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Experience Tunisia’s rich culture with Street View Imagery
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Experience Tunisia’s rich culture with Street View Imagery

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The Cisterns of La Malga provided the  water supply for Carthage—especially the Baths of Antonius—during the Roman Empire.
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Located in Carthage and overlooking the Mediterranean, the Baths of Antoninus are the largest set of Roman Thermae built on the African continent dating back to the Roman Empire era.
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Built in the mid-second century, the Theatre of Carthage could contain 10,000 spectators. Now it is where Carthage’s major international and musical festivals are held.
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The Basilica of Damus al-Karita, within the archaeological site of Carthage, was a cemetery church dating back to the Byzantine times.
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The Ribat of Sousse is a soaring structure that was used as a minaret and a watch tower. It is one of the best conserved fortresses built along the North African coastline as a defence against assailants.
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According to a Kufic inscription in the Great Mosque’s courtyard, the stunning structure was built in AD 851 during the time of Aghlabid dynasty.
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The Archaeological Museum of Sousse was established in 1951 and contains the second largest collection of mosaics in the world after that of the Bardo National Museum in Tunis.
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Originally, The National Bardo Museum was a 15th Century Hafsid Palace. Now, it is the second largest Museum in Africa tracing the history of Tunisia over several millennia.
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Enjoy the three sections of the archaeological museum of Sbeitla: the Capsian culture, the Dionysus empire, and the Mosaic Exhibition.
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Utique Museum was built in 1990 and is located in the Utique archaeological site.
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Explore the magnitude of Carthage during the Punic and Roman eras in the National Museum of Carthage.

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