Henchir-Bir-El-Menadla
Bir el Menadla (Bir el Menadla) is a locality and archaeological site in Governorate de Mahdia (Al Mahdiyah), Tunisia (North Africa).
Location
[edit]It is located at 35°25'60" N and 10°16'0" E between Dahmani and El Djem, at an elevation of 61 meters above sea level.[1] The site is near the Cherita and Sebkhet de Sidi El Hani lakes, and south of Kairouan.
Bir el Menadla is also known as Bi'r al Manadilah, Bir el Menadla, Bi’r al Manādilah[2][3] Henchir-Bir-El-Menadka or just Menadla.
Identification
[edit]The ruins at Menadla date from the Roman Empire and are tentatively identified as a station on the Roman Road from Althiburos(Dahmani) To Thysdrus(El Djem) called Terento,[4] though there is a suggestion the town was named Forontoniana,[5] has also be proposed.
The ruins are tentatively identified with a Roman town of the Roman province of Byzacene, called Terento.[6] The town appears on the Tabula Peutingeria, and according to the Antonine Itinerary it was on the Roman Road from Althiburos To Thysdrus.[7][8][9] about 10 miles from Aquae Regiae[10] The Antonine Itinerary tells us that its neighbors were Germanieiana, tentatively identified with nearby Ksour-el-Maïete and Aeliae thought by some to be nearby Henchir-Merelma. If these tentatively identifications are correct it would confirm the Antonine Itinerary description of them being way stations on the limes Africana Road.
Bishopric
[edit]Terento is not on the lists of the Episcopal See and so it is presumed that the town was actually the cathedra for the diocese of Forontoniana.
References
[edit]- ^ Bir el Menadla at mapcarta.com.
- ^ "Bir el Menadla (Menadla Birel) Map, Weather and Photos - Tunisia: Well - Lat:35.4333 and Long:10.2667".
- ^ Bir el Menadla at mapcarta.com.
- ^ Bulletin Archéologique du Comité des travaux historiques Et scientifiques Archived 2017-08-13 at the Wayback Machine (1900) p126.
- ^ Forontoniana at .gcatholic.org
- ^ L'Afrique Chretienne p.177 .
- ^ Pierre Salama, Les voies romaines de l'Afrique du Nord, Algiers, 1951.
- ^ O. Cuntz, Itinéraire d'Antonin, (Leipzig, 1929) (1990 ISBN 3-519-04273-8).
- ^ Pierre Salama, Les voies romaines de l'Afrique du Nord, Alger, 1951 (with a map of 1949).
- ^ Tissot, Geogr., II, p.588.