Tamentfoust
Tamentfoust, the classical Rusguniae and colonial, is a site in the Dar El Beïda District of Algiers in Algeria.
Geography
Tamentfoust lies on Cape Matifou, which forms the northeast side of the Bay of Algiers.Names
The Roman name Rusguniae is a latinization of the Punic name, meaning "Francolin Cape" and referring to nearby Cape Matifou. Ptolemy hellenized the name as Rhoustónion, and it appears in late sources as Rusgume, Rugunie, and Rusgimia.The French name La Pérouse honored the naval officer and explorer Jean-François de Galaup, who owned an estate of that name.
Tamentfoust is a Berber name for "right side", from the cape's position relative to Algiers. The present name of the cape, Matifou, is a 14th-century Spanish approximation of the Berber name.
History
Rusguniae was established as a colony along the trade route between the Strait of Gibraltar and Phoenicia. It consisted of a small fortress on Cape Matifou. It eventually fell under Carthaginian control, probably during the 6th centuryBC.After the Punic Wars, the area fell under Roman hegemony and Augustus established a colony there for the 9th Legion at some point during his reign.
In late antiquity, it was part of the Vandal Kingdom prior to the Byzantine reconquest of Africa. It was overrun by the Umayyad Caliphate in the 7th century.
Bordj Tamentfoust or Tamentfoust Castle was built by Ramdhan Agha in 1661. It was the site of the official declaration of a jihad against France on 23 July 1830, in response to the French invasion of the country.
Religion
Rusguniae was a Christian bishopric. It was notionally restored as a Catholic titular see in the 20th century:List of bishops
- José Gabriel Anaya y Diez de Bonilla
- Paul Zinghtung Grawng
- Rigoberto Corredor Bermúdez
- Anthony Ireri Mukobo, IMC