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Detailed Information
  • Place Types Museum
  • Address Subaytilah, Tunisia
  • Coordinate 35.2300282,9.1300001
  • Website Unknown
  • Rating 4
  • Compound Code 64JJ+22 Subaytilah, Tunisia
Photos
المتحف الأثري بسبيطلة
المتحف الأثري بسبيطلة
المتحف الأثري بسبيطلة
Reviews
Wahbi Saied (12/16/2019)
I loved this museum .. And the walk was not difficult
Amr Elmogy (02/21/2018)
The Archaeological Museum of Sbeitla is a Tunisian archaeological museum located opposite the archaeological site of Sbeitla, in Kasserine Governorate. It is characterized by the richness of its contents despite its small size. The Museum of Sbeitla includes four halls, in which artifacts depicting various aspects of daily life from prehistoric times to Islamic history are displayed. There are also photographs that represent sites or landmarks in the region. Hall 1 This room is for historical briefs related to Sbeitla site. With maps and graphic examples, as well as prehistoric witnesses, they are depicted as one of the many "gray" or "muddles" scattered throughout the region. These piles of ash and helix husks, which are the remains of the ancient population, are among the most important sources of our information about the Cypriot civilization, derived from the name of the city of Gafsa in southern Tunisia, a civilization that lived between the eighth and seventh millennium BC. The second hall is a hall for carving on marble and alabaster, and we find large and small sculptures, and busts of alabaster, were found in Sableh, Bacchus, the Roman god of wine accompanied by a leopard whose mouth was originally used as a mouth of water spring, and Kasserine is a statue of a woman who may be Diana a goddess Hunting for the Romans, and finally a female bust found with Haidara and a small statue of Sibiba. The third hall devoted a portion of this space to display two mosaic panels that were decorating some private houses The museum was stolen and one of the most important missing items is the "Kiberia" statue, a rare statue that was stolen from the Museum of Sbeitla in 2006 along with a number of other precious artifacts, which date back more than twenty centuries.
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