Sutunura was a Roman era civitas[1][2] in the Roman province of Africa and is tentatively identified with ruins near Aïn-El-Askerm, Rdir-Es-Soltan in modern Tunisia.[3][4][5](36° 34' 29" North, 9°59'29"East)[6] 50 km from Carthage. The location being confirmed with inscription remains in situ[7][8] and is nearby to Koudiat es Somra, Jebel Barrou and Ghedir Soltane.[9]
^Leslie Dossey, Peasant and Empire in Christian North Africa (University of California Press, 2010 ) p250.
^Sutunurca at trismegistos.org.
^Barrington Atlas, 2000, pl. 32 E4.
^Alan Bowman, Andrew Wilson, The Roman Agricultural Economy: Organization, Investment, and Production (Oxford University Press Oxford, 2013) p145.
^Titular Episcopal See of Sutunurca, at Gcatholic.org.
^Ain el Asker map at maplandia.com.
^Leslie Dossey, Peasant and Empire in Christian North Africa (University of California Press, 2010) p250
Sutunura was a Roman era civitas in the Roman province of Africa and is tentatively identified with ruins near Aïn-El-Askerm, Rdir-Es-Soltan in modern...
Mactaris, aged seventy-six years, two months. Selicius Felix, buried at Sutunura in Africa Proconsularis, with a monument from his son, Selicius Saturninus...