Tunisia holidays: Why tourists should look beyond the beach and discover its ancient Roman heritage

After terrorist attacks scared away the sun lounger crowd, visitors to Tunisia are now rediscovering its rich Roman history

Nick Redmayne
Tuesday 23 January 2018 10:29 GMT
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Tunisia has many ancient Roman sites, such as the Amphitheatre of El Jem
Tunisia has many ancient Roman sites, such as the Amphitheatre of El Jem (Nick Redmayne)

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“Carthago delenda est” – or, “Carthage must be destroyed” – was a favourite phrase of Roman orator Cato the Elder. It took until 146BC and an emphatic victory in the Third Punic War for his punchline to be delivered. Rome’s vengeful legions levelled the city and sold its population into slavery.

Today, Tunisia is again reeling in the wake of violence, namely 2015’s two terrorist outrages, in the Bardo Museum and on the beach at Sousse. In a country where tourism was focused almost exclusively in coastal resorts, the attack was well targeted, and has decimated the tourist industry. Cheap, all-inclusive beach holidays aren’t a unique selling point; holidaymakers have fled elsewhere. Recent revisions in Foreign Office advice have changed things – TUI has, this month, put Tunisia back on its books for 2018 – but whether sun-and-sand tourists will return in their former numbers remains to be seen.

In a way, though, the holiday world’s abandonment of Tunisia’s beaches has allowed the spotlight to fall on the ancient heritage of a country too long hidden behind sun loungers and all-you-can-eat buffets. “Tourism has never looked beyond the coast,” says my guide, Chaouki Latrache. “Tour operators make calculations and they take the easy choices.”

We’re in Carthage, Tunisia’s best-known and most-visited Roman site. Perched on the Mediterranean coastline, a visit is worth it for the spellbinding views alone, but in truth, the development of the modern city, combined with centuries of neglect, hasn’t left Dido’s ancient citadel in its best possible state.

Instead, Chaouki wants to show me some of the country’s lesser known ruins, all within a couple of hours of Tunis, meaning you can comfortably manage them in day trips from the capital. We start with Dougga, a Unesco-designated site in the north-west of the country, and find we have the place almost to ourselves. Chaouki reckons it’s seven years since he last brought an English tourist here.

“Dougga is an atypical Romanised town,” says Chaouki. “There’s no grid pattern. They built on a hilltop and had to work with the land.” Climbing through thistles and scrub, past a couple of dogs, we reach a lookout point – and my jaw drops.

Below us is a Tunisian Pompeii: full streets, ruined houses, still-standing temples. Unesco calls Dougga “the best preserved Roman small town in North Africa”. Chaouki eagerly points out characteristic “opus africanum” methods of construction, and translates Latin text carved on tumbled tribute stones. We scurry over hypocausts and into tepidaria (warm rooms in Roman baths). Walking towards the dominating structure of the town’s capitol – complete with gracious colonnaded portico – I stand on a pavement which, 2,000 years ago, had the directions of prevailing winds carved into it. The same breezes still blow today.

Bulla Regia has Roman mosaics
Bulla Regia has Roman mosaics (Nick Redmayne)

The following day we’re on the road again to Bulla Regia, a Roman site 160km west of Tunis, near the Algerian border. This site lies just out of the “green” zone as designated by the FCO, however – it’s just in the orange, or “avoid all but essential travel” area. To me, it felt no different than the other, “safe to travel” parts of Tunisia; but bear in mind that travel insurance is not valid if you stray into the orange zone.

We arrive to a café, an interpretative display and even a gift shop. But they’re all closed. Again, we have the site to ourselves: a grid of streets, with opulent villas, temples, baths, an amphitheatre and even a brothel still intact.

Nearby, we spy a group of archaeologists – Tunisian students. Co-director of the project, Corisande Fenwick from University College London, is overseeing the painstaking excavation of a human skeleton. This is, she says, a major discovery: a church and a cemetery with hundreds of graves dating from the 4th to the 7th century. “It shows that Christianity existed after the Arab conquest,” she says. She lets us wander round the site, dodging taped-off areas. We are, perhaps, the first visitors in 1,400 years.

Dougga is the best preserved Roman small town in North Africa
Dougga is the best preserved Roman small town in North Africa

Back in Tunis, we make for the Bardo Museum, and the world’s largest display of Roman mosaics. Security is tight and Chaouki isn’t his usual ebullient self. We walk past breathtaking mosaics – complex works of epic proportions, each seeming to outdo the last. The only known depiction of Virgil, showing him at work writing The Aeneid, sits not far from a portrait of Ulysses.

“I was here,” says Chaouki, and it takes me a while to grasp what he’s saying. He was here on 18 March, 2015’s first attack, when three militants stormed the building and killed 22 people. Here in the museum, he tells me about hearing the initial shots, his disbelief. He remembers opening a fire exit to lead tourists to safety. “I remember a lot of steps between life and death,” he says. And then he adds: “This is the first time I visit after that day. Before, I had no reason to come back, and no wish to. But now, I am glad to be here.”

It may be some time before Tunisian beaches throng with tourists once again, but in the meantime, its Roman heritage is begging for a long overdue fresh look.

Travel essentials

Getting there

Tunisair (tunisair.com) flies daily from Heathrow to Tunis from £138 return.

Staying there

In Tunis, Dar El Medina (darelmedina.com) has doubles from €63, B&B.

More information

Guides cost 120-150 dinar (£40-50) per day; Chaouki can be contacted on latrache.chaouki@gmail.com

cometotunisia.co.uk

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