Pupput

Pupput, also spelled "Putput", "Pudput", "Pulpud" and "Pulpite" in Latin, sometimes located in Souk el-Obiod ou Souk el-Abiod (Arabic: أبيض or "white market"), is a Colonia in the Roman province of Africa which has been equated with an archaeological site in modern Tunisia. It is situated on the coast near the town of Hammamet, between the two wadis of Temad (or el-Thimad) to the north and Moussa to the south.[1] Much of the Pupput is buried under modern holiday developments which have been built over the major part of the site.[2]

Pupput
Archaeological remains of Pupput
Shown within Tunisia
LocationTunisia
RegionNabeul Governorate
Coordinates36°23′34″N 10°33′42″E

History

Classical antiquity

This agricultural region, densely occupied in classical antiquity, has probably been inhabited since the 5th century BC by the Berbers and Carthaginians. There is a sanctuary and inscription at the ancient Punic city of Thinissut, located at modern Bir Bouregba,[3] but no Punic remains have been identified on the site of Pupput itself.[4]

A settlement existed here as early as the 1st century BC, and this may have been of BerberPunic origin. It was a simple vicus in Carthaginian territory at the time of the Roman Emperor Antoninus Pius (2nd century AD).[5] The Roman politician Salvius Julianus is thought to have been born in the village and it may be due to him that Pupput became an honorary Colonia under the Emperor Commodus (185-192).[6] At this time the city was probably a satellite town of its neighbour Neapolis. The earliest documentary record of the city was in 168 when it was promoted to the status of a municipium governed by an elected council. It appears to have gained in importance during the 2nd and 3rd centuries, when it expanded considerably and a significant number of public monuments were built.[2] According to an inscription preserved in the Bardo National Museum in Tunis which was dedicated to the 4th century Emperor Licinius,[7] the Roman name of the city was "Colonia Aurelia Commoda Pia Felix Augusta Pupput".[8]

Extract from the Atlas archéologique de la Tunisie (1892), sites 11-12 and 14.

Late antiquity

The ancient city of Pupput would have become vicus again in late antiquity. An episcopal seat of Puppi, corresponding to the modern Souk-El-Abiodh south of Hammamet, is indicated in the lists of bishops of 411 (Donatist and Catholic), 484, 525 and 646.[9] Puppi was the seat of an ancient Christian episcopal see of the Roman province of Africa Proconsolaris, a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Carthage. There are records of six bishops of the Diocese of Puppi. Two of the bishops, the Catholic Pannonio and the Donatist Vittoriano, attended the Council of Carthage in 411 when Catholics and Donatists gathered together called to resolve the Donatist schism in Roman Africa. A third bishop, Aurelio, was an attendee of the Council of Chalcedon in 451. Bishop Pastinato attended the Vandal Synod of Carthage in 484 called by King Huneric in 484 in an attempt to persuade the Catholic bishops to convert to Arianism. After the synod Pastinato was exiled. Bishop Fortunato attended the Carthaginian Council of 525 and Bishop Guloso attended an anti-monothelite council in 646.[10]

Although Puppi belonged to the ecclesiastical province of Africa Proconsolaris,[11] Pupput was listed as part of the civil Roman province of Byzacena.[12] To explain this discrepancy, some authors, such as Noël Duval, have suggested that boundary changes resulted in a "conurbation" of the city with Siagu (now Ksar Ezzit[4][13] in the east of the town of Bir Bouregba), which was located in Africa Proconsularis, a few kilometers to the north.[9]

Puppi survives today as titular bishop, and the current bishop is Timothy Yu Gyoung-chon, of Seoul.[14]

Middle Ages

In the Middle Ages, following the Vandal period, Pupput became a part of the Byzantine Empire, and a citadel was built to defend it. After the Arab conquest at the end of the seventh century, the whole of Tunisia passed under Arab domination[15] and the city was renamed Qasr Zaid. The urban center then moved further north-east, to where the city of Hammamet was founded, near the baths (as the name suggests[16]), on the site of the medina. The ancient buildings of Souk el-Obiod seem to have been abandoned following this final relocation. Pirates from the Spanish Kingdom of Aragón captured and destroyed the city in 1303, leaving it in ruins. The Pupput area was subsequently settled by charcoal burners from Hammamet.[2]

Remains

Historical sources mention the existence of a Capitol, a theatre and amphitheatre, of which no traces exist today.[2] It was not until the late 19th century that the site was rediscovered[17] by accident when an area was being levelled for construction.[2] Some of Pupput's remains were partially unearthed in the early 20th century by battalions of the French army, but in the late 1960s the site was endangered by the development of hotel complexes along the Tunisian coast.[17] Rescue archaeology revealed part of a Roman necropolis, which at 300 meters is the largest in Roman Africa. Additionally a large residential quarter was found including houses, thermae (baths) which gave nearby Hammamet its name (from the Arabic word hammam, meaning "bath"), and a water supply network including aqueduct parts and cisterns. Grave goods and decorative architectural elements were also found, including mosaic flooring that indicates high-status buildings.[2] The residential quarter and baths were preserved as an archaeological park, but the remains of the central complex of monuments and the public buildings were buried beneath hotel foundations.[17]

The ancient town and bishopric of Puppi has been tentatively identified with this site at Souk el-Abiod.[18]

References

  1. See the details of the site A00016 on the "Staff Map [of Tunisia] (scale 1:50 000), sheet 37 (early 20th century?).
  2. "The archaeological site of Pupput". Patrimonie de Tunisie. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  3. 36°26′19″N 10°35′35″E
  4. Samir Aounallah, Le Cap Bon, jardin de Carthage, Bordeaux, Ausonius, 2001, pp. 231-239 et sq. (Ausonius. Scripta Antiqua, 4) ISBN 2-910023-26-5
  5. Itinéraire d'Antonin, 58, 3 (read on line)
  6. CIL VIII, 24092
  7. CIL VIII, 24093
  8. Aïcha Ben Abed Ben Khader, « Les maisons de Pupput (Tunisie) », CRAI, vol. 150, number 1, 2006, p. 509
  9. « Pupput », Carte des routes et des cités de l'est de l'Africa à la fin de l'Antiquité : nouvelle édition de la carte des voies romaines de l'Afrique du Nord conçue en 1949, d'après les tracés de Pierre Salama, Turnhout, Brepols, 2010, pp. 196-197
  10. Stefano Antonio Morcelli (1816). Africa Christiana: in tres partes tributa (in Latin). 1. Betton. p. 258.
  11. André Chastagnol, « Les gouverneurs de Byzacène et de Tripolitaine », Antiquités africaines, 1, Aix-en-Provence, CNRS, 1967, p. 120 (read on line)
  12. Martianus Capella, VI, 670 et ILAfr 314
  13. 36°25′54″N 10°35′09″E
  14. "Puppi (Titular See) Puppitanus". Catholic Hierarchy. Retrieved 23 January 2017.
  15. Mohamed Benabbès, L'Afrique byzantine face à la conquête arabe : recherche sur le VII siècle en Afrique du Nord [doctoral thesis : History : Paris 10 : 2004], under the direction of Claude Lepelley, 2004 OCLC 492040374
  16. Hammamet, in Arabic: حمامات, is the plural of the word hammam (Turkish bath).
  17. Äicha Ben Abed Ben Khader (2006). Tunisian Mosaics: Treasures from Roman Africa. Getty Publications. p. 84. ISBN 9780892368570.
  18. Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2013, ISBN 978-88-209-9070-1), p. 956

Sources

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