Radès
Radès | |
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UTC1 (CET ) | |
Postal code | 2040 |
Radès (
Rades is divided into sub cities: Radès Medina, Radès Méliane, Rades Forêt, Chouchet Radès, El Malleha, Noubou and The Olympic City, Rades Montjil, Rades echat. Way to Zahra district and el Oulija.[clarification needed]
History
Maxula Prates was a
From the beginning of the Muslim conquest of the Maghreb, the hill of Rades was equipped with a ribat. It is around this ribat, which has long since disappeared, that the village of which it is spoken in the 11th century was built and which seems to have been provided with a port since that time. Under the Hafsides, vineyards spread over the hillsides.
During the reign of the Husseinite beys, Radès was inhabited by farmers and sought by the notables of Tunis city.[1] The locality then grew rapidly and extended to the beach and the surrounding hills during the 19th century. High dignitaries built houses such as houses in a Hispano-Arabic style decorated with gardens such as those of governor Mokhtar Ben Zid and brigadier general Allala Ben Frija, who built a house there in 1862.[2]
Between the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, members of the Djellouli family built themselves beautiful houses of Hispano-Arabic style, notably the ministers M'hammed Djellouli and Taïeb Djellouli, as well as the Governor Sadok Djellouli. French residents also built bourgeois villas in Europe. One can quote the colonial villa built in 1905 and bought by the Grand Vizier M'hamed Chenik, which gives it Hispano-Moorish and Italian styles; His brother Hassen, a notable landowner, lived in the villa Vacherot, which became his residence in the middle of the 20th century.
Name
The modern name of the town, Radès, originally called Maxula Prates,[3] derives from the Latin expression "Maxula per rates" (Maxula by the rafts), Maxula being the original Libyco-Berber name of the village near which is in the Antiquity a station of boats whose function is To connect the terminus of the coastal road with Carthage by sea. The Arabs have retained from this toponymic designation only spleens which they have transformed into Rades.
Bishopric
During the
Sports
Despite its small population, the city is internationally known for its sports facilities. Radès hosted the
The city has an internationally recognized club team:
Tramway
The Maxula-Radès tramway to the sea was tram line that ran between Maxula-Radès station and the
References
- ^ Jacques Revault, Palace and summer residences of the region of Tunis. 16–19th centuries, ed. CNRS, (Paris, 1974), p. 432
- ^ Jacques Revault, Palace and summer residences of the region of Tunis. 16–9th centuries, ed. CNRS, (Paris, 1974), p. 432
- ^ "Titular See of Maxula Prates, Tunisia 🇹🇳".
- ^ [Titular Episcopal See of Maxula Prates], at GCatholic.org.
- ^ Journal of the French courts in Tunisia, ed. French printing company Borrel, (Tunis, 1902), p. 416
- ^ Annals of the Chamber of Deputies: parliamentary documents, vol. 69, ed. Imprimerie du Journal officiel, Paris, 1906, p. 314