Preview
Creation Year
January 1963
Image ID
D.099
Alternate Identifier
B04.099
Subcollection
D: North Africa
Abstract
The remaining two of the impressive stone arches that surrounded the palace's central courtyard from three sides. -MA
Description
The remains of the "sumptuous governor's palace, of about A.D. 500, in which lived the beautiful and talented Theodora—unjustly vilified by Gibbon (following Procopius)—who was the governor's favorite before she married Justinian. The city wall forms its south side, and some of its rooms project into a bastion" (MacKendrick, 132).
References
MacKendrick, Paul. The North African Stones Speak. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1980.
Image Notes
Creation date unknown. Photograph processed September 1963. Formerly cataloged as B.04.099. Notes written on the slide or index: Apollonia Central Church.
Curator Notes
Legacy Subcollection: "D: Appollonia"
Image Format
35 mm slide
Geographic Reference
Susah, Libya
Keywords
Palace, Arches, Stone, Masonry, Sixth Century AD, Byzantine Period
