Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Amphitheatre of El Jem

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Location
  
Tunisia

Criteria
  
iv, vi

UNESCO region
  
Arab States

Phone
  
+216 22 434 142

Type
  
Cultural

Reference
  
38

Address
  
El Jem, Tunisia

UNESCO World Heritage Site inscription
  
1979

Amphitheatre of El Jem

Hours
  
Open today · 7:30AM–6PMWednesday7:30AM–6PMThursday7:30AM–6PMFriday7:30AM–6PMSaturday7:30AM–6PMSunday7:30AM–6PMMonday7:30AM–6PMTuesday7:30AM–6PM

Similar
  
Medina of Sousse - Tunisia, Bardo National Museum, Thuburbo Majus, Anfiteatro de Itálica, Great Mosque of Kairouan

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Amphitheatre of El Jem is an archeological site in the city of El Djem, Tunisia. It is listed by UNESCO since 1979 as a World Heritage Site.

Contents

The amphitheatre was built around 238 AD, when the modern Tunisia belonged to the Roman province of Africa, in the city of Thysdrus, currently a suburb of El Djem. It is one of the best preserved Roman ruins in the world, and is unique in Africa. As other amphitheatres in the Roman Empire, it was built for spectator events, and it is one of the biggest amphitheatres in the world. The estimated capacity is 35,000, and the sizes of the big and the small axes are respectively 148 metres (486 ft) and 122 metres (400 ft). The amphitheatre is built of stone blocks, located on a flat ground, and is exceptionally well conserved.

The amphitheatre of El Jem is the third amphitheatre built on the same place. The belief is that it was constructed by the local proconsul Gordian, who became the emperor as Gordian III. In the Middle Ages, it served as a fortress, and the population sought here shelter during the attacks of Vandals in 430 and Arabs in 647. In 1695, during the Revolutions of Tunis, Mohamed Bey El Mouradi made an opening in one of the walls to stop the resistance of the followers of his brother Ali Bey al-Muradi who gathered inside the amphitheater. It is believed that the amphiteatre was used as a salpetre manufacture in the end of the 18th and in the 19th century. Around 1850, the breach in the wall was enlarged by Ahmad I ibn Mustafa to approximately 30 metres (98 ft). In the second half of the 19th century, the structure was used for shops, dwellings, and grain storage.

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References

Amphitheatre of El Jem Wikipedia