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[[File:Roman Theatre Dougga.jpg|thumb|291x291px|Roman theatre of Dougga]]
[[File:Dougga Theatre - Looking Down from the Top.jpg|thumb|Roman theatre of Dougga]]
The '''Roman theatre of Dougga''' is an ancient theatre located in [[Téboursouk|Teboursouk]] in the [[North West Tunisia|north-west of Tunisia]].
The '''Roman theatre of Dougga''' is an ancient theatre located in [[Téboursouk|Teboursouk]] in the [[North West Tunisia|north-west of Tunisia]].


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== Gallery==
== Gallery==
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Théâtre de dougga 3.jpg|The theatre in 2016
File:Tunisia-Dougga-theatre.jpg|Old photo of the theatre before restoration work
File:Tunisia-Dougga-theatre.jpg|Old photo of the theatre before restoration work
File:Tunisia-2744 - Leaving the Theatre (7845230192).jpg|Current situation
File:Tunisia-2744 - Leaving the Theatre (7845230192).jpg|Current situation

Revision as of 07:43, 6 May 2023

Roman theatre of Dougga

The Roman theatre of Dougga is an ancient theatre located in Teboursouk in the north-west of Tunisia.

History

Like all the other Roman cities of North Africa from the reign of Augustus, Dougga had its own theatre. According to historians, the monument was built between 168 and 169. It is located in the eastern part of the archeological site Dougga,[1] and can host over 3500 spectators.[2]

The theatre got classified as a monument on 8 June 1891.[3] It is considered[by whom?] as one of the best preserved examples of theatres in Roman Africa

Nowadays, it hosts every year the activities of the Dougga's international festival.

Architecture

A dedication engraved into the pediment of the stage and on the portico the dominates the city, recalls the building's commissioner, P. Marcius Quadratus, who "built [it] for his homeland with his own denarii"; the dedication was celebrated with "scenic representations, distributions of life, a festival and athletic games".

References

  1. ^ Carton, Louis (1904). ""The roman theater of Dougga": Memories presented by several scholars of the academy. Vol. 11, no 2". Mémoires Présentés Par Divers Savants Étrangers À l'Académie. 11 (2): 79–191. doi:10.3406/mesav.1904.1087. hdl:2027/hvd.32044058303785.
  2. ^ Gros, Pierre (1996). The roman architecture from the beginning of the third century BC to the end of the great empire: Public monuments. Paris: Picard. pp. 293–294. ISBN 2708405004.
  3. ^ "DocArtis". www.docartis.com. Retrieved 2020-04-10.