Image PMR094K-19 by Peter Michael Rhodes

Travel > PMR094K-19
PMR094K-19 
 Libya, Tripolitania: ruins of the ancient city of Sabratha, founded about 500 BC as a Phoenician trading post, later being Romanised after Carthage fell to the Romans in the Third Punic War in 146 BC. It reached its peak under the Emperor Septimius Severus in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD, but was severely damaged in an earthquake in 365 AD. After the Arab conquest it lost all importance to Leptis Magna. A UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1982. 
Here: the 24-metre-tall reconstructed Mausoleum of Bes, a rare example of Punic (pre Roman) architecture, showing the convex, triangular form, and the protecting lions. 
 Keywords: Roman architecture, archeological excavations, archeology, Maghreb, Punic architecture

© Peter Michael Rhodes
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Photographer: Peter Michael Rhodes
Collection: Travel
Filename:
PMR094K-19
Upload Date: 2012-11-17 18:43:53
Photo Size: 1.4mb 2480x3507 pixels
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Caption:

Libya, Tripolitania: ruins of the ancient city of Sabratha, founded

about 500 BC as a Phoenician trading post, later being Romanised after Carthage fell to the Romans in the Third Punic War in 146 BC. It reached its peak under the Emperor Septimius Severus in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD, but was severely damaged in an earthquake in 365 AD. After the Arab conquest it lost all importance to Leptis Magna. A UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1982.
Here: the 24-metre-tall reconstructed Mausoleum of Bes, a rare example of Punic (pre Roman) architecture, showing the convex, triangular form, and the protecting lions.
Keywords: Roman architecture, archeological excavations, archeology, Maghreb, Punic architecture