Cape Farina
Cape Farina is a headland in Bizerte Governorate, Tunisia. It forms the northwestern end of the Gulf of Tunis. The Tunisian towns of Ghar el-Melh, Rafraf, Lahmeri, and the beach of Plage Sidi Ali Mekki Est are located along the peninsula.
Names
The cape was known to the Phoenicians and Carthaginians as ??? ????, meaning the, a healing god in the Phoenician pantheon whom the Greeks and Romans variously interpreted as Asclepius or Apollo. From this, the cape's name was interpreted by Greco-Roman authors as Rusucmona and was known under Roman rule as the or .Its modern Arabic names are Ras et-Tarf or Ras Sidi Ali el-Mekki.
Geography
The extremity of Cape Farina forms the northwestern end of the Gulf of Tunis. The geological formation responsible for Cape Farina continues underwater before rising to form Plane Island offshore.History
Under Roman rule, the peninsula preserved an ancient and important Ancient [Roman temples|temple] to "Apollo", probably representing a continuation of the Carthaginian worship of the healing god Eshmun. The settlement at Castra Delia, the largest on the peninsula, was also sometimes known by the peninsula's latinized Punic name as "Rusucmona".Under Turkish rule, Porto Farina was a well-fortified base for piracy. This caused it to be the scene of the action of [14 April 1655|1655 English assault] wherein naval bombardment completely overwhelmed shore defenses for the first time.