This image by David Gunn is in the public domain. You are free to reuse it.
This ancient theater is in…
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• Albania
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• California
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• Corsica
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• Libya
Standing on the Mediterranean shore are the excavated and
partially restored ruins of Leptis Magna, an ancient city
in Libya that, like the more famous Carthage, was settled by
Phoenicians. Leptis Magna was a city of merchants rather than
warriors, so it was always a vassal to the reigning empire in
North Africa. First it came into the Carthaginian sphere of
influence, then it was incorporated into the Roman Empire, and
in its waning days it was ruled by the Vandals and finally the
Byzantines. At its peak it had a population of perhaps 100,000
and a thriving market in olive oil, thanks to a countryside made
fertile by Roman irrigation. After the retreat of the Byzantines,
Leptis Magna could no longer trade with Europe. It became a
ghost town and was overtaken by the desert sands.
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