Articles
El Jem Amphitheatre: Africa's Colosseum Rising from the Steppe
The amphitheatre of El Jem rises from the ground in the heart of a little village surrounded by olive orchards in central Tunisia's flat plain. Built in the 3rd century AD, it is approximately 150 meters long, 124 meters …
Dougga: The Most Complete Roman City in Africa
The ancient city of Dougga, located in the highlands of northwestern Tunisia about 110 kilometers southwest of Tunis, sits on a magnificent ridge with views across olive trees and wooded valleys that have barely …
Chott el Djerid: A Sea of Salt in the Heart of the Sahara
In the desert interior of southern Tunisia, between the oasis towns of Tozeur and Kebili, an extraordinary landscape spreads to the horizon: the Chott el Djerid. It is the largest salt lake in the entire Sahara Desert, …
The Jasmine Revolution: How Tunisia Sparked the Arab Spring
On January 14, 2011, an astonishing event occurred on Habib Bourguiba Boulevard in Tunis: President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, who had ruled Tunisia for 23 years with a tight grip on surveillance, corruption, and brutality, …
Tunisia 2025: A Historic Record and a New Chapter for North African Tourism
Tunisia's tourism sector reached a watershed moment in 2025, welcoming more than 11 million international visitors for the first time in the country's history. This far exceeds the previous record of approximately 9.4 …
Carthage: The Ruins of an Empire That Challenged Rome
On a hill overlooking the Gulf of Tunis, just north of the contemporary capital, are the scattered but spectacular remnants of Carthage, one of the ancient world's most formidable civilizations. Founded by …