidente mediterráneo. Ed. Real Academia de la Historia. Madrid, 2001 ISBN 8489512949
- Robin, Daniel. Faith, Hope and love in the early churches of North Africa (This Holy Seed). Tamarisk Publications, Chester, United Kingdom ISBN 978 0 9538565 3 4
- Smedley, Edward; et al., eds. (1845), "Mauritania", Encyclopaedia Metropolitana..., vol. XXII, London: B. Fellowes & al., pp. 48–49.
- Smith, Philip (1854), "Abyla", Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography..., London: Walton & Maberly.
- Talbi, Mohammed. Le Christianisme maghrébinin "Indigenous Christian Communities in Islamic Lands". M. Gervers and R. Bikhazi. Toronto, 1990.