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Jedars

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Jedars ( French spelling: Djeddars ) are thirteen Berber mausoleums located south of Tiaret city in Algeria . The name is derived from the Arabic : جدار jidār (wall), which is used locally to refer to ancient monumental ruins. The pre-Islamic tombs date from late antiquity (4th-7th? centuries CE).

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17-461: The tombs are situated on the tops of two hills in the mountainous Frenda area, around 30 km south of Tiaret. There are three sepulchres on Jabal Lakhdar ( 35°06′47″N 1°12′45″E  /  35.113098°N 1.212475°E  / 35.113098; 1.212475 ), and ten on Jabal Arawi ( 35°03′48″N 1°11′01″E  /  35.063391°N 1.183733°E  / 35.063391; 1.183733 , also known as Ternaten ) 6 km south of

34-655: A dynasty that used the mausolea not just as a resting place, but also an expression of power. It has been proposed that they were errected by Zenati -speaking migrants who, originating from the Sahara, overran the Limes Africanus and pushed into the Roman Maghreb in the early 5th century. These newcomers seem to have established one or several Romano-Berber kingdoms . Powerful Mauretanian individuals mentioned in written sources who are possibly to be attributed to these kingdoms and

51-435: A few unobtrusive Christian symbols, and a couple of roughly carved panels (apparently hunting scenes) similar to many ancient Lybico-Berber rock carvings. The largest jedar at Ternaten is the only one in that group sufficiently intact to display epigraphy and iconography. It contained large well-executed polychrome murals (now almost completely weathered away) of religious scenes typical of Mediterranean Christian iconography of

68-698: Is believed that the solid jedars that do not contain funerary chambers may cover a single tomb excavated into the bedrock. The jedars of Jabal Lakhdar seem to have displayed a dedicatory inscription on one side of the top. This inscription was in Latin, but not deeply engraved and hence in every case is now almost illegible; the inscribed blocks are also very damaged. Enough remains only to confirm that these were tombs, but not whose they were. However, these jedars display an enormous range of stonecutters' marks, from isolated letters to partial names. Most of these are also Latin, some have been postulated to be Tifinagh . There are

85-512: Is unknown (they may lie unrecognised in an Algerian museum) and Dr. Roffo, it is said, burnt most of his notes in a fit of pique after an argument with the Director of Antiquities (who had probably got wind of his methods of 'excavation'). During the years 1968-70, an Algerian studying under Gabriel Camps at the University of Aix-Marseilles, Fatima Kadria Kadra, made the first archaeological study of

102-469: The 5th century or later, indicating that the ruling class had by then become Christian. This jedar also contains many Latin inscriptions on recycled tombstones and other building material, dating from the time of Septimius Severus (202-203 CE) up to 494 CE. The source of this recycled material is not known with certainty, but there are several large ruins of cities and necropoli in the surrounding districts. The three jedars of Jabal Lakhdar are believed to be

119-499: The Berber king Massonas mentioned by the 6th-century historian Procopius is not supported today. In the early 1940s, an anthropology student, Dr. Roffo, obtained permission to excavate. In pursuance of this, he used explosives to open Jedar B, from which he obtained a skeleton which was in a wooden coffin in a tomb excavated beneath the building; the same happened with one of the smaller jedars at Ternaten. The whereabouts of these skeletons

136-552: The Ternaten group for which dating has been attempted is the largest, Jedar F. Because the latest recycled tombstone bears a date of 494, it may belong to the 6th or 7th century. Unlike the Jabal Lakhdar monuments, its funerary chambers seem to have been built to hold more than one occupant, so it has been proposed that it is dynastic, with the smaller jedars surrounding it those of lesser nobility or rank. The earliest known reference to

153-439: The construction is dry stone ; lime mortar is used sparingly. The thirteen Jedars share many characteristics. There are also many similarities with much smaller Berber tombs called bazinas , which are common in the pre- Sahara zone. This shows that they represent indigenous Berber architecture in spite of their use of Roman architectural techniques and Mediterranean Christian iconography. The characteristics are: It

170-624: The first group. The graves' size and commanding situation indicate that they were built for royalty. They have been systematically plundered for many centuries, and hence are in a state of ruin. The monuments were erected straight onto the substratum or with very shallow excavation. Some stone was quarried from local limestone and sandstone, some were recycled from nearby settlements and necropoli of earlier times. The materials vary widely: dressed stone blocks 1-1.5 m. long, partially dressed blocks up to 2.4 m. long, natural rock slabs with minimal dressing, old tombstones, and old building fragments. Most of

187-509: The jedars are Masuna (known from an inscription dated to 508 titling himself rex gentium Maurorum et Romanorum , "king of the Mauri and Romans"), Mastigas (fl. 535–539) and Garmul (fl. 569–579). Frenda Frenda is a town and commune in Tiaret Province in northwestern Algeria . It is best known for ancient Berber monumental tombs known as Jedars . This article about

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204-673: The jedars is in 947, when the Fatimid caliph Ismail al-Mansur was conducting military operations in the Tiaret area. According to a campaign diary that was copied by several later historians such as Idris Imad al-Din and Ibn Khaldun , the caliph was shown the jedars at Jabal Lakhdar and encountered an inscription "in the Roman language" (presumably in Greek , but also possibly in Latin ). Inquiring as to its meaning, he

221-470: The jedars to use systematic modern techniques. A book based on her thesis was published by Algiers University in 1983 and remains the definitive reference. The construction of the jedars is linked to the rise of a new elite that emerged during the disintegration of the Roman Empire in the 5th century. The names of the interred individuals and their association remain unknown, but they very likely belonged to

238-484: The jedars. Beginning in 1842, French military expeditions in the area noted the monuments, resulting in the first archaeological descriptions. Jedar A was opened in a very rough manner in 1875 by antiquarians who failed to publish their research. In 1882, Professor La Blanchère from Algiers University published a detailed study on the jedars (mostly based on the previous excavations) and attempted to place them in historical context. His identification of them as belonging to

255-427: The oldest. Within this group, the relative chronology is now believed known, from study of the stonemasons' marks. The largest, with funerary chambers, known as Jedar A, is the oldest; very soon after, solid Jedar B was constructed by many of the same workmen. The last jedar, C, is believed to have been incomplete when it was very hurriedly finished and its occupant interred, perhaps a generation later. Taking into account

272-530: The unobtrusive nature of the Christian symbols, it is believed the occupants of these tombs were not themselves Christian but ruled over Christian subjects. Remains of a wooden coffin from Jedar B returned a C14 date of 410 ± 50 CE. Calibrating the date on the OxCal system gives a range of 410 - 615 AD at 95.4% probability. A recent re-reading of the dedication from Jedar A has proposed a 4th-century date. The only jedar in

289-473: Was told that it read "I am the strategos Solomon . This city is called Mauretania . The inhabitants of this city have rebelled against the Emperor Justinian and his mother Theodora . Therefore he sent me against them, and I have built this building, so as to commemorate the victory which God has granted me". Although Ibn Khaldun lived in the area for a number of years, he made no other reference to

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