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Cherchell

Cherchell (Arabic: شرشال) is a town on Algeria's Mediterranean coast, 89 kilometers (55 mi) west of Algiers. It is the seat of Cherchell District in Tipaza Province. Under the names Iol and Caesarea, it was formerly a Roman colony and the capital of the kingdoms of Numidia and Mauretania.

Cherchell
شرشال
Town
Cherchell's fountain place
Location of Cherchell in the Tipaza Province
Cherchell
Coordinates: 36°36′27″N 02°11′24″E / 36.60750°N 2.19000°E / 36.60750; 2.19000
CountryAlgeria
ProvinceTipaza
DistrictCherchell
Population
 (2008)[1]
 • Total34,372
Fort Joinville Lighthouse
Cherchell
Coordinates36°36′41″N 2°11′17″E / 36.61139°N 2.18806°E / 36.61139; 2.18806
Constructed1881[2]
Foundationstone base
Constructionstone tower
Height28.60 metres (93.8 ft)[2]
Shapecylindrical tower with balcony and lantern[4]
Markingsunpainted tower, black lantern
OperatorOffice Nationale de Signalisation Maritime
Focal height40.10 metres (131.6 ft)[2]
Light sourcemain power
Intensity1,000 W[2]
Range25 nautical miles (46 km; 29 mi)[2]
CharacteristicFl (2+1) W 15s.[3]
The port of Cherchell
Cherchell bay with Mont Chenoua in the background
Road to the neighborhood of Tizirine
Archaeological Museum of Cherchell.

Names edit

The town was originally known by a Phoenician and Punic name that included the element ʾY (𐤀‬𐤉‬), meaning "island".[5][6] This may have been ʾY-ḤOL,[clarification needed] meaning "Island of Sand".[7] The Punic name was hellenized as Iṑl (Greek: Ἰὼλ)[8] and latinized as Iol.

Cherchel and Cherchell are French transcriptions of the Arabic name Shershel (Arabic: شرشال), derived from the town's old Latin name Caesarea (Greek: ἡ Καισάρεια, hē Kaisáreia),[8] which was given to it in 25 BC by Juba II to honor his benefactor Augustus,[9] who had legally borne the name "Gaius Julius Caesar" after his posthumous adoption by Julius Caesar in 44 BC. It was later distinguished from the many other Roman towns named Caesarea by calling it Caesarea in Mauretania, Caesarea Mauretaniae[10] ("Mauretania's Caesarea"), Iol Caesarea[11] (Ἰὼλ Καισάρεια, Iṑl Kaisáreia),[8] or Caesarea Iol.[12][13] After its notional refounding as a Roman colony, it was formally named Colonia Claudia Caesariensium Iol after its imperial patron Claudius.[14]

History edit

Antiquity edit

 
The Museum of Cherchell has many mosaics (like this one about viticulture) showing the riches of Caesarea

Phoenicians established their first major wave of colonies on the coasts between their homeland and the Strait of Gibraltar in the 8th century BC, but Iol was probably established around 600 BC[15] and the oldest remains so far discovered at Cherchell date from the 5th century BC.[16] By that time, Carthage had already taken control of the Phoenicians in the western Mediterranean. Punic Iol was one of the more important trading posts in what is now Algeria. In the 3rd century BC, it was fortified[16] and began issuing Numidia's first coins in bronze and silver, bearing Punic text, Carthaginian gods, and images of local produce, particularly fish.[17]

After the Punic Wars, Carthage's holdings in northwest Africa were mostly given to Rome's local allies. Iol was given to Micipsa, the king of Numidia, who first established it as a royal court.[15] It became an important city for the kingdom and was the primary capital for Bocchus I and II. The town minted its own coins and received new defensive works in the 1st century BC. Its Punic culture continued, but worship of Baal Hammon was notionally substituted with worship of his Roman equivalent Saturn.[9]

Iol was annexed directly to Rome in 33 BC.[16] Augustus established Juba II as king of Mauretania in 25 BC, giving him the city as his capital, which Juba then renamed in his honor.[9] Juba and his wife Cleopatra (the daughter of Mark Antony and Cleopatra of Egypt) rebuilt the city on a lavish scale, combining Roman and Hellenized Egyptian styles. The roads were relaid on a grid and amenities included a theater, an art gallery,[16] and a lighthouse modeled after the Pharos in Alexandria. He probably began the Roman wall that ran for about 7 kilometers (4 mi) around a space of about 400 hectares (988 acres); about 150 of that total was used for the settlement in antiquity.[14] The royal couple were buried in the Royal Mausoleum of Mauretania. The seaport capital and its kingdom flourished during this period, with most of the population being of Greek and Phoenician origin with a minority of Berbers.

Their son Ptolemy was assassinated by Caligula during a trip to Rome in AD 40. Rome proclaimed the annexation of Mauretania, which was resisted by Ptolemy's former slave Aedemon and by Berber leaders such as Sabalus. Caligula himself was murdered before Rome's response could be made, but his successor Claudius sent legions under Gn. Hosidius Geta and G. Suetonius Paulinus to complete the conquest. By 44, most resistance had been ended and the former kingdom was divided into two Roman provinces, one governed from Tingis (present-day Tangiers) and another governed from Caesarea. Mauretania Caesariensis extended along what is now the Algerian coast and included most of the hinterland as far as the Atlas Mountains.

Roman colonies of veteran soldiers were established in the new provinces to maintain order. Caesarea itself was made a colony, with its residents gaining Roman citizenship. It prospered as a provincial capital during the 1st and 2nd centuries, reaching a population of over 20,000[16] and possibly as many as 30,000.[18] It was defended by auxiliary units and was the harbor of Rome's Mauretanian Fleet,[14] which was established as a permanent force after Berber raids in the early 170s. The city featured a hippodrome, amphitheater, numerous temples, and civic buildings like a basilica.[19] It was surrounded by suburban villas whose agricultural mosaics are now celebrated.[16] It had its own school of philosophy, academy, and library.[citation needed] It received a new forum and further patronage from the African emperor Septimius Severus and his dynasty, possibly reaching as many as 100,000 inhabitants.[20][dubious ] Its native son Macrinus and his son Diadumenian became the first Berber and lower-class emperors, reigning in 217 and 218. (Their predecessor's wastefulness and wars required unpopular financial adjustments that led to their overthrow in favor of Elagabalus.) Juba's theater was converted into an amphitheater sometime after the year 300.[14]

The city was sacked by a Berber revolt in 371 and 372. It largely recovered, but was ravaged again by the Vandals after they were invited into Roman North Africa by Count Boniface in 429. Parts of the town received new fortifications. After the Vandal Kingdom conquered Carthage in 439, they also acquired a large part of Rome's Mediterranean fleet which they used to carry out raids all over the sea. Caesarea's port was sometimes used as a base for these raiders, and the city prospered from their plunder. Its schools produced the famous grammarian Priscian, who emigrated to the Byzantine east.

Middle Ages edit

 
El Rahman Mosque in Cherchell, built as a Christian church during the French colonial years, adapting a Roman pagan temple in the forum of Caesarea, later used for Christian worship

In 533, the Vandal Kingdom was conquered by Byzantine forces under Justinian's general Belisarius. Caesarea was among the areas to return to imperial rule. It was the seat of Mauretania's duke (Latin: dux),[21] but it went into decline and its city center was given over to ramshackle housing for the poor.[16] The first duke was named John; that he was given an infantry unit rather than cavalry implies that he was meant to hold the port without much concern about controlling its surrounding hinterland.[21]

The town remained under Byzantine control until its Muslim conquest in the late 7th century. Successive waves of Umayyad attacks into Byzantine North African territory over 15 years wore down the smaller and less motivated imperial forces, until finally Umayyad troops laid siege to the city of Caesarea and, although the defenders were resupplied by Byzantine fleets, finally overwhelmed it. Much of the Byzantine nobility and officials fled to other parts of the Empire, while most of the remaining Roman and semi-Roman Berber population accepted Islamic rule which granted them protected status.

Some remained Christians.[22] For two generations what remained of the Roman population and Romanized Berbers launched several revolts often in conjunction with reinforcements from the Empire. As a result, by the ninth century down much of the city's defences were damaged beyond repair, and resulting in its political loss of importance, leaving the former city little more than a small village.

For the following few centuries, the city remained a power center of Arabs and Berbers with a small but significant population of Christians who were fully assimilated by the beginning of the Early Modern period. Similarly, by the 10th century the city's name had transformed in the local dialect from a Latin to a Berber and ultimately into the Arabised form Sharshal (in French orthography, Cherchell).

The Norman Kingdom of Africa raided Berreshk, near Cherchell, in 1144.[23]

Modernity edit

Eventually, Ottoman Turks managed to successfully reconquer the city from Spanish occupation in the 16th century, using the city primarily as a fortified port. In 1520, Hayreddin Barbarossa captured the town and annexed the Algerian Pashalic. His elder brother Oruç Reis built a fort over the town. Under Turkish occupation, the city's importance as a port and fort led to it being inhabited by Moslems of many nationalities, some engaging in privateering and piracy on the Mediterranean.

In reply, European navies and especially the French Navy and the Knights Hospitaller (self-proclaimed descendants of the Crusaders) laid siege to the city and occasionally captured it for limited periods of time. For a century in the 1600s and for a brief period in the 1700s the city either was under Spanish or Hospitallar control. During this period a number of palaces were built, but the overwhelming edifice of Hayreddin Barbarossa's citadel, was considered too militarily valuable to destroy and uncover the previous ancient buildings of old Caesarea.

After the end of the Napoleonic Wars and Revolutions of the early 19th century, the French under both British, American, and other European powers were encouraged to attack and destroy the Barbary Pirates. From 1836 to 1840 various allied navies, but mostly French hunted down the Barbary pirates and conquered the Barbary ports while threatening the Ottoman Empire with war if it intervened. In 1840, the French after a significant siege captured and occupied the town. The French lynched the Barbary Pirates including the local pasha for Crimes against the laws of nations.{fact}

 
Coat of arms of French Cherchell

In turn, many ancient statues and buildings were either restored and left in Cherchell, or taken to museums in Algiers, Algeria or Paris, France for further study. However, not all building projects were successful in uncovering and restoring the ancient town. The Roman amphitheatre was considered mostly unsalvageable and unnecessary to rebuilt. Its dress stones were used to the build a new French fort and barracks. Materials from the Hippodrome were used to build a new church. The steps of the Hippodrome were partly destroyed by Cardinal Charles Lavigerie in a search for the tomb of Saint Marciana.

French occupation also brought new European settlement, to join the city's long-established communities of semi-Arabized Christians of local origin and old European merchant families, in addition to Berbers and Arab Muslims. Under French rule, European and Christians became a majority of the population again until World War II.

In the immediate years before World War II, losses to the French national population from World War I, and a declining birthrate in general among Europeans kept further colonial settlement to a trickle. Arab and Berber populations started seeing an increase in growth. French-Algerian colonial officials and landowners encouraged larger numbers of surrounding Berber tribesmen to move into the surrounding region to work the farms and groves cheaply. In turn, more and more Berbers and Arabs moved into the city seeking employment. By 1930 the combined Berbo-Arab Algerian population represented nearly 40% of the city's population.

The changing demographics within the city were disguised by the large numbers of French military personnel based there and the numbers of European tourists visiting what had become known as the Algerian Riviera. Additionally, during World War II, Cherchell, with its libraries, cafes, restaurants, and hotels served as a base for the United States Army and Allied War effort, hosting a summit conference between the US and UK in October 1942.

The end of the war with its departure of Allied forces and a reduction of French naval personnel due to rebasing saw an actual decline in Europeans living in the city. Additionally, the general austerity of the post-war years dried up the tourism industry and caused financial stagnation and losses to the local Franco-Algerian community. In 1952, a census recorded that the Frenco-Algerian population had declined to 50% of the population.

For the remaining 1950's Cherchell was only slightly caught up by the Algerian War of Independence. With its large proportion of Europeans, French control and influence was strong enough to discourage all but the most daring attacks by anti-French insurgents. By 1966, after independence from the French, Cherchell had lost nearly half of its population and all of its Franco-Algerian population.

Independent Algeria edit

Cherchell has continued to grow post-independence, recovering to peak colonial-era population by the 1980s. Cherchell currently has industries in marble, plaster quarries and iron mines. The town trades in oils, tobacco and earthenware. Additionally, the ancient cistern first developed by Juba and Cleopatra Selene II was restored and expanded under recent French rule and still supplies water to the town.

Although the Algerian Riviera ended with the war, Cherchell is still a popular tourist place in Algeria. Cherchell has various splendid temples and monuments from the Punic, Numidian and Roman periods, and the works of art found there, including statues of Neptune and Venus, are now in the Museum of Antiquities in Algiers. The former Roman port is no longer in commercial use and has been partly filled by alluvial deposits and has been affected by earthquakes. The former local mosque of the Hundred Columns contains 89 columns of diorite. This remarkable building now serves as a hospital. The local museum displays some of the finest ancient Greek and Roman antiquities found in Africa. Cherchell is the birthplace of writer and movie director Assia Djebar.

Historical population edit

Year Population[1]
1901 9,000
1926 11,900
1931 12,700
1936 12,700
1954 16,900
1966 11,700
1987 18,700
1998 24,400
2015 30,000

Remains edit

Earthquakes, wars and plunder have ravaged many of the ancient remains.

The town (of Caesarea) remains insufficiently known....The town walls, studied in 1946, pose more problems; and the monuments are more often simply marked than completely known. The amphitheater, which has been excavated, remains unpublished; the very large hippodrome, which appears clearly on aerial photographs, is known only through old borings. The temples, which have been found on a spur of the mountain to the East of the central esplanade, on the edge of the route from Ténès to the West of the modern town, are too much destroyed to warrant publication even of plans. The baths along the edge of the sea, rather majestic, are also badly preserved. One would scarcely recognize several houses recently excavated. Grouped around peristyles with vast trichinia, they are readily adapted to the terrain and are constructed on terraces on the lower slopes or on the edge of cliffs with views over the sea. They often are preserved for us only in a late form—4th c. A.D.—and traces of the era of Juba are found only in the lower strata. The theater is an exception; still well preserved in 1840, it has since served as a quarry. It was set against the slope of the mountain. At the back of the scaena towards the N was a portico, covered over today by a street, where Gsell saw the S side of the forum. Of the rich scaenae frons there remain only traces and several statues, of which two are colossal muses. The orchestra had later undergone great modification which had resulted in the disappearance of the platform of the stage: an oval arena had been built, intended for hunting spectacles, and a wall was raised between the first row of seats and the cavea to protect spectators from the wild beasts. The sumptuously decorated monument is consequently very much mutilated, but is of interest specifically because of its complex history. The amphitheater, in the E part of the town, was erected in flat open country. It was not oval but rectangular, with the short sides rounded. The tiers of seats, for the most part missing, were carried on ramping vaults, and the arena floor was cut by two perpendicular passages intended for beasts. It is in this arena that St. Marciana was martyred.[24]

Some remains can be seen in the local Archeological Museum of Chercell-Caesarea.

Religion edit

Christianity arrived in Caesarea early enough to produce martyrs during the Diocletianic Persecution. For vandalizing an idol of Diana, St Marciana was supposedly tortured and killed in Caesarea's arena, gored by a bull and mauled by a leopard for the amusement of the crowd. St Theodota and her sons were also supposedly martyred in the city.[10]

Caesarea was a bishopric from about 314 to 484, although not all of its bishops are known. Fortunatus took part in the 314 Council of Arles, which condemned Donatism. Clemens was mentioned in one of Symmachus's letters and would have served in the 370s. During the 411 synod at Carthage, Caesarea was represented by the Donatist Emeritus and the orthodox Deuterius. St Augustine accosted Emeritus at Caesarea in the autumn of 418 and secured his exile. Apocorius was an orthodox bishop whom Huneric summoned to Carthage in 484 and then exiled. An early 8th-century Notitia Episcopatuum still included this see.[25][26]

Caesarea was revived by the Roman Catholic Church as a titular see in the 19th century. It was distinguished as "Caesarea in Mauretania" in 1933.[27] Its bishops have included:

  • Titular Bishop Biagio Pisani (1897.04.23 – 1901.06.07)
  • Titular Bishop Pietro Maffi (1902.06.09 – 1903.06.22)
  • Titular Bishop Thomas Francis Brennan (1905.10.07 – 1916.03.20)
  • Titular Archbishop Pierre-Célestin Cézerac (1918.01.02 – 1918.03.18)
  • Titular Archbishop Cardinal Wilhelmus Marinus van Rossum, CSSR (1918.04.25 – 1918.05.20)
  • Titular Archbishop Benedetto Aloisi Masella (1919.12.15 – 1946.02.18)
  • Titular Bishop Luigi Cammarata (1946.12.04 – 1950.02.25)
  • Titular Bishop Francesco Pennisi (1950.07.11 – 1955.10.01)
  • Titular Bishop André-Jacques Fougerat (1956.07.16 – 1957.01.05)
  • Titular Bishop Carmelo Canzonieri (1957.03.11 – 1963.07.30)
  • Titular Bishop Archbishop Enea Selis (1964.01.18 – 1971.09.02)
  • Titular Bishop Giuseppe Moizo (1972.01.22 – 1976.07.01)
  • Titular Archbishop Sergio Sebastiani (1976.09.27 – 2001.02.21)
  • Titular Bishop Gerard Johannes Nicolaas de Korte (2001.04.11 – 2008.06.18)
  • Titular Bishop Stanislaus Tobias Magombo (2009.04.29 – 2010.07.06)
  • Titular Archbishop Walter Brandmüller (2010.11.04 – 2010.11.20)
  • Titular Archbishop Marek Solczyński (2011.11.26 – present)

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b . populstat.info. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Cherchell". Office Nationale de Signalisation Maritime. Ministere des Travaux Publics. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  3. ^ List of Lights, Pub. 113: The West Coasts of Europe and Africa, the Mediterranean Sea, Black Sea and Azovskoye More (Sea of Azov) (PDF). List of Lights. United States National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. 2015.
  4. ^ Rowlett, Russ. "Lighthouses of Western Algeria". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  5. ^ Markoe (2000), p. 182.
  6. ^ Huss (1990), p. 37.
  7. ^ Lipiński (2004), p. 405.
  8. ^ a b c Smith (1872), Vol. II, s.v. "Iol".
  9. ^ a b c Lipiński (2004), p. 406.
  10. ^ a b Stokes (1905), p. 446.
  11. ^ Dossey (2010), p. 13.
  12. ^ Smith (1872), Vol. I, s.v. "Cartenna".
  13. ^ Berggren & al. (2000), p. 157.
  14. ^ a b c d Grimal (1983), s.v. "Cherchell".
  15. ^ a b Roller (2003), p. 121.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Potter (2002).
  17. ^ Callegarin (2011), p. 46.
  18. ^ Leveau, Philippe. "Caesarea de Maurétanie, une ville romaine et ses campagnes" first chapter
  19. ^ Leveau Philipe: "L'amphithéâtre et le théâtre-amphithéâtre de Cherchel" (in French)
  20. ^ Gsell.[who?]
  21. ^ a b Lillington-Martin (2018), p. 173.
  22. ^ Virginie Prevost. "Prevost: Les dernières communautés chrétiennes autochtones d'Afrique du Nord" ([1])
  23. ^ The Cambridge Medieval History Series volumes 1-5. Plantagenet Publishing.
  24. ^ Princeton: Iol
  25. ^ Joseph Mesnage, L'Afrique chrétienne, Paris 1912, pp. 447–450
  26. ^ Charles Courtois, v. Césarée de Maurétanie, in Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de Géographie ecclésiastiques, vol. XII, Paris 1953, coll. 203–206
  27. ^ Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 ISBN 978-88-209-9070-1), p. 867

Bibliography edit

  • S. Pétridès (1908). "Caesarea Mauretaniae". Catholic Encyclopedia.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Cherchel" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 82–83.
  • Callegarin, Laurent (2011), "Coinages with Punic and Neo-Punic Legends of Western Mauretania", Money, Trade, and Trade Routes in Pre-Islamic North Africa, British Museum Research Publication, No. 176, London: British Museum, pp. 42–48.
  • Dossey, Leslie (2010), Peasant and Empire in Christian North Africa, Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 9780520254398.
  • Grimal, Pierre (1983), Woloch, G. Michael (ed.), Roman Cities, Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, ISBN 9780299089344.
  • Huss, Werner (1990), Die Karthager, Munich: C.H. Beck, ISBN 9783406379123. (in German)
  • Lillington-Martin, Christopher (2018), "Procopius, Πάρεδος/Quaestor, Codex Justinianus, 1.27, and Belisarius's Strategy in the Mediterranean", Procopius of Caesarea: Literary and Historical Interpretations, Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 157–185, ISBN 9781317075493.
  • Lipiński, Edward (2004), Itineraria Phoenicia, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta, No. 127, Studia Phoenicia, Vol. XVIII, Leuven: Uitgeverij Peeters, ISBN 9789042913448.
  • Markoe, Glenn E. (2000), Phoenicians, Peoples of the Past, Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 9780520226142.
  • Oengus (1905), Stokes, Whitley (ed.), The Martyrology of Oengus the Culdee..., Harrison & Sons.
  • Potter, Timothy William (2002), "Caesarea (3)", The Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd ed., Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 262, ISBN 978-0-19-954556-8.
  • Ptolemy (2000), Berggren, J. Lennart; et al. (eds.), Ptolemy's Geography: An Annotated Translation of the Theoretical Chapters, Princeton: Princeton University Press, ISBN 0691010420.
  • Roller, Duane W. (2003), The World of Juba II and Kleopatra Selene, New York: Routledge, ISBN 9781134402960.
  • Smith, Philip (1872), A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography..., vol.  I & II, London: John Murray.

External links edit

  • GigaCatholic with titular incumbent biography links
  • Various ancient ruins of Cherchell:

cherchell, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, british, village, formerly, called, churchill, oxfordshire, arabic, شرشال, town, algeria, mediterranean, coast, kilometers, west, algiers, seat, district, tipaza, province, under, names, caesarea, former. Iol redirects here For other uses see IOL disambiguation For the British village formerly called Cherchell see Churchill Oxfordshire Cherchell Arabic شرشال is a town on Algeria s Mediterranean coast 89 kilometers 55 mi west of Algiers It is the seat of Cherchell District in Tipaza Province Under the names Iol and Caesarea it was formerly a Roman colony and the capital of the kingdoms of Numidia and Mauretania Cherchell شرشالTownCherchell s fountain placeLocation of Cherchell in the Tipaza ProvinceCherchellCoordinates 36 36 27 N 02 11 24 E 36 60750 N 2 19000 E 36 60750 2 19000CountryAlgeriaProvinceTipazaDistrictCherchellPopulation 2008 1 Total34 372Fort Joinville LighthouseCherchellCoordinates36 36 41 N 2 11 17 E 36 61139 N 2 18806 E 36 61139 2 18806Constructed1881 2 Foundationstone baseConstructionstone towerHeight28 60 metres 93 8 ft 2 Shapecylindrical tower with balcony and lantern 4 Markingsunpainted tower black lanternOperatorOffice Nationale de Signalisation MaritimeFocal height40 10 metres 131 6 ft 2 Light sourcemain powerIntensity1 000 W 2 Range25 nautical miles 46 km 29 mi 2 CharacteristicFl 2 1 W 15s 3 The port of CherchellCherchell bay with Mont Chenoua in the backgroundRoad to the neighborhood of TizirineArchaeological Museum of Cherchell Contents 1 Names 2 History 2 1 Antiquity 2 2 Middle Ages 2 3 Modernity 2 4 Independent Algeria 2 5 Historical population 3 Remains 4 Religion 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksNames editFurther information Maghreb placename etymology The town was originally known by a Phoenician and Punic name that included the element ʾY 𐤀 𐤉 meaning island 5 6 This may have been ʾY ḤOL clarification needed meaning Island of Sand 7 The Punic name was hellenized as Iṑl Greek Ἰὼl 8 and latinized as Iol Cherchel and Cherchell are French transcriptions of the Arabic name Shershel Arabic شرشال derived from the town s old Latin name Caesarea Greek ἡ Kaisareia he Kaisareia 8 which was given to it in 25 BC by Juba II to honor his benefactor Augustus 9 who had legally borne the name Gaius Julius Caesar after his posthumous adoption by Julius Caesar in 44 BC It was later distinguished from the many other Roman towns named Caesarea by calling it Caesarea in Mauretania Caesarea Mauretaniae 10 Mauretania s Caesarea Iol Caesarea 11 Ἰὼl Kaisareia Iṑl Kaisareia 8 or Caesarea Iol 12 13 After its notional refounding as a Roman colony it was formally named Colonia Claudia Caesariensium Iol after its imperial patron Claudius 14 History editAntiquity edit nbsp The Museum of Cherchell has many mosaics like this one about viticulture showing the riches of CaesareaMain articles Caesarea Mauretaniae and Mauretania Caesariensis Phoenicians established their first major wave of colonies on the coasts between their homeland and the Strait of Gibraltar in the 8th century BC but Iol was probably established around 600 BC 15 and the oldest remains so far discovered at Cherchell date from the 5th century BC 16 By that time Carthage had already taken control of the Phoenicians in the western Mediterranean Punic Iol was one of the more important trading posts in what is now Algeria In the 3rd century BC it was fortified 16 and began issuing Numidia s first coins in bronze and silver bearing Punic text Carthaginian gods and images of local produce particularly fish 17 After the Punic Wars Carthage s holdings in northwest Africa were mostly given to Rome s local allies Iol was given to Micipsa the king of Numidia who first established it as a royal court 15 It became an important city for the kingdom and was the primary capital for Bocchus I and II The town minted its own coins and received new defensive works in the 1st century BC Its Punic culture continued but worship of Baal Hammon was notionally substituted with worship of his Roman equivalent Saturn 9 Iol was annexed directly to Rome in 33 BC 16 Augustus established Juba II as king of Mauretania in 25 BC giving him the city as his capital which Juba then renamed in his honor 9 Juba and his wife Cleopatra the daughter of Mark Antony and Cleopatra of Egypt rebuilt the city on a lavish scale combining Roman and Hellenized Egyptian styles The roads were relaid on a grid and amenities included a theater an art gallery 16 and a lighthouse modeled after the Pharos in Alexandria He probably began the Roman wall that ran for about 7 kilometers 4 mi around a space of about 400 hectares 988 acres about 150 of that total was used for the settlement in antiquity 14 The royal couple were buried in the Royal Mausoleum of Mauretania The seaport capital and its kingdom flourished during this period with most of the population being of Greek and Phoenician origin with a minority of Berbers Their son Ptolemy was assassinated by Caligula during a trip to Rome in AD 40 Rome proclaimed the annexation of Mauretania which was resisted by Ptolemy s former slave Aedemon and by Berber leaders such as Sabalus Caligula himself was murdered before Rome s response could be made but his successor Claudius sent legions under Gn Hosidius Geta and G Suetonius Paulinus to complete the conquest By 44 most resistance had been ended and the former kingdom was divided into two Roman provinces one governed from Tingis present day Tangiers and another governed from Caesarea Mauretania Caesariensis extended along what is now the Algerian coast and included most of the hinterland as far as the Atlas Mountains Roman colonies of veteran soldiers were established in the new provinces to maintain order Caesarea itself was made a colony with its residents gaining Roman citizenship It prospered as a provincial capital during the 1st and 2nd centuries reaching a population of over 20 000 16 and possibly as many as 30 000 18 It was defended by auxiliary units and was the harbor of Rome s Mauretanian Fleet 14 which was established as a permanent force after Berber raids in the early 170s The city featured a hippodrome amphitheater numerous temples and civic buildings like a basilica 19 It was surrounded by suburban villas whose agricultural mosaics are now celebrated 16 It had its own school of philosophy academy and library citation needed It received a new forum and further patronage from the African emperor Septimius Severus and his dynasty possibly reaching as many as 100 000 inhabitants 20 dubious discuss Its native son Macrinus and his son Diadumenian became the first Berber and lower class emperors reigning in 217 and 218 Their predecessor s wastefulness and wars required unpopular financial adjustments that led to their overthrow in favor of Elagabalus Juba s theater was converted into an amphitheater sometime after the year 300 14 The city was sacked by a Berber revolt in 371 and 372 It largely recovered but was ravaged again by the Vandals after they were invited into Roman North Africa by Count Boniface in 429 Parts of the town received new fortifications After the Vandal Kingdom conquered Carthage in 439 they also acquired a large part of Rome s Mediterranean fleet which they used to carry out raids all over the sea Caesarea s port was sometimes used as a base for these raiders and the city prospered from their plunder Its schools produced the famous grammarian Priscian who emigrated to the Byzantine east Middle Ages edit nbsp El Rahman Mosque in Cherchell built as a Christian church during the French colonial years adapting a Roman pagan temple in the forum of Caesarea later used for Christian worshipIn 533 the Vandal Kingdom was conquered by Byzantine forces under Justinian s general Belisarius Caesarea was among the areas to return to imperial rule It was the seat of Mauretania s duke Latin dux 21 but it went into decline and its city center was given over to ramshackle housing for the poor 16 The first duke was named John that he was given an infantry unit rather than cavalry implies that he was meant to hold the port without much concern about controlling its surrounding hinterland 21 The town remained under Byzantine control until its Muslim conquest in the late 7th century Successive waves of Umayyad attacks into Byzantine North African territory over 15 years wore down the smaller and less motivated imperial forces until finally Umayyad troops laid siege to the city of Caesarea and although the defenders were resupplied by Byzantine fleets finally overwhelmed it Much of the Byzantine nobility and officials fled to other parts of the Empire while most of the remaining Roman and semi Roman Berber population accepted Islamic rule which granted them protected status Some remained Christians 22 For two generations what remained of the Roman population and Romanized Berbers launched several revolts often in conjunction with reinforcements from the Empire As a result by the ninth century down much of the city s defences were damaged beyond repair and resulting in its political loss of importance leaving the former city little more than a small village For the following few centuries the city remained a power center of Arabs and Berbers with a small but significant population of Christians who were fully assimilated by the beginning of the Early Modern period Similarly by the 10th century the city s name had transformed in the local dialect from a Latin to a Berber and ultimately into the Arabised form Sharshal in French orthography Cherchell The Norman Kingdom of Africa raided Berreshk near Cherchell in 1144 23 Modernity edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources History of Cherchell news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Eventually Ottoman Turks managed to successfully reconquer the city from Spanish occupation in the 16th century using the city primarily as a fortified port In 1520 Hayreddin Barbarossa captured the town and annexed the Algerian Pashalic His elder brother Oruc Reis built a fort over the town Under Turkish occupation the city s importance as a port and fort led to it being inhabited by Moslems of many nationalities some engaging in privateering and piracy on the Mediterranean In reply European navies and especially the French Navy and the Knights Hospitaller self proclaimed descendants of the Crusaders laid siege to the city and occasionally captured it for limited periods of time For a century in the 1600s and for a brief period in the 1700s the city either was under Spanish or Hospitallar control During this period a number of palaces were built but the overwhelming edifice of Hayreddin Barbarossa s citadel was considered too militarily valuable to destroy and uncover the previous ancient buildings of old Caesarea After the end of the Napoleonic Wars and Revolutions of the early 19th century the French under both British American and other European powers were encouraged to attack and destroy the Barbary Pirates From 1836 to 1840 various allied navies but mostly French hunted down the Barbary pirates and conquered the Barbary ports while threatening the Ottoman Empire with war if it intervened In 1840 the French after a significant siege captured and occupied the town The French lynched the Barbary Pirates including the local pasha for Crimes against the laws of nations fact nbsp Coat of arms of French CherchellIn turn many ancient statues and buildings were either restored and left in Cherchell or taken to museums in Algiers Algeria or Paris France for further study However not all building projects were successful in uncovering and restoring the ancient town The Roman amphitheatre was considered mostly unsalvageable and unnecessary to rebuilt Its dress stones were used to the build a new French fort and barracks Materials from the Hippodrome were used to build a new church The steps of the Hippodrome were partly destroyed by Cardinal Charles Lavigerie in a search for the tomb of Saint Marciana French occupation also brought new European settlement to join the city s long established communities of semi Arabized Christians of local origin and old European merchant families in addition to Berbers and Arab Muslims Under French rule European and Christians became a majority of the population again until World War II In the immediate years before World War II losses to the French national population from World War I and a declining birthrate in general among Europeans kept further colonial settlement to a trickle Arab and Berber populations started seeing an increase in growth French Algerian colonial officials and landowners encouraged larger numbers of surrounding Berber tribesmen to move into the surrounding region to work the farms and groves cheaply In turn more and more Berbers and Arabs moved into the city seeking employment By 1930 the combined Berbo Arab Algerian population represented nearly 40 of the city s population The changing demographics within the city were disguised by the large numbers of French military personnel based there and the numbers of European tourists visiting what had become known as the Algerian Riviera Additionally during World War II Cherchell with its libraries cafes restaurants and hotels served as a base for the United States Army and Allied War effort hosting a summit conference between the US and UK in October 1942 The end of the war with its departure of Allied forces and a reduction of French naval personnel due to rebasing saw an actual decline in Europeans living in the city Additionally the general austerity of the post war years dried up the tourism industry and caused financial stagnation and losses to the local Franco Algerian community In 1952 a census recorded that the Frenco Algerian population had declined to 50 of the population For the remaining 1950 s Cherchell was only slightly caught up by the Algerian War of Independence With its large proportion of Europeans French control and influence was strong enough to discourage all but the most daring attacks by anti French insurgents By 1966 after independence from the French Cherchell had lost nearly half of its population and all of its Franco Algerian population Independent Algeria edit Cherchell has continued to grow post independence recovering to peak colonial era population by the 1980s Cherchell currently has industries in marble plaster quarries and iron mines The town trades in oils tobacco and earthenware Additionally the ancient cistern first developed by Juba and Cleopatra Selene II was restored and expanded under recent French rule and still supplies water to the town Although the Algerian Riviera ended with the war Cherchell is still a popular tourist place in Algeria Cherchell has various splendid temples and monuments from the Punic Numidian and Roman periods and the works of art found there including statues of Neptune and Venus are now in the Museum of Antiquities in Algiers The former Roman port is no longer in commercial use and has been partly filled by alluvial deposits and has been affected by earthquakes The former local mosque of the Hundred Columns contains 89 columns of diorite This remarkable building now serves as a hospital The local museum displays some of the finest ancient Greek and Roman antiquities found in Africa Cherchell is the birthplace of writer and movie director Assia Djebar Historical population edit Year Population 1 1901 9 0001926 11 9001931 12 7001936 12 7001954 16 9001966 11 7001987 18 7001998 24 4002015 30 000Remains editEarthquakes wars and plunder have ravaged many of the ancient remains The town of Caesarea remains insufficiently known The town walls studied in 1946 pose more problems and the monuments are more often simply marked than completely known The amphitheater which has been excavated remains unpublished the very large hippodrome which appears clearly on aerial photographs is known only through old borings The temples which have been found on a spur of the mountain to the East of the central esplanade on the edge of the route from Tenes to the West of the modern town are too much destroyed to warrant publication even of plans The baths along the edge of the sea rather majestic are also badly preserved One would scarcely recognize several houses recently excavated Grouped around peristyles with vast trichinia they are readily adapted to the terrain and are constructed on terraces on the lower slopes or on the edge of cliffs with views over the sea They often are preserved for us only in a late form 4th c A D and traces of the era of Juba are found only in the lower strata The theater is an exception still well preserved in 1840 it has since served as a quarry It was set against the slope of the mountain At the back of the scaena towards the N was a portico covered over today by a street where Gsell saw the S side of the forum Of the rich scaenae frons there remain only traces and several statues of which two are colossal muses The orchestra had later undergone great modification which had resulted in the disappearance of the platform of the stage an oval arena had been built intended for hunting spectacles and a wall was raised between the first row of seats and the cavea to protect spectators from the wild beasts The sumptuously decorated monument is consequently very much mutilated but is of interest specifically because of its complex history The amphitheater in the E part of the town was erected in flat open country It was not oval but rectangular with the short sides rounded The tiers of seats for the most part missing were carried on ramping vaults and the arena floor was cut by two perpendicular passages intended for beasts It is in this arena that St Marciana was martyred 24 Some remains can be seen in the local Archeological Museum of Chercell Caesarea Religion editChristianity arrived in Caesarea early enough to produce martyrs during the Diocletianic Persecution For vandalizing an idol of Diana St Marciana was supposedly tortured and killed in Caesarea s arena gored by a bull and mauled by a leopard for the amusement of the crowd St Theodota and her sons were also supposedly martyred in the city 10 Caesarea was a bishopric from about 314 to 484 although not all of its bishops are known Fortunatus took part in the 314 Council of Arles which condemned Donatism Clemens was mentioned in one of Symmachus s letters and would have served in the 370s During the 411 synod at Carthage Caesarea was represented by the Donatist Emeritus and the orthodox Deuterius St Augustine accosted Emeritus at Caesarea in the autumn of 418 and secured his exile Apocorius was an orthodox bishop whom Huneric summoned to Carthage in 484 and then exiled An early 8th century Notitia Episcopatuum still included this see 25 26 Caesarea was revived by the Roman Catholic Church as a titular see in the 19th century It was distinguished as Caesarea in Mauretania in 1933 27 Its bishops have included Titular Bishop Biagio Pisani 1897 04 23 1901 06 07 Titular Bishop Pietro Maffi 1902 06 09 1903 06 22 Titular Bishop Thomas Francis Brennan 1905 10 07 1916 03 20 Titular Archbishop Pierre Celestin Cezerac 1918 01 02 1918 03 18 Titular Archbishop Cardinal Wilhelmus Marinus van Rossum CSSR 1918 04 25 1918 05 20 Titular Archbishop Benedetto Aloisi Masella 1919 12 15 1946 02 18 Titular Bishop Luigi Cammarata 1946 12 04 1950 02 25 Titular Bishop Francesco Pennisi 1950 07 11 1955 10 01 Titular Bishop Andre Jacques Fougerat 1956 07 16 1957 01 05 Titular Bishop Carmelo Canzonieri 1957 03 11 1963 07 30 Titular Bishop Archbishop Enea Selis 1964 01 18 1971 09 02 Titular Bishop Giuseppe Moizo 1972 01 22 1976 07 01 Titular Archbishop Sergio Sebastiani 1976 09 27 2001 02 21 Titular Bishop Gerard Johannes Nicolaas de Korte 2001 04 11 2008 06 18 Titular Bishop Stanislaus Tobias Magombo 2009 04 29 2010 07 06 Titular Archbishop Walter Brandmuller 2010 11 04 2010 11 20 Titular Archbishop Marek Solczynski 2011 11 26 present Gallery edit nbsp Roman theater nbsp Section of Caesarea s Roman aqueduct nbsp Photography of ancient Roman inscriptions from Cherchell 1856 nbsp Photography of Roman remains from Caesarea 1856 nbsp Mosaic of the Three Graces from Caesarea nbsp Portrait of Juba II found in Caesarea nbsp Mosaic of vineyard workers nbsp Mosaic of the tigersSee also editList of lighthouses in AlgeriaReferences editCitations edit a b populstat info populstat info Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2014 08 27 a b c d e Cherchell Office Nationale de Signalisation Maritime Ministere des Travaux Publics Retrieved 3 May 2017 List of Lights Pub 113 The West Coasts of Europe and Africa the Mediterranean Sea Black Sea and Azovskoye More Sea of Azov PDF List of Lights United States National Geospatial Intelligence Agency 2015 Rowlett Russ Lighthouses of Western Algeria The Lighthouse Directory University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Retrieved 3 May 2017 Markoe 2000 p 182 Huss 1990 p 37 Lipinski 2004 p 405 a b c Smith 1872 Vol II s v Iol a b c Lipinski 2004 p 406 a b Stokes 1905 p 446 Dossey 2010 p 13 Smith 1872 Vol I s v Cartenna Berggren amp al 2000 p 157 a b c d Grimal 1983 s v Cherchell a b Roller 2003 p 121 a b c d e f g Potter 2002 Callegarin 2011 p 46 Leveau Philippe Caesarea de Mauretanie une ville romaine et ses campagnes first chapter Leveau Philipe L amphitheatre et le theatre amphitheatre de Cherchel in French Gsell who a b Lillington Martin 2018 p 173 Virginie Prevost Prevost Les dernieres communautes chretiennes autochtones d Afrique du Nord 1 The Cambridge Medieval History Series volumes 1 5 Plantagenet Publishing Princeton Iol Joseph Mesnage L Afrique chretienne Paris 1912 pp 447 450 Charles Courtois v Cesaree de Mauretanie in Dictionnaire d Histoire et de Geographie ecclesiastiques vol XII Paris 1953 coll 203 206 Annuario Pontificio 2013 Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 ISBN 978 88 209 9070 1 p 867 Bibliography edit S Petrides 1908 Caesarea Mauretaniae Catholic Encyclopedia Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Cherchel Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 82 83 Callegarin Laurent 2011 Coinages with Punic and Neo Punic Legends of Western Mauretania Money Trade and Trade Routes in Pre Islamic North Africa British Museum Research Publication No 176 London British Museum pp 42 48 Dossey Leslie 2010 Peasant and Empire in Christian North Africa Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520254398 Grimal Pierre 1983 Woloch G Michael ed Roman Cities Madison University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 9780299089344 Huss Werner 1990 Die Karthager Munich C H Beck ISBN 9783406379123 in German Lillington Martin Christopher 2018 Procopius Paredos Quaestor Codex Justinianus 1 27 and Belisarius s Strategy in the Mediterranean Procopius of Caesarea Literary and Historical Interpretations Abingdon Routledge pp 157 185 ISBN 9781317075493 Lipinski Edward 2004 Itineraria Phoenicia Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta No 127 Studia Phoenicia Vol XVIII Leuven Uitgeverij Peeters ISBN 9789042913448 Markoe Glenn E 2000 Phoenicians Peoples of the Past Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520226142 Oengus 1905 Stokes Whitley ed The Martyrology of Oengus the Culdee Harrison amp Sons Potter Timothy William 2002 Caesarea 3 The Oxford Classical Dictionary 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 262 ISBN 978 0 19 954556 8 Ptolemy 2000 Berggren J Lennart et al eds Ptolemy s Geography An Annotated Translation of the Theoretical Chapters Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0691010420 Roller Duane W 2003 The World of Juba II and Kleopatra Selene New York Routledge ISBN 9781134402960 Smith Philip 1872 A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography vol I amp II London John Murray External links edit nbsp Algeria portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cherchell GigaCatholic with titular incumbent biography links Various ancient ruins of Cherchell A Roman ruin An ancient theater Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine A Roman aqueduct near CherchellPortal nbsp Engineering Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cherchell amp oldid 1206722895, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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