Ancient Cotta

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cotta
LocationJbila, Tangier, Morocco
RegionMauretania Tingitana
Coordinates35°45′21″N 5°56′09″W / 35.7558°N 5.9359°W / 35.7558; -5.9359
TypeSettlement
History
BuilderRomans
FoundedAfter 40 AD
Abandonedc. 3rd century AD
Site notes
Excavation dates1965
ArchaeologistsMichel Ponsich and Miquel Tarradell
ConditionRuins

Cotta was an ancient town built by Romans in the 1st century AD, in the province of Mauretania Tingitana, intended to function primarily as a garum factory. The town was likely abandoned in the 3rd century AD. Its ancient ruins are now located on the Atlantic coast[1] of modern-day Morocco a few kilometers south of Cap Spartel, and include the garum factory, an olive press, a temple, a villa and a bath complex.[2][3]

Name[edit]

Some researchers have identified Cotta with "Gytte" from Hanno's voyage. Michel Ponsich [fr] highlighted the similarity of the name of Cotta to the ancient name of Cap Spartel, Kotes, which is related to "grapes".[4][5]

History[edit]

The factory at Cotta was established in Mauretania Tingitana after the annexation of the Kingdom of Mauretania in 40 AD. It is one of several other factories established on both sides of the Mediterranean (North Africa and Iberia), and was intended to be a self-sufficient complex, given the presence of farming land nearby.[2]

Excavation[edit]

The site was excavated by archaeologists Michel Ponsich and Miquel Tarradell in 1965. It is the most thoroughly excavated site of its kind in ancient Tingitana. Its structure is no different from other sites found for example at Lixus and Baelo Claudia.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Macdonald, Allanah (2017). Murex-Purple Dye: The Archaeology behind the Production and an Overview of Sites in the Northwest Maghreb Region (Thesis). University of Southern Denmark.
  2. ^ a b Mark Ellingham and Shaun McVeigh. The Real Guide, Morocco. p. 64.
  3. ^ a b Tonnes Bekker-Nielsen. - Ancient Fishing and Fish Processing in the Black Sea Region (Black Sea Studies)-Aarhus University Press (2004). pp. 66–68.
  4. ^ Abdelmalik Ennaciri, ed. (2013). المدن المراسي في تاريخ المغرب: أشغال الأيام الوطنية الثامنة عشر للجمعية المغربية للبحث التاريخي [Port cities in the history of Morocco: Proceedings of the 18th national days of the Moroccan Association for Historical Research, Casablanca, 27-29 October 2010] (in Arabic). Rabat: Moroccan Association for Historical Research. pp. 64–65. ISBN 9789954328002.
  5. ^ El Ouazghari, Abderrahman. El mundo indígena y roma en el Marruecos antiguo (PDF) (in Spanish). Universidad de Granada.

External links[edit]