Prehistory The prehistory of Setif begins with the first traces of human occupation, about 2.4 million years ago, and ends with the first
Carthaginian texts, in the first millennium BC. The site of
Aïn El Ahnech, in
Guelta Zerka, includes several sites without associated human fossils that have yielded very ancient
lithic remains of the
Oldowan type, first discovered in the
Olduvai Gorge by the
archaeologist Louis Leakey in the 1930s. The
Aïn Boucherit site delivered in 2018
lithic industry remains (carved stone tools), dated between 1.9 and 2.4 million years ago. On November 29, 2018,
the journal Science announced the dating of the site by four corroborating methods: negative geomagnetic polarity reported to the Matuyama chron, ESR dating, biochronology (fossil species assemblages) and sedimentation rate. Aïn Boucherit could be the third oldest African site after
Lomekwi 3 in
Kenya (3.3 Ma), and
Kada Gona in
Ethiopia (2.55 Ma). The prehistoric site of Ain El Ahnech is located a few kilometers east of the city, and the age of the lithic remains is estimated by archaeomagnetism to be about 2.4 million years old. It is an ancient lake, located in the commune of
Guelta Zerka. The site was discovered in 1947 by the French
paleoanthropologist Camille Arambourg (1885-1969), during his paleontological research of continental deposits in the Setif region. On November 29, 2018, a discovery of tools dating back 2.4 million years was published, making this site, at the time of its discovery, the cradle of Humanity before that of Tanzania. Professor
Mohamed Sahnouni confirms this discovery.
Ancient history Numidia The city, of
Numidian origin, was part of the kingdom of
Massaesyli in the year 225 BC. It was also considered as a capital before
Juba II preferred
Cherchell. It was near Sétif that
Jugurtha campaigned and lost against
Marius in 105 BC. Overcome by Marius, he was taken to
Rome where was executed in the prison of
Tullianum. No remains of this period have been found. The city was small under the Numidian kings.
Roman Era It was an integral part of the Roman province of Caesarian Mauritania which became Setifian Mauritania. When Jugurtha was delivered, Sitifis became part of the kingdom of Mauretania, successively attributed to Bocchus then Boccuris, Juba II and finally to Ptolemy of Mauretania, assassinated at Lugdunum at the instigation of Caligula. For its strategic situation, Sitifis interested Nerva who installed there from 96 AD a
colony for veterans the Colonia Nerviana Augusta Martialis Veteranorum Sitifensium. Although no buildings of this period are known, a cemetery excavated in the 1960s seems to have contained tombs from the early colony. Claudius reduced Mauritania into a Roman province, divided it in two, and attached Setif to the new Caesarian Mauritania, capital Caesarea (Cherchell). In 290, Setif became the capital of
Mauretania Sitifensis (present-day eastern Algeria), detached from
Mauretania Caesariensis. The new province was then under the diocese of Africa, itself under the prefecture of Italy.
Mauretania Sitifensis In the later division of the
Roman Empire under the Emperor
Diocletian, the eastern part of
Mauretania Caesariensis, from
Saldae to the river Ampsaga, was split into a new province, and called Mauretania Sitifensis named after the inland town of
Setifis (
Setif in modern
Algeria). At the time of
Constantine the Great, Mauretania Sitifensis was assigned to the administrative
Diocese of Africa, under the
Praetorian prefecture of Italy. The new province had a huge economic development in the 4th century, until the conquest by the
Vandals. In this province, the Christian denomination known as
Donatism challenged the
Roman Church (which was the main local religion after Constantine), while Setifis was a center of
Mithraism. After the
fall of the Western Roman Empire, certain areas of Mauretania Sitifensis were under Vandal and later
Byzantine control, but most of the province (until 578 AD) was ruled by
Berber kingdoms like the
Kingdom of Altava. Only the coastal area around Saldae and Setifis remained fully
Romanized. Byzantine emperor
Maurice in 585 AD created the province of Mauretania Prima and erased the old Mauretania Sitifensis. Indeed, the emperor Maurice in that year created the office of "Exarch", which combined the supreme civil authority of a
praetorian prefect and the military authority of a
magister militum, and enjoyed considerable autonomy from
Constantinople. Two exarchates were established, one in Italy, with seat at
Ravenna (hence known as the
Exarchate of Ravenna), and one in Africa, based at Carthage and including all imperial possessions in the Western Mediterranean. The first African exarch was the
Patricius Gennadius: he was appointed as
magister militum Africae in 578 AD, and quickly defeated the Romano-Moorish kingdom of
Garmul in
Mauretania extending the territory of the Mauretania Sitifensis. Among the provincial changes done by emperor Maurice, Mauretania Caesariensis and Mauretania Sitifensis were re-merged as a province of Mauretania Prima. Mauretania Sitifensis initially had an area of 17800 square miles and had a good agriculture (cereals, etc..), that was exported through the port of
Saldae. But under Byzantine control the province was reduced to only the coastal section, with one third of the original area. In the newly prosperous town a
bath building was built, decorated with fine mosaics: its restoration in the fifth century had a cold room (
frigidarium) paved with a large mosaic showing the birth of Venus. On the northwest edge of the town two great Christian
basilicas were built at the end of the fourth century, decorated, again, with splendid
mosaics, and a
Bishopric was founded at this time. There was a Jewish community in the area. The
Romans built a
circus at Sitifis, which aerial photographs show survived substantially intact until the 20th century; today only a small part of the curved end continues visible; the remainder has been destroyed or built over. In the 5th century it suffered from a violent earthquake. The region of Sétif was one of the granaries of ancient Rome: Caput Saltus Horreorum (today Aïn-Zada) was its seat. The city has preserved vestiges from the 2nd and 4th centuries: ramparts, a temple, a circus, a mausoleum known as "Scipio's", etc. The product of the archaeological excavations is preserved and exhibited in the city's Archaeological Museum, and various steles in the Abd el-Kader garden. It is to put in relation with the site of
Cuicul (Djemila).
Bishopric The city was the base of a
Bishopric.
Augustine, who had frequent relations with Sitifis, tells us that in his day the Bishopric had a
monastery and an episcopal school. Several Christian inscriptions have been found there, one of 452 mentioning the relics of
Saint Lawrence, another naming two
martyrs of Sitifis, Justus and Decurius. ;Known Bishops ;*Servus, mentioned in a letter of St. Augustine in 409 ;*Novatus present at the Council of Carthage (484), and exiled by Huneric ;*Optatus, at the Council of Carthage (525). ;*Alexis Lemaître, M. Afr. (24 Feb 1911 Appointed – 28 July 1920 ;*
Joanny Thévenoud, M. Afr. (8 Jul 1921 Appointed – 16 September 1949) ;*
André-Maurice Parenty (9 Mar 1950 Appointed – 23 November 1983) ;*
Armando Xavier Ochoa (23 Dec 1986 Appointed – 1 April 1996) ;*
Manuel Felipe Díaz Sánchez (27 Feb 1997 Appointed – 4 April 2000) ;*
John Choi Young-su (22 Dec 2000 Appointed – 3 February 2006) ;*
Broderick Soncuaco Pabillo (24 May 2006 Appointed – )
Vandal Era map (4th century) showing Sitifi Colonia (Sétif)Preluding the fall of the
Western Roman Empire in 476, the
Germanic people of the
Vandals, led by their king
Genseric (427- 477), crossed from
Spain to Africa in 429 at the request of the Roman governor
Bonifatius, who was in revolt against the Emperor
Valentinian III. The route of the Vandals in Africa, from
Tingi (Tangier) to
Carthage, passed through
Setifis, which was probably reached in 430. Bonifatius defeated, Genseric established the seat of his kingdom in Carthage in 439, forcing the emperor to recognize him as master of Roman Africa. Under the Vandals it was the chief town of a district called Zaba.
Byzantine Era In 531, the king of the
Vandals,
Hilderic, was overthrown by the usurper
Gelimer, giving the Roman emperor of the East
Justinian, anxious to restore the
Roman Empire, a pretext for intervention. After his departure from
Byzantium (
Constantinople /
Istanbul), General
Belisarius took advantage of uprisings in
Tripolitania and the
Moors, which enabled him to take
Carthage (533) and then Gelimer himself (534). The Byzantines found in
Sitifis, a small population, because of the vandal predations. In 539, Sitifis again became the capital of a Byzantine "Roman" province:
Mauritania Sitifensis. At that time,
Solomon built the Byzantine fortress walls, whose west and south walls are still visible.
Islamic Era In 647 AD (the year 27 of the Hijrah), the first
Muslim expedition to Africa took place. By 700 AD, the area had been conquered and converted to the
Islamic faith. We know little of the early Islamic town, but by the tenth century the area outside of the fortress was once more filled with houses: on the site of the Roman baths over twelve of these were excavated, with large courtyards surrounded by long, thin, rooms. Setif according to the geographer and historian
Al-Bakri: "The city of Sétif is two days from El-Mecila (...) one arrives at Sétif, a large and important city, whose origin dates back to ancient times.' The wall that surrounded it was destroyed by the Ketama, followers of Abu Abd'Allah ash-Shi'i, because the Arabs had taken it away from them and had forced them to pay a tithe every time they wanted to enter it. It is now without walls, but it is nevertheless well populated and very flourishing. The bazaars are in great number, and all the commodities are in great number, Sétif is ten days from Kairouan, ten days from Gazrouna and one day from Tanaguelalt located in the neighborhood of Mila. ". The city was successively administered by the Muslim dynasties that ruled North Africa: Umayyads, Abbasids, Aghlabids, Fatimids, Zirids, Almohads, Hafsids, Ottomans. According to the historian Al-Yaqubi in the Kitab al-Buldan, taken up by A.Duri, a fraction of the Arabs Banu Assad ibn Khuzaima called Banu Usluja originating from Iraq settled in Setif at the time of the
Aghlabids with non-Arabs (Persian abna) from Khorasan. In 903, following the death of the
Aghlabid emir
Ibrahim II of Ifriqiya, Sétif briefly served as the headquarters of his son
Muhammad. Muhammad intended to lead a military campaign against the
Isma'ili leader
Abu Abdallah al-Shi'i, who had gained a following among the
Kutama Berbers, but he aborted it before any battles were fought because his brother
Abdallah had been murdered. Intending to seize the throne, Muhammad left Sétif for the capital of
Tunis, but he was arrested in
Baghaya and then executed by the new emir,
Ziyadat Allah III, alongside all of Ziyadat Allah's brothers and uncles, in August 903. This internal power struggle enabled Abu Abdallah al-Shi'i to go on the offensive and capture Sétif from the Aghlabids. He had already tried to besiege the strongly fortified city twice, but to no avail. However, in probably October or November of 904, after the city's Arab ruler died, a Berber from the
Lahisa tribe surrendered the city to Abu Abdallah, who then demolished part of the fortifications to prevent them from being used against him and his Kutama allies. Then, possibly encouraged by Abu Abdallah's military success, the Isma'ili imam
Abdallah al-Mahdi Billah (who would later found the
Fatimid Caliphate) left Egypt to go to the Maghreb. The invasion of
Ifriqiya by the
Banu Hilal, a warlike
Arab tribes encouraged by the Fatimids of
Egypt to seize North Africa. It was in Sétif that the
battle of Sétif took place between the Hilalian Arabs and the
Almohad Berbers, which resulted in the victory of the Almohads. Remains of this Arab-Muslim period were unearthed in the early 1980s. According to Khelifa Abderrahmane, the results of these excavations are very interesting: "The city was not totally abandoned and the remains of the baths served as occasional shelter for men and livestock. The development of the Muslim city would have taken place first to the north of the Byzantine fortress." This excavation demonstrated that the first Islamic houses were built with reused ashlars reinforced on their inner side with pebbles bound with adobe. Carbon 14 dating refers to a period between 655 and 970. The excavation brought to light nine buildings that were dated between the year 810 (during the Aghlabid period) and 974 (during the Fatimid caliphate). A coin of the Fatimid caliph
Al Mu'izz with a figurative ceramic shard was found in the third floor. According to Khelifa Abderahmane, the important thing is that the excavation was able to identify a typology of the tenth and eleventh century habitat for this region, with pieces that are longer than they are wide.19 The Arab tribe of Bani Hil'izz was the first to be found in the area.
Ottoman Empire During the
Ottoman era, the city of Sétif saw great interest from the Ottomans and experienced noticeable development. An Islamic neighborhood was found in the Sétif recreation park. The city also witnessed several major battles between the Beys of Tunis and Constantine during the rule of the
Ottoman Empire. We find that there are several Ottoman monuments in the city of Sétif, including some landmarks in the region and the Al-Atiq mosque located in the heart of the city and the Abu Zer Al-Ghafari mosque located in the city. Both of these mosques date back to the Ottoman era and, especially their minarets, still testify to the brilliance of Islamic art to this day. In the mid-eleventh century this development stopped abruptly, and a defensive wall was built around the city. Nothing more is known of Sétif until the ruins of the town were used by the French army, who built their own fortress on the site in 1848, using the line of the medieval city wall and the
Byzantine fortress.
French era In 1838, the city was taken by a column of the French colonial army as part of the operations to take Constantine. The occupation was initially military, but civilians (workers) soon flocked to the city. A first urban plan of the city was set up by decree in 1843 and saw the formation of a European city in 1846. The following year, on February 11, 1847, a European city was created by royal decree with an endowment of 2,509 hectares of land. From 1850, the city became a center of colonial settlement attracted by the agricultural potential of the region. The colonization developed notably under the Second Empire, and accentuated the urban structuring of the current city center. The construction of the station of Sétif, on the Algiers-Constantine line, would have been decided by the town council in 1877. In 1926, the city saw the launch of a social housing program for the Algerians of Sétif.
Massacre in Sétif (1945) On 8 May 1945, the day of the formal end of
World War II in Europe, Sétif was the starting point for a series of nationalist riots that were bloodily suppressed by the French colonial authorities. The demonstrations and the explosion of violence that accompanied them originated in a nationalist insurrection project whose aim was to create a "liberated zone" with a provisional government led by
Messali Hadj. But these plans had to be abandoned after Messali's failed escape attempt from his house arrest and his transfer to
Brazzaville. The Sétif riot, often presented as the consequence of popular anger caused by the death of the flag-bearer , was in fact "a real armed insurrection that left 23 dead and 80 wounded Europeans and estimates of Algerian casualties vary widely from 2,000 to 40,000. The news of the riot quickly spread throughout the region. The demonstration of independence fighters in Sétif turned into a violent insurrection. The revolt spread to neighboring towns. The repression that followed was disproportionate and extremely brutal, killing thousands of demonstrators. This repression was carried out by the army and civilian militias. 3,700 men were deployed in the subdivision of Sétif (equivalent to two French departments). It was Governor Chataigneau who declared a state of siege. He gave full powers to General Henri Martin, head of the army in North Africa, to "restore emergency order. France announced 103 dead Europeans and 110 wounded (84 killed, including 13 women on the first day of the riot in Setif and its surroundings); between 600 and 1,500 Algerians were killed or wounded. 400 killed and 250 wounded by the army, 200 killed by the air force, and about ten killed by the navy, but there were also 2,000 to 3,000 Muslim deaths as a result of the reaction of civilians who, from the start of the riots, organized themselves into self-defense militias. Officially, the Algerian government counted 45,000 victims, a figure put forward in the summer of 1945 by the
Algerian People's Party (PPA). In 2015, French historians François Cochet,
Maurice Faivre, Guy Pervillé and Roger Vétillard, reviewing recent research by a dozen French historians, estimated the number of Algerian victims at between 3,000 and 8,000 dead.
The Algerian War (1954–1962) The events in Sétif during the Algerian War were marked by political and social unrest, as well as acts of violence and resistance against the French colonial government. The conflict that started in 1945 continued for several years, with acts of sabotage, guerrilla warfare and armed attacks being carried out by both sides. During the outbreak of the revolution, the city was marked by the following events: • Commando operation against policeman Benton in 1956, • Elimination of Brigadier Ferrand in 1957, • Elimination of Dr. Kanaba, a member of the organization "the hand," in 1958, • Clash at the train station in the Tlidjan district in 1960, • Release of death row prisoners in 1961, • Battle of the city market in 1962. The city of Sétif offered many martyrs including: Bouchareb Roumila / Harchi Masaouda / Zarrougui Kheira / Sebti Naima / Narwal Zouina / ... / Mohammed Kerouani / Sheikh El Aifa ... The events in Sétif during the war reflect the broader struggle for independence and self-determination that was taking place in Setif as well as across the country. Eventually, the war ended with Algeria gaining independence from France in 1962. The events in Sétif during the Algerian War remain a sensitive and controversial issue in the country's modern history. == Geography ==