Events relating to north africa

Realistic portraits, done in hot wax and preserved in coffins at Fayyum, vividly depict inhabitants of Roman Egypt

The network of Roman roads stretches eventually from England to Egypt

Ptolemy writes in Alexandria an encyclopedic account of Greek scientific theory in cosmology, astronomy and geography

Plotinus, moving from Alexandria to Rome, teaches the influential philosophy later known as Neo-Platonism

Roman socks, surviving in dry Egyptian tombs, are the earliest known examples of knitting

Cyprian, bishop of Carthage, is one of many Christians martyred for refusing to sacrifice to the Roman gods

St Anthony, one of the early Christian hermits in the Egyptian desert, is tempted by terrifying hallucinations

The Jews of the Diaspora have by now spread through much of the Roman empire, where they are treated with tolerance

Pachomius organizes in Egypt the first community of Christian monks, at Dandara on the Nile

The Cushite dynasty fades away in Nubia, after lasting for 1000 years or more

A document is distributed by the bishop of Alexandria, formally establishing the contents of the New Testament

The Codex Sinaiticus, the earliest surviving manuscript of the complete New Testament, is copied out - probably in Egypt

St Augustine reveals that as a young man, studying and teaching in Carthage, he often prayed for 'chastity and continence, but not yet'

Prompted by the fall of Rome to the Visigoths, St Augustine undertakes a great work of Christian philosophy, the City of God

Gaiseric captures Carthage and makes it his base for Vandal raids across the Mediterranean

Belisarius, conquering the Vandals in north Africa, pioneers the strategic concept of the castle

The Arabs establish a garrison town at Kairouan, as a base for the conquest of northwest Africa

With the entire middle east under their control, the Arabs make Damascus the capital of the Umayyad caliphate

Carthage is captured from the Byzantines by the Arabs and is finally destroyed, though Tunis will later rise nearby

The African slave trade through the Sahara is so extensive that a new town, Zawila, is established as a trading station

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