Ruspina

Ruspina was a Phoenician, Carthaginian and Roman town located in Monastir, Tunisia, situated in Roman times in Africa propria, and mentioned by Pliny the Elder and Ptolemy.

Name

The Phoenician and Punic name RŠPN (𐤓‬𐤔‬𐤐𐤍) or RŠPNT (𐤓‬𐤔‬𐤐𐤍𐤕) seems to mean "Angle Cape". It was used for the cape and hills at the south end of the Bay of Hammamet and for the main settlement near the cape. The Punic name was variously hellenized as Rhouspînon (Greek: Ῥουσπῖνον), Rhouspino, (Ῥουσπίνῳ), Rhouspína (Ῥουσπίνα), or Rhoúspina (Ῥούσπινα) but consistently latinized as Ruspina.

Geography

The exact location of the city is uncertain. Nathan Davis believes it was located at modern day Monastir. Multiple tombs and ruins have been discovered in this city that may have been part of Ruspina.

History

The Carthaginian town came under Roman hegemony after the Punic Wars. In 46BC, the town was the first in Africa to ally itself with Julius Caesar during his civil war. The same year, the Battle of Ruspina was a victory for Pompey's ally T. Labienus.


35°46′10″N 10°49′31″E / 35.7694°N 10.8253°E / 35.7694; 10.8253


This page was last updated at 2023-12-26 10:33 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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