- 50 km
southwest of Constantine. In
ancient times, the
river was
called Ampsaga. Dussaud, René (1952). "André Berthier. — Tiddis,
antique Castellum Tidditanorum"...
-
Numidia in 46 BC. The
western kingdom between the Sava (Oued Soummam) and
Ampsaga (Oued-el-Kebir)
rivers p****ed to
Bocchus II,
while the
eastern kingdom...
- "impositum mari et
flumini Ampsagae" (overlooking the sea and the
River Ampsaga), and thus on the
border with Numidia. Its site is now
occupied by the...
- the
Mediterranean littoral between Cyrenaica on the east and the
river Ampsaga (now the Oued
Rhumel (fr)) on the west; that part of it that
faces the...
-
seems to date from the
years 100-110. They were then in the
region of the
Ampsaga river (oued el-Kebir) in
Mauretania Caesariensis. He
locates them upstream...
-
Arabio after Caesar's murder. The
kingdom of
Mauretania thus
extended to
Ampsaga. The rest of the
kingdom of M****inissa II, the
region near the sea north...
- the
eastern part of
Mauretania Caesariensis, from
Saldae to the
river Ampsaga, was
split into a new province, and
called Mauretania Sitifensis named...
- name of
Hampsicora in
contemporary Algeria and Tunisia, like the
river Ampsaga (today's
Rhummel in
Algerian Arabic),
bordering with the
Numidian M****ylii...
- Sitifensis) ran
approximately on a line west of Cape
Bougaroun on the
Ampsaga River to the east end of the
Chott el
Hodna and
further west into the steppe...
- the
eastern part of
Mauretania Caesariensis, from
Saldae to the
river Ampsaga, was
split into a new province, and
called Mauretania Sitifensis named...