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четверг, 16 мая 2019 г.

Roman moat discovered near Tetouan, Morocco

Archaeologists from the University of Cadiz in Spain have discovered the ruins of a Roman moat at Tamuda, an archaeology site near Tetouan in northern Morocco.











Roman moat discovered near Tetouan, Morocco
Archaeologists from the University of Cadiz in Spain have discovered an ancient Roman moat near Tetouan,
the first of its kind to be discovered in Morocco [Credit: Morocco World News]

The Spanish team has been excavating the Tamuda site for a decade. The research was primarily funded by the Spanish Ministry of Culture and private Spanish organization Palarq.


The Roman moat is an important discovery because it may be the first archaeological finding of this kind in Morocco, stated the University of Cadiz in a press release.


It is likely to be part of a Roman military fort and would have been built around a camp, as part of a well-known Roman defensive strategy.


The moat likely dates from the first century AD, during the creation of the Roman province Mauretania Tingitana. Professor Bernal from the University of Cadiz confirmed that the team would be carrying out more excavations at the site.


The excavation of the Tamuda site is a long-term project between Morocco and Spain. It was set up through a bilateral agreement between the Ministry of Culture of Morocco and the University of Cadiz.


Archaeologists and researchers participating in the project come from Spain, Morocco, Argentina, Colombia, Ecuador, and Mexico, “making this important Moroccan pre-Islamic site an active international training laboratory, ” stated Professor Darío Bernal Casasola from the University of Cadiz.


The site was first discovered in 1921 by Spanish archaeologist Cesar Luis de Montalbán.


Author: Margot Eliason | Source: Morocco World News [May 10, 2019]



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