Calama (Numidia)
Calama was a colonia in the Roman province of Numidia situated where Guelma in Algeria now stands.
G. Mokhtar places it just within the Roman province of Africa Proconsularis, to the east of Numidia, but it is generally believed to have been in Numidia, a province created probably in 198–199.
History
Calama was founded by the Phoenicians and called Malaka, similar to their colony Malake at Málaga, Spain. Malaka was situated in the Berber kingdom of Numidia. When this area later came under Roman rule, the city was renamed Calama. Between the late republic and early empire, it was governed by a Punic-inspired twin magistracy of sufetes.Whether Calama is identical with the town of Suthul which the Roman general Aulus Postumius Albinus unsuccessfully tried to take in 110 BC, is disputed, with some denying and others cautiously affirming.
In the 1st century AD, Calama, then part of the Roman province of Numidia, became a major urban centre. It was given the rank of a Roman municipium as early as Hadrian, and of a colonia later. The city was sponsored by Vibia Aurelia Sabina, sister of the Emperor Commodus. Calama was, with Setifis and Hippo Regius, one of the granaries of Rome in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD. Under Septimius Severus, Calama became one of the most prosperous in the Roman empire, with thermae and a huge theatre.
Calama became a Christian bishopric, four of whose bishops are named in extant documents:
- Donatus was accused in a council held in 305 of having handed over the sacred scriptures during the Decian persecution
- Megalius gave episcopal ordination to Saint Augustine in 395 and died in 397
- Saint Possidius, elected in the year of Megalius's death, took an active part in the joint Conference of Carthage (411) with Donatist bishops
- Quodvultdeus was one of the Catholic bishops whom Huneric summoned to Carthage in 484 and then exiled.
No longer a residential bishopric, Calama is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see.
The invading Vandals captured and partially destroyed Calama and defeated Count Bonifacius near the city in 431.
After the conquest of Numidia by the Byzantine Empire, Solomon built a fortress there between 539 and 554. Calama's population was fully Christian in the 6th and 7th century.
With the spread of Islam, Byzantine rule of Calama ended and slowly Calama disappeared around the 11th century.