Volubilis is a partly excavated Berber and Roman city in Morocco
situated near the city of Meknes, and commonly considered as the ancient
capital of the kingdom of Mauretania. Built in a fertile agricultural
area, it developed from the 3rd century BC onward as a Berber, then
proto-Carthaginian, settlement before being the capital of the kingdom
of Mauretania. It grew rapidly under Roman rule from the
1st century AD onward and expanded to cover about 42 hectares with a 2.6
km circuit of walls. The city gained a number of major public buildings
in the 2nd century, including a basilica, temple and triumphal arch.
Its prosperity, which was derived principally from olive growing,
prompted the construction of many fine town-houses with large mosaic
floors.
The city fell to local tribes around 285 and was never retaken by Rome
because of its remoteness and indefensibility on the south-western
border of the Roman Empire. It continued to be inhabited for at least
another 700 years, first as a Latinised Christian community, then as an
early Islamic settlement. In the late 8th century it became the seat of
Idris ibn Abdallah, the founder of the Idrisid dynasty and the state of
Morocco.
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