Talk:Sousse

Latest comment: 14 days ago by 178.216.218.9 in topic Is this Juny Tony?

Names edit

  • I have the surname "deSousa," Portuguese lineage, and wonder if Susa (Iran) or Susse (Tunisia) is the referent of this name. Pdesousa 16:01, 15 June 2007 (UTC)pdesousaReply

Population edit

How many inhabitants are there? 3 completely different figures are quoted in the article — Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.13.31.29 (talk) 21:03, 10 May 2012 (UTC)Reply

I think "more than 540,000" applies to the whole Sousse Governorate, not the city itself, so I replaced it with "about 200,000". The city's official homepage [1] says the population is 185 263 but does not mention the date or sources. It would be nice to see references to the sources in the article.90.190.113.12 (talk) 08:46, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

Create a new article on the history of Sousse edit

To make a long story short, please see my comment at Talk:Hadrumetum and respond there if anyone has comments. --AlexanderVanLoon (talk) 09:47, 23 August 2013 (UTC)Reply

  Done. — LlywelynII 15:21, 8 December 2018 (UTC)Reply

"Archaeology" edit

This section

The official Tunisian body for matters of heritage and archaeology is the [[National Heritage Institute (Tunisia)|National Heritage Institute]] (INP).<ref>[http://www.inp.rnrt.tn/ Institut National du Patrimoine Tunisie/National Heritage Institute (INP)].</ref> That body maintains a project known as the ''Carte Nationale des Sites Archéologiques et des Monuments Historiques''.<ref>[http://www.inp.rnrt.tn/Carte_archeo/html/index_fr.htm Carte Nationale des Sites Archéologiques et des Monuments Historiques] from [http://www.inp.rnrt.tn/ Institut National du Patrimoine Tunisie / National Heritage Institute (INP) | Archeological Map].</ref>

seems to have nothing whatsoever to do with Hadrumetum or Sousse. Any idea how it could be used with more focus on the topic here? — LlywelynII 15:21, 8 December 2018 (UTC)Reply

Roman circus edit

This section

A PDF file<ref name=Sousse-INP-Sousse_Archaeological_Bulletin> [http://www.inp.rnrt.tn/periodiques/bultin_archeo_sousse.pdf Sousse Archaeological Bulletin] "SOCIÉTÉ ARCHÉOLOGIQUE DE SOUSSE, Assemblée générale du 29 Février 1903, Extraits des procès-verbaux des réunions." etc., from [http://www.inp.rnrt.tn/ ''Institut National du Patrimoine Tunisie'' / National Heritage Institute (INP) | Digital Library | Sousse Archaeological Bulletin] (near bottom of page). </ref> (in French), available from the site of the ''Institut National du Patrimoine Tunisie'' / National Heritage Institute (INP), containing over 400 pages from various reports and papers produced by the ''SOCIÉTÉ ARCHÉOLOGIQUE DE SOUSSE'' around 1903, contains some 10 references to the word ''cirque'' in the context of Sousse. This document makes absolutely clear that in 1903 the Roman circus of Sousse was considered the only public monument of Sousse whose location was known<ref name=Sousse-INP-Sousse_Archaeological_Bulletin/> (PDF page 204).
From the discussion in this file, and from an aerial photograph<ref name=Sousse-DocArtis-air-photo> [http://www.docartis.com/Tunisia_Fonti_documentarie/Immagine/foto_aeree/A00219_88TU829-250n23.jpg aerial photograph of Sousse] from [http://www.docartis.com/pagina2/toponimi_tunisia.htm DocArtis | Progetti | TUNISIA: Projet de gestion du patrimoine culturel | Fonti documentarie | Foto aeree] | [http://www.docartis.com/Tunisia_Fonti_documentarie/foto_aeree.htm PHOTOS AERIENNES | Sousse ville. | A00219]. </ref> it would appear certain that the Roman circus of Sousse was located, with a north-south orientation, about {{convert|1|km|1|abbr=on}} north-west of the walls of the medina at a location<ref> [http://www.wikimapia.org/#lat=35.8297832&lon=10.6244338&z=16&l=9&m=s&v=9 Wikimapia location: Sousse Roman circus (probable location)]. </ref> which, today, is partially occupied by a sports ground.

in addition to its poor formatting and inclusion of every possible alternate and foreign name for sth we already have a separate article about 1 doesn't say anything about the circus except roughly where it's located and that it was the only ruin known 115 years ago; 2 the second bit isn't incredibly interesting given that a century of archaeology might've uncovered plenty since then and the article already mentions and cites the completeness of the Vandal and Arab destructions of the town; 3, cite or not, it's also patently false since the catacombs were discovered in the year 1903; 4, cites or not, it's also patently self-contradictory since it's claimed the ruin was "known" but then has to reconstruct the position based on aerial photographs which 5 is of course WP:OR of the sort that we can undertake in WP:BLUE cases but can't and shouldn't document as the WP:RS for the information. Surely, if the ruin was known, its location was known as well and can be used from the same source. 7 The number of times a French word appears in a government PDF is not really germane to anything about the city of Sousse. If any of those appearances say something important, then just include that. Last, the page numbers should just be included in the cites in some fashion, not added into the running text of the article itself. — LlywelynII 01:24, 9 December 2018 (UTC)Reply

Corniche sousse edit

Lettre 102.25.132.142 (talk) 20:37, 27 October 2022 (UTC)Reply

Is this Juny Tony? edit

among us 178.216.218.9 (talk) 06:21, 14 April 2024 (UTC)Reply