Phoenician port A settlement in Tingis began, at the earliest, in the 10th centuryBC by Phoenecians, before being settled around the beginning of the 6th century BC by
Carthaginian colonists, who variously recorded the name of their settlement as (), (), and (). The town is sometimes connected to the voyages of
Hanno the Navigator.
Mauretanian city After the
Punic Wars,
Carthage lost control of the colony to the
Roman-allied kings of
Mauretania. Its name during this time appears in Greek and Roman sources variously as
Tenga,
Tinga,
Titga, &c. It maintained strong ties to its Carthaginian heritage, issuing bronze coins with Punic legends reading "City of Titga" (, ), "City of Tinga" (, ), or "people of Tinga" (, ). These bore
Baal or (via
interpretatio Graeca)
Demeter's head
obverse and
wheat reverse.
Roman provincial capital in Morocco The town came under Roman rule in the 1st centuryBC.
Q.Sertorius, took and held Tingis for a number of years in the 70sBC as part of
his war against
Sulla's
regime in Rome. Tingis grew in importance as a free city under
Augustus and then as a
colony under
Claudius, who made it the capital of
Mauritania Tingitana. As a Roman colony, it bore the formal name , the "
Julian colony of Tingis". Under the early empire, it began to use Latin script, issuing its bronze coins with the legend ; these bore Augustus and
Agrippa's heads
obverse and
Baal's head
reverse. As a provincial capital, Tingis developed and prospered. In the 4th century, it surpassed
Volubilis when that city was left south of the
Roman lines and unprotected by
Roman legions. Tingis at its peak reached 20,000 inhabitants, all thoroughly
romanized and mostly
Christian. Tingis was famed throughout the Roman Empire for its fishing conserve industry. Under
Septimius Severus, two
Roman roads were constructed from Tingis: one on the Atlantic coast to
Sala Colonia and the second into the mountainous interior toward Volubilis. During
Diocletian's reform of Roman governmental structures in AD296, Mauretania Tingitana became part of the
Diocese of Hispania. Tingis remained the capital of the larger territory, maintaining its status and development.
Later history and his general
Belisarius, as depicted in
Ravenna. The
Vandals conquered and occupied Tingis around AD425 before sweeping across the Roman Maghreb. Between 534 and 682, Tingis was restored to
Byzantine control. Tingis was fortified and a new church erected. However, its commercial strength had waned, a change attested by its decreased issuance of coins. Tingis fell under the control of the
Umayyad Caliphate as part of the
Muslim conquest of North Africa in 702, after which it was reduced to a small town more commonly discussed under the name
Tangier.
Tariq ibn Ziyad organized the
conquest of Spain from Tingis and nearby
Septem in 706. ==Religion==