City of Bridges | Capital of Eastern Algeria
175m highβheld world record until 1929
19th century Ottoman masterpiece, now museum
One of Africa's largest, 15,000 capacity
Roman mosaics to Berber pottery (since 1930)
Capital of eastern Algeria and commercial centre. Named Arab Capital of Culture in 2015. The Great Mosque dates to 1136. Tiddis Roman ruins nearby offer hiking and ancient exploration. Hosts International Malouf Festival celebrating Andalusian music.
Over 2,500 years of history, originally called Cirta as capital of Numidia. Rebuilt 313 AD and named after Emperor Constantine. Known as "City of Bridges" for picturesque bridges spanning hills, valleys, and Rhumel Gorge. Captured by Vandals (432), Byzantines (534), Arabs (8th c.), Ottomans, and French (1837).
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