The 'Garamantes' were a
Saharan
Berber-speaking people who used an elaborate underground
irrigation system, and founded a kingdom in the
Fezzan area of modern-day
Libya, in the
Sahara desert. They were a local power in the Sahara between
500 BC and
500 AD.
There is not much information about the Garamantes, not even the name they used to call themselves; ''Garamantes'' was a
Greek name which the
Romans later adopted. Most of what we know comes from Greek and Roman sources, and recent archaeological excavations in the area, though large areas in ruins are still unexcavated. Another important source of information are the abundant rock paintings, many of which depict life prior to the rise of the realm.
Garamantian life
In the 1960's, archaeologists excavated part of the Garamantes' capital (modern
Germa, about 150 km west of modern-day
Sebha) and named it 'Garama' (An earlier capital, Zinchecra, was located not far from the later Garama.). Current research indicates that the Garamantes had about eight major towns, three of which have been examined
as of 2004. In addition they had a large number of other settlements. Garama had population of some four thousand and another six thousand living in villages within a 5 km radius.
The Garamantes were farmers, engineers and merchants. Their religion was based on
Egyptian models, and some of their dead were buried in small pyramids. They used the
Libyco-Berber script for writing. The discovery of the "Black Mummy" by Professor Fabrizio Mori at the
Uan Muhuggiag suggests that there may even have been a long tradition of mummification in the region.
The Garamantes' diet consisted of grapes, figs, barley and wheat. They traded
wheat,
salt and
slaves in exchange for imported
wine and
olive oil,
oil lamps and Roman tableware. According to
Strabo and
Pliny, the Garamantes quarried
amazonite in the
Tibesti Mountains.
Archeological remains
The ruins include numerous tombs, forts, and cemeteries. The Garamantes constructed a network of underground tunnels and shafts to mine the
fossil water from under the limestone layer under the desert sand. It was built around
200 BC to
200 AD. The network of tunnels is known to
berbers as ''
foggaras''. The network allowed agriculture to flourish, but it required the use of slaves to maintain.
History
The Garamantes were probably present as tribal people in the Fezzan by
1000 BC. They appear in the written record for the first time in the
5th century BC. According to Professor
Frank Snowden, they were described in the various classical texts of the period as "Ethiopians", but distinguished from "Ethiopians" by others; reflective of the ethnic diversity of the region.
[1] According to
Herodotus, they were "a very great nation" who herded cattle, farmed dates, and hunted the "Ethiopian Troglodytes", or "cave-dwellers" who lived in the desert, from four-horse
chariots. Roman depictions describe them as bearing ritual scars and tattoos.
Tacitus wrote that they assisted the rebel
Tacfarinas and raided Roman coastal settlements.
The Romans kept close trade contacts with Garamantes; archaeologists have even found a Roman bathhouse in Garama. The Roman chronicler
Maternus accompanied a Garamantian ruler on a four-month military expedition to what is now the border area of
Nigeria. Still, in spite of the trade relations, Romans did not really consider them civilized.
The Garamantians represented a challenge to Rome, never giving in to Roman power, while the coastal zones of today's Libya did. Despite this, Herodotus reported that they had no weapons of war, and did not know how to defend themselves.
In the
1st century BC, the Garamantes raided North Africa and clashed with Roman forces. According to
Pliny the Elder, Romans eventually grew tired of Garamantian raiding and
Lucius Cornelius Balbus captured 15 of their settlements in
19 BC. After a Roman punitive expedition in
70, the Garamantes were forced into an official relationship with Rome and might have become one of the Roman
client states.
By around
150 the Garamantian kingdom (in today's central Libya (Fezzan), principally along the still existing Wadi l-Ajal), covered 180,000 square kilometres in modern-day southern Libya. It lasted from about
400 BC to
600.
The decline of the Garamantian civilization is said to be connected to worsening climatic conditions. What is desert today was once fairly good agricultural land and was enhanced through the Garmantian irrigation system 1,500 years ago. As fossil water is not a renewable resource, over the six centuries of the Garamantian kingdom, the
ground water level fell. The kingdom declined and fragmented.
Byzantine records claim that the king of Garamantes made a peace treaty with Byzantium in
569 and accepted
Christianity. Later
Muslim records say that in
668 the king of Garamantes was imprisoned and dragged off in chains. The area was eventually absorbed into the Muslim sphere of influence.
References
1. Snowden, Before Color Prejudice (Harvard University Press March 1, 1991), 8-9
External links
★
"Kingdom of the Sands"
★
Encyclopaedia of the Orient - article about Garamantian empire