Susa, Libya

Susa or Soussa /ˈssə/ (Greek: Ἀπολλωνία) (Arabic: سوسة) is a town and seaside resort in the District of Jabal al Akhdar in north-eastern Libya.[2] Susa stands by the ruins of Apollonia, Cyrenaica. The town contains the Apollonia Museum. It is located about 30 km northeast of Bayda.

Susa

سوسة
Town
Susa
Location in Libya
Coordinates: 32°53′48″N 21°57′47″E
Country Libya
DistrictJabal al Akhdar
Population
 (2012)
  Total7,999[1]
Time zoneUTC + 2

History

The Ancient City of Apollonia in Cyrenaica was founded in 630 BC by Greek colonists and became a significant commercial centre in the southern Mediterranean. It served as the harbour of Cyrene, 20 km (12 mi) to the southwest.

Apollonia became autonomous from Cyrene at latest by the time the area came within the power of Rome, when it was one of the five cities of the Libyan Pentapolis, growing in power until, in the 6th century A.D., it became the capital of the Roman province of Libya Superior or Libya Pentapolitana. The city became known as Sozusa, which explains the modern name of Marsa Susa or Susa, which grew up long after the cessation of urban life in the ancient city after the Arab invasion of AD 643.[3]

Sozusa was an episcopal see and is included in the Catholic Church's list of titular sees.[4]

Muslim Greek community

Susa is home to an exiled Muslim Greek community, also referred to as "Turco-Romnoi" ("Turkish Rum" or "Turkish Greeks") from Crete and Mainland Greece, arriving in Ottoman Libya after the Greco-Turkish War of 1897. Another wave of Muslim Greeks arrived after the Population exchange between Greece and Turkey, marking the city's second founding after its abandonment following the Arab Conquest of the Maghreb.[5][6]

See also

References

  1. https://archive.is/20121204171259/http://www.world-gazetteer.com/wg.php?x=&lng=en&des=wg&geo=-133&srt=npan&col=abcdefghinoq&msz=1500&men=gcis&lng=en
  2. Maplandia world gazetteer
  3. D. White, "Apollonia (Marsa Susa) Libya" in The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites (Princeton University Press, 1976)
  4. Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2013, ISBN 978-88-209-9070-1), p. 975
  5. Enrico De Agostini, p. 334
  6. Balta, E., & Ölmez, M. (2011). Between religion and language: Turkish-speaking Christians, Jews and Greek-speaking Muslims and Catholics in the Ottoman Empire. İstanbul: Eren.
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