Tiddis (also known as Castellum Tidditanorum or Tiddi) was a Roman Empire city that depended on Cirta and a bishopric as "Tiddi", which remains a Latin Catholic titular see.
It was located on the territory of the current commune of Béni Hamidane in the Constantine Province of eastern Algeria.Mounir Bouchenaki, ancient cities of Algeria, collection Art and Culture No. 12, Algiers, Ministry of Information and Culture, 1978 (114 p.) ()
This prosperous town, established on a plateau, had a monumental gate, baths, industrial facilities (tanneries), a sanctuary to Mithras dating back to the 4th century BC, and also a Christian chapel.André Berthier, the Numidia, Rome and the Maghreb, Ed.picard, 1981.André Berthier, R.S. Davis and c. Ogle, new research on the Bellum Jugurthinum, 2001.
Castles and water tanks of all forms remind us that the city has gradually been abandoned because it lacked sources. One can admire the mausoleum that Quintus Lollius Urbicus built, a native of Tiddis (and son of a romanised Berber landowner) who then became prefect of Rome.André Berthier, j. July, r. Charlier, the Bellum Jugurthinum of Sallust and the problem of Chen, R.S.A.C., 1949
The local African Romance community probably disappeared with the Arab conquest in the second half of the 7th century, but some pottery remains showed the survival of a small village -with some christian inhabitants- inside the ruins of Tiddis until the XI century.Andre Berthier. "Tiddis", Introduction
Today, Tiddis is an authentic Roman site called Res eddar or the "peak of the House" located in the Gorge of the Khreneg, just north of Cirta. It marks the presence of a Roman civilization through rock art inscriptions and Roman pottery.
Four bishops are assigned by Morcelli to this see, but Mesnage and Jaubert believe they were bishops of Tisedi, leaving only
Ecclesiastical history
Titular see
Famous locals
See also
Sources and external links
Bibliography
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