- History of ancient Libya
Prehistory
Since Neolithic times the climate of North Africa has been drying. A reminder of the
desertification of the area is provided by megalithic remains, which occur in great variety of form and in vast numbers in presently arid and uninhabitable wastelands: dolmens and circles likeStonehenge , cairns, underground cells excavated in rock, barrows topped with huge slabs, and step-pyramidlike mounds. Most remarkable are thetrilithon s, some still standing, some thrown down, which occur isolated or in rows, and consist of two squared uprights standing on a common pedestal that support a huge transverse beam. In the Terrgurt valley "there had been originally no less than eighteen or twenty megalithic trilithons, in a line, each with its massive altar placed before it" according to Cowper.Ancient times
In ancient times, the
Phoenicia ns and Carthaginians, the armies ofAlexander the Great and his Ptolemaic successors from Egypt, then Romans,Vandal s, and local representatives of theByzantine Empire ruled all or parts of Libya. The territory of modern Libya had separate histories until Roman times, as Tripoli and Cyrenaica.Cyrenaica , by contrast, was Greek before it was Roman. It was also known as Pentapolis, the "five cities" being Cyrene (near the village of Shahat) with its port of Apollonia (Marsa Susa), Arsinoe (Tocra), Berenice (Bengazi) and Barca (Merj). From the oldest and most famous of theGreek colonies the fertile coastal plain took the name of Cyrenaica.These five cities were also known as the Western Pentapolis ;not to be confused with the
Pentapolis of the Roman era on the current west Italian coast.See also
*
Ancient Libya
*Pentapolis (North Africa)
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