Somâa Explained

Official Name:Somâa
Native Name:الصمعة
Settlement Type:Commune and town
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Tunisia
Subdivision Name1:Nabeul Governorate
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Naoufel Ben Dhia (Ennahda)
Unit Pref:Imperial
Population As Of:2014
Population Total:7017
Population Density Km2:1 403 hab./km2
Utc Offset:+1
Postal Code:8023

Somâa is a town and commune in the Nabeul Governorate, Tunisia. As of 2004 it had a population of 6,287.[1]

Description

Somâa (Arabic: الصمعة) is a Tunisian town located in the region of Cape Bon, about ten kilometers north of Nabeul.

Attached administratively to the governorate of Nabeul, it constitutes a municipality with 7,017 inhabitants in 20142. It was created by a decree of April 2, 1966.[2]

History

The city was built on a hilly site at the foot of the last foothills of the mountain range of the Tunisian ridge. It would be on the site of an ancient mausoleum dating back to the second century BC. J. - C., as Fernand Benoit thinks in 19314. Besides, the name of the city comes from the classical Arabic çawma'a designating the top of a hill or a high place inhabited by a hermit4.

Some ruins date from Carthaginian and Roman times, as shown by a coin discovered on the spot and dated from the reign of Trajan. In late antiquity a Christian bishopric was founded in the town, then called Praesidium.

Sidi Ali al-Çum'î, mystic of the 13th century, is the patron saint of the city. According to oral tradition, he is the ancestor of the majority of inhabitants.

During the Ottoman regency, Somâa produced some products such as mats, baskets, baskets and brooms sold throughout the country.[3] Around 1860, the city has only 442 inhabitants.[4]

The road connecting Somâa and Béni Khiar was enlarged in 1925 and two Franco-Arab schools built in 1927 and 1952.

On December 16, 1942, a Neo-Destour cell was founded in Somâa; militants were arrested by the French army on January 28, 1952, and deported to Zaraoura in the south of the country.

See also

References

36.55°N 57°W

Notes and References

  1. Recensement de 2004 (Institut national de la statistique)
  2. Décret du 2 avril 1966 portant création d'une commune à Somâa, Journal officiel de la République tunisienne, n°16, 1er avril 1966, p. 576.
  3. [Lucette Valensi]
  4. Jean Ganiage, « La population de la Tunisie vers 1860. Essai d'évaluation d'après les registres fiscaux », Population, vol. 21, n°5, (1966), .