Tabæ

 Diocese of Tabasco

 John Bannister Tabb

 Tabbora

 Tabernacle (Tabernaculum)

 Tabernacle

 Feast of Tabernacles

 Tabernacle Societies

 Tabernacle Society

 Tacana Indians

 Tacapæ

 Alexandre-Antonin Taché

 Etienne-Pascal Taché

 Tadama

 Tænarum

 Taensa Indians

 Vicariate Apostolic of Tahiti

 Ven. Anna Maria Gesualda Antonia Taigi

 Tait Indians

 Takkali

 James Talbot

 John Talbot

 Peter Talbot

 Thomas Joseph Talbot

 Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord

 Thomas Tallis

 Talmud

 Jean Talon

 Nicolas Talon

 Pierre Talon

 Tamanac Indians

 Tamassus

 Diocese of Tamaulipas

 Michelangelo Tamburini

 Thomas Tamburini

 Tametsi

 Marie-Marthe-Baptistine Tamisier

 Tanagra

 Tancred

 Roger Brooke Taney

 Cyprien Tanguay

 Tanis

 Adam Tanner

 Conrad Tanner

 Edmund Tanner

 Matthias Tanner

 Tantum Ergo

 Bernardo Tanucci

 Taoism

 Taos Pueblo

 Aloysius Taparelli

 Tapestry

 Esteban Tapis

 Helena Tarabotti

 Sts. Tarachus, Probus, and Andronicus

 Diocese of Taranto

 Vicariate Apostolic of Tarapacá (de Tarapacá)

 St. Tarasius

 Diocese of Tarazona

 Diocese of Tarbes

 Diocese of Tarentaise

 Targum

 Pierre Tarisel

 St. Tarkin

 Diocese of Tarnow

 Camillus Tarquini

 Archdiocese of Tarragona

 St. Tarsicius

 Tarsus

 Nicolò Tartaglia

 Giuseppe Tartini

 Elzéar-Alexandre Taschereau

 St. Tassach

 Joseph Tassé

 René-Prosper Tassin

 Torquato Tasso

 Alessandro Tassoni

 Tatian

 St. Tatwin

 Diocese of Taubaté

 John Tauler

 Ethelred Taunton

 John Taverner

 Tavistock Abbey

 Tavium

 Taxa Innocentiana

 John de Taxster

 Frances Margaret Taylor

 Ven. Hugh Taylor

 Antonio Tebaldeo

 Te Deum

 Catherine Tegakwitha (Tekakwitha, Takwitha)

 Tegernsee

 Diocese of Tehuantepec

 St. Teilo

 Teleology

 Telepathy

 Diocese of Telese

 Bernardino Telesio

 Pope St. Telesphorus

 Telesphorus of Cosenza

 Tell el-Amarna Tablets

 Gabriel Téllez

 Michel Le Tellier (2)

 Telmessus

 Te Lucis Ante Terminum

 Vicariate Apostolic of Temiskaming

 Temnus

 Wilhelm Tempel

 Temperance

 Temperance Movements

 Knights Templars

 Temple

 Sisters of the Temple

 Temple of Jerusalem

 Temptation

 Temptation of Christ

 Pierre-Guérin de Tencin

 Tenebræ

 Tenedos

 Diocese of Teneriffe

 David Teniers

 Tennessee

 William Jewett Tenney

 Tentyris

 Ecclesiastical Tenure

 Teos

 Diocese of Tepic

 Tepl

 Diocese of Teramo

 Terce

 Terenuthis

 St. Teresa of Jesus

 Sixteen Blessed Teresian Martyrs of Compiègne

 Anthony Terill (Bonville)

 Termessus

 Diocese of Termoli

 St. Ternan

 Diocese of Terracina, Sezze, and Piperno

 André Terrasson

 Terrestrial Paradise

 Jean-Baptiste Terrien

 Tertiaries

 Tertullian

 Diocese of Teruel

 Old Testament

 New Testament

 Testem Benevolentiae

 Missouri Test-Oath

 Johann Tetzel

 Teuchira

 Teutonic Order

 Tewdrig

 Tewkesbury Abbey

 State of Texas

 Mount Thabor

 Thabraca

 Thacia Montana

 Thænæ

 Thagaste

 Thagora

 St. Thais

 Sigismond Thalberg

 Valentin Thalhofer

 Thangmar

 Thanksgiving before and after Meals

 Thanksgiving Day

 Thapsus

 Thasos

 Thaumaci

 John Thayer

 Theatines

 The Theatre

 Thebaid

 Augustus Thébaud

 Thebes (1)

 Thebes (2)

 St. Thecla

 Sts. Thecla

 Theft

 Thegan (Degan) of Treves

 Augustin Theiner

 Thelepte

 Themiscyra

 Themisonium

 Baron Louis-Jacques Thénard

 Thennesus

 St. Theobald

 Theobald

 Theocracy

 St. Theodard

 Theodicy

 Pope Theodore I

 Pope Theodore II

 Theodore, Archbishop of Canterbury

 Theodore of Mopsuestia

 St. Theodore of Amasea

 Theodore of Gaza

 St. Theodore of Studium

 Theodoret

 Theodoric of Chartres

 Theodoric the Great

 Sts. Theodorus and Theophanes

 Theodorus Lector

 Theodosiopolis

 Theodosius I

 Theodosius Florentini

 St. Theodotus of Ancyra

 Theodulf

 Theology

 Ascetical Theology

 Christology

 Dogmatic Theology

 History of Dogmatic Theology

 Mystical Theology

 Moral Theology

 Pastoral Theology

 Theonas

 St. Theophanes

 Theophanes Kerameus

 Bl. Théophane Vénard

 Theophilanthropists

 Theophilus (1)

 Theophilus (2)

 Theosophy

 Domenico Theotocopuli

 Diocese of Thera

 Thermæ Basilicæ

 Thermopylæ

 Epistles to the Thessalonians

 Thessalonica

 Theveste

 Thibaris

 Thibaut de Champagne

 Thierry of Freiburg

 Louis-Adolphe Thiers

 Thignica

 Joseph Albert Alberdingk Thijm

 Peter Paul Maria Alberdingk Thijm

 Richard Thimelby

 Third Orders

 Thirty Years War

 Thmuis

 St. Thomas the Apostle

 Charles L.A. Thomas

 Bl. Thomas Abel

 Thomas á Jesu

 Thomas a Kempis

 Ven. Thomas Alfield

 St. Thomas Aquinas

 St. Thomas Becket

 St. Thomas Christians

 Bl. Thomas Cottam

 Bl. Thomas Ford

 Bl. Thomas Johnson

 Bl. Thomas More

 Thomas of Beckington

 Thomas of Bradwardine

 Thomas of Cantimpré

 Thomas of Celano

 Thomas of Dover

 St. Thomas of Hereford

 Thomas of Jesus

 Thomas of Jorz

 Thomas of Strasburg

 St. Thomas of Villanova

 Bl. Thomas Percy

 Bl. Thomas Sherwood

 Louis Thomassin

 Bl. Thomas Woodhouse

 Thomism

 Thompson

 Francis Thompson

 Right Honourable Sir John Sparrow David Thompson

 Thompson River Indians

 Jean-Joseph Thonissen

 Thorney Abbey

 Feast of the Crown of Thorns

 Ven. Robert Thorpe

 Jacques-Auguste de Thou

 Nicolas de Thou

 Three Chapters

 Diocese of Three Rivers

 Throne

 Thuburbo Minus

 Thugga

 Johann Amadeus Franz de Paula Thugut

 Ven. John Thulis

 Thundering Legion

 Count Leo Thun-Hohenstein

 Thuringia

 Johannes Thurmayr

 Ven. Thomas Thwing

 Thyatira

 Thynias

 Hermann Thyräus

 Tiara

 Pellegrino Tibaldi

 Tiberias

 Sea of Tiberias

 Tiberiopolis

 Tiberius

 Tibet

 Sts. Tiburtius and Susanna

 Ticelia

 Ven. Nicholas Tichborne

 Ven. Thomas Tichborne

 Ticonius

 Ticuna Indians

 Joseph Tieffentaller

 Tiepolo

 Mark Aloysius Tierney

 St. Tigris

 Louis-Sébastien Le Nain de Tillemont

 Johannes Tserclæs, Count of Tilly

 Timbrias

 Time

 Sts. Timotheus and Symphorian

 Epistles to Timothy and Titus

 Timucua Indians

 Mary Agnes Tincker

 Tingis

 See of Tinin

 Diocese of Tinos and Mykonos

 Tintern Abbey

 Il Tintoretto

 Tipasa

 Girolamo Tiraboschi

 Diocese of Tiraspol

 Benvenuto Tisio da Garofalo

 James Tissot

 Tithes

 Titian

 Titopolis

 Titulus

 Titus, Bishop of Bostra

 Titus

 Tius

 Diocese of Tivoli

 Tlaxcala

 Tlos

 Giuseppe Toaldo

 Toba Indians

 Tobias

 Alexis de Tocqueville

 Diocese of Todi

 Tokio

 Archdiocese of Toledo

 Diocese of Toledo (Ohio)

 Francisco Toledo

 History of Toleration

 Religious Toleration

 John Baptist Tolomei

 Tomb

 Tomb of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Tomi

 Abbey of Tongerloo

 Salvator Tongiorgi

 Gift of Tongues

 Tonica Indians

 Tonkawa Indians

 Tonsure

 Hugh Tootell

 Torah

 Francesco Torbido

 St. Toribio Alfonso Mogrovejo

 Girolamo Francesco Tornielli

 Torone

 Archdiocese of Toronto

 Tomás de Torquemada

 Francisco Torres

 Bartolemé de Torres Naharro

 Evangelista Torricelli

 José Torrubia

 Diocese of Tortona

 Diocese of Tortosa

 Paolo dal Pozzo Toscanelli

 Tosephta

 Alonso Tostado

 Luigi Tosti

 Totemism

 Totonac Indians

 George Anselm Touchet

 Archdiocese of Toulouse

 Diocese of Tournai

 Joseph Pitton de Tournefort

 Honoré Tournély

 Volume 16

 Charles-Thomas Maillard de Tournon

 Antoine Touron

 Archdiocese of Tours

 Charles-François Toustain

 Antoine-Augustin Touttée

 Tower of Babel

 Alexandre de Prouville, Marquis de Tracy

 Tradition and Living Magisterium

 Traditionalism

 Traducianism

 Trajan

 Trajanopolis (1)

 Trajanopolis (2)

 Tralles

 Diocese of Trani and Barletta

 Transcendentalism

 Transept

 Transfiguration

 Feast of Transfiguration of Christ

 Vicariate Apostolic of the Transvaal

 Transylvania

 Diocese of Transylvania

 Diocese of Trapani

 Trapezopolis

 Trappists

 Sts. Trasilla and Emiliana

 Accusations of Treason

 Diocese of Trebizond

 Trebnitz

 Lettice Mary Tredway

 Francis Tregian

 Tremithus

 Council of Trent

 Diocese of Trent (Tridentum)

 Diocese of Trenton

 Sir Thomas Tresham

 Diocese of Treviso

 Jewish Tribe

 Diocese of Tricarico

 Charles Joseph Tricassin

 Tricca

 Diocese of Trichinopoly

 Vicariate Apostolic of Trichur (Trichurensis)

 Tricomia

 Triduum

 Diocese of Trier

 Francis a Paula Triesnecker

 Diocese of Triest-Capo d'Istria

 Diocese of Trincomalee

 Abbey of Trinità di Cava dei Tirreni

 Order of Trinitarians

 Blessed Trinity

 Trinity College

 Trinity Sunday

 Triple-Candle-stick

 Prefecture Apostolic of Tripoli

 Tripolis

 Giangiorgio Trissino

 Tritheists

 John Trithemius

 Diocese of Trivento

 Nicholas Trivet

 Troas

 Trocmades

 John de Trokelowe

 Ancient See of Trondhjem

 Trope

 Scriptural Tropology

 John Thomas Troy

 Diocese of Troyes

 Truce of God

 Otto Truchsess von Waldburg

 St. Trudo

 St. Trudpert

 Antonio de Trueba

 Diocese of Trujillo

 Feast of Trumpets

 St. Trumwin

 Trustee System

 Trusts and Bequests

 Truth

 Catholic Truth Societies

 Tryphon, Respicius, and Nympha

 Johann Nepomuk von Tschiderer zu Gleifheim

 John Nepomuk Tschupick

 Archdiocese of Tuam

 School of Tuam

 University of Tübingen

 Tubunae

 Diocese of Tucson

 Diocese of Tucumán

 Diocese of Tudela

 Diocese of Tuguegarao

 Diocese of Tulancingo

 Louis-René Tulasne

 Diocese of Tulle

 Tunic

 Tunis

 Diocese of Tunja

 Tunkers

 Cuthbert Tunstall

 Ven. Thomas Tunstall

 Simon Tunsted

 Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot

 Turin

 University of Turin

 Turkestan

 Turkish Empire

 Adrian Turnebus

 Turpin

 Tuscany

 Diocese of Tuy

 St. John Twenge

 Twiketal of Croyland

 Tyana

 St. Tychicus

 Tynemouth Priory

 Types in Scripture

 Tyrannicide

 Tyre

 James Tyrie

Tunis


French protectorate on the northern coast of Africa. About the twelfth century before Christ Phoenicians settled on the coast of what is now Tunis and founded colonies there, which soon attained great economic importance. Among them were: Hippo Zarytus, Utica, Carthage, Hadrumetum, and Tunes. Ultimately all these cities were obliged to acknowledge the suzerainty of Carthage, which ruled a territory almost as extensive as the present Tunis. The fall of Carthage, B.C. 146, made the Romans masters of the country, which as the Province of Africa became one of the granaries of Italy. Numerous ruins of palaces, temples, Christian churches, amphitheatres, aqueducts, etc., which are still to be found, give proof of the high civilization existing under Roman sway. Christianity also flourished at an early era. In 439 the country was conquered by the Vandals, and in 533 Belisarius retook it and made it a part of the Eastern Empire. The supremacy of Constantinople was not of long duration. First the Patrician Gregorius, Governor of North Africa for the Emperor Heraclius, proclaimed his independence. However, on the incursion of the Arabs from the East, Gregorius was overthrown in 648 by the Arabian commander Abdallah, who returned to Egypt with enormous booty. In 670 the Arabs again entered the country, conquered Biserta, and founded the City of Kairw·n in the region beyond Susa. In 697 they also took the City of Carthage, up to then successfully defended by the Eastern Empire, and reduced it to a heap of ruins. Tunis, a town formerly of small importance, now took the place of Carthage in commerce and traffic. When the Ommayyad dynasty was overthrown by the Abbassids, almost all Africa regained independence, and it was not until 772 that the caliphs again acquired control over it. Caliph Haroun al Raschid made the vigorous Ibrahim ibn el Aghlab Governor of Africa, but in 800 Ibrahim threw off the supremacy of the caliphate. Kairw·n remained the capital of the Aghlabite Kingdom, which embraced Tripoli, Algiers, the greater part of Tunis, and also the Arabic possessions in Sicily and Sardinia. The last of the Aghlabite dynasty made Tunis the capital of the country, and gave the name of the city to the entire country. In 908 the Aghlabite dynasty was overthrown by Obeid Allah, founder of the dynasty of the F·timites, which in the course of the tenth century conquered the whole of North Africa. After the conquest of Egypt the F·timites transferred the seat of their power to Cairo and gave the regions in Western Africa in fief to the ZÌrite family in 972.

From the middle of the twelfth century Tunis was ruled by the Almohade dynasty, which, weakened by its struggles with the Christian kingdoms of Spain, was driven out of Tunis in 1206 by a Berber, Ab˜ Hafs, who founded the dynasty of the Hafsites that ruled until 1574. In 1240 Eastern Algeria was united to Tunis. Thus in the course of time the great centralized Arabic Empire was replaced in North Africa by several independent states, such as Morocco, Algiers, and Tunis. In this way the strength of Islam, as contrasted with that of Christian Western Europe, was weakened, and the Christian countries were now able to prepare to attack the Mohammedan power. Thus, King St. Louis of France undertook a crusade against Tunis in 1270 which was unsuccessful; Louis himself died the same year during the siege of the City of Tunis. During the last centuries of the medieval era Tunis was the most flourishing of the North African countries; the cities of Tunis and Kairw·n were centres of Eastern civilization and learning.

The rule of the Arabic Emirs in Tunis was overthrown by the Turks. Turkish corsairs led by the Greek renegade Horuk Barbarossa appeared in the western part of the Mediterranean about 1510. By gifts they won over the ruler of Tunis, Mulei Mohammed, who permitted them to make the City of Tunis the base for their piratical expeditions. In a short time Horuk Barbarossa gathered a large fleet manned chiefly by Turks, and became master of the City of Algiers and several towns along the African coast. His brother, Khair al-DÌn Barbarossa, increased these possessions on the coast and sought to give his conquests permanence by placing them under the suzerainty of the Porte. When disputes over the succession to the throne arose in the Hafsite dynasty, Barbarossa skilfully used the opportunity to overthrow Mulei Hassan and to make himself the ruler of Tunis. Mulei Hassan appealed to the Emperor Charles V, who responded by landing near Carthage with a fleet, capturing Tunis and Goletta in July, 1535, and liberating nearly 20,000 Christian slaves. Mulei Hassan was restored to power in Tunis as a Spanish vassal, but was obliged to promise to suppress Christian slavery in his domain, to grant religious liberty, and to close his ports to the pirates. As a pledge Spain retained the citadels of Tunis and Goletta, which it garrisoned. On the way home the Spanish fleet completed the destruction of Carthage, but failed in an attack on Algiers. Mulei Hassan, who was hated by his people, was overthrown in 1542 by his own son Mulei Hamid. When in 1570 the Turks entered Tunis from Algiers Mulei Hamid appealed to Spain for aid, and as a result Tunis was captured by Don Juan of Austria in 1573. Jealous of his half-brother, however, King Philip recalled him and offered no resistance when the Turks conquered the entire country in 1574. Thus the military supremacy of the Turks was established in Tunis. The real masters of the country were the Turkish garrisons, beside whom the dey, appointed by the Sultan as the possessor of the highest authority, was a mere shadow. As early as the administration of the third dey, the bey, Murad, originally an officer to collect the tribute, gained the chief authority for himself and made it hereditary in his family.

Like Algiers and Morocco, Tunis developed in this period into a much dreaded pirate state. The Tunisian galleys sailed along all the coasts of the Mediterranean, devastating and plundering. They stopped foreign ships on the open sea and dragged them as prizes to Tunis, where the cargo would be discharged and the crew and passengers sold as slaves. For a long time Christian Western Europe did nothing to put an end to this impudent piracy. Although the English Admiral Blake in 1665 burned nine large Tunisian pirate ships in the harbour of Porto Farina, yet, as the struggle against the pirates was not continued, no permanent improvement of conditions was attained. At a later date treaties were made between Tunis and the powers interested in commerce in the Mediterranean. Venice, Spain, Portugal, England, Holland, Denmark, and even the United States paid an annual tribute to Tunis. In return Tunis bound itself not to attack the ships that sailed under the flag of the treaty-making powers. For two hundred years Europe endured this nest of pirates. For Tunis it was a brilliant period in which enormous treasures accumulated in the country, and during which the supremacy of the Porte was almost nominal.

The nineteenth century completely altered the situation. Sharp resolutions against piracy in the Mediterranean were passed by the Congress of Vienna and England was authorized by the powers to enforce these resolutions by sending a fleet against the piratical countries. In 1816 Lord Exmouth, by the bombardment and partial destruction of the City of Algiers, forced the ruler of Algiers to put an end to Christian slavery. The terrified Bey of Tunis also promised to do the same, yet, in spite of this, Christian ships were repeatedly attacked by Tunisian vessels. When in 1830 the French began the conquest of Algiers, Tunis at first aided the Algerian leader Abd el Kader, but in retaliation the French forced Tunis to suppress piracy completely, to yield an island on the coast, and to pay a sum of money. Alarmed at the danger from France, the Porte now sought to form closer relations with Tunis and to make the country an immediate Turkish province. These efforts, which were successful at that date in Tripoli, failed in Tunis on account of the opposition of French diplomacy. In order to be better able to maintain his position in regard to the Porte, the Bey Sidi Ahmed (1837-55) entered into closer relations with France, and even tried to introduce western reforms; in 1842 he abolished slavery, and in 1846 the slave-trade. Under French and English influence his cousin Sidi Mohammed (1855-59) introduced liberal legislation and reorganized the administration. His brother Mohammed es-Sadok (1859-82) even gave the country a liberal constitution in 1861, but had to withdraw it owing to the opposition of the Arabs and Moors. His extravagant tastes forced the bey to borrow money, thus bringing him into financial dependence on France, which showed more and more undisguisedly its desire to control Tunis. However, the Franco-German War (1870-71) forced France to restrain its hand.

In 1871 the sultan granted the hereditary right to rule according to primogeniture to the family of the bey and abandoned all claim to tribute, in return for which the bey promised not to go to war without the permission of the Porte, and to enter into no diplomatic negotiations with foreign powers. France protested against this and would not recognize the suzerainty of the Porte over Tunis, but could not enforce its protests. In the years succeeding the foreign element in Tunis constantly gained in importance, and the Italian Government, especially, sought to acquire a strong economic position in the country. France began to fear that she might be outwitted by Italy in Tunis, so in 1881 she used the disturbances on the boundary of Algiers and Tunis as a pretext for military interference. In April, 1881, in spite of the protests of the bey and the Porte, an army of 30,000 French soldiers advanced from Algiers into Tunis, and readily overcame the resistance of the tribes. A French fleet appeared before the capital, and a squadron landed at Biserta a brigade which advanced against the City of Tunis from the land side. Unable to oppose this force, the bey was obliged to sign on 12 May the Treaty of Kasr el-Said, also called the Bardo Treaty, which transformed Tunis into a French protectorate. The revolt of the native tribes against the French was crushed in the years 1881-82. Although at the beginning of the expedition France had declared that the occupation would only be a temporary one, yet ever since then the French have remained in the country. Economically the control by an European power has proved advantageous to the country. Mohammed es-Sadok was succeeded by his brother Sidi Ali Pasha (1882-1902), who was followed by his son Sidi Mohammed.

The regency of Tunis has an area of 45,779 sq. miles and contained, in 1911, 1,923,217 inhabitants, of whom 1,706,830 were natives, 49,245 Jews, 42,410 French, 107,905 Italians, 12,258 English and Maltese, 1307 Spanish. Politically, Tunis forms a French protectorate; France represents the country in foreign relations, makes all the treaties with foreign powers, decides as to peace and war. In return it protects the bey against any threatened attack upon his land and guarantees the state debt. In internal affairs the bey has nominally the legislative power, but decrees and laws are not valid until they have received the signature of the resident-general representing the French Government. The budget is not submitted to the hey for his approval until it has been discussed by the ministerial council and examined by the French Government. The resident-general is the representative of the French Government at Tunis, and is subordinate to the French minister of foreign affairs. He unites in his person all the authority of the French Government, is the official intermediary between the Tunisian Government and the representatives of foreign powers, is the presiding officer of the ministerial council, and of all the higher administration of Tunis. He can veto the actions of the bey, and in case the bey fails to act he can order the necessary regulations or open the way for them. The ministerial council consists of the resident-general, two native ministers, and seven French ministers; the council settles the most important matters and especially determines the budget. The two native ministers direct internal affairs, the administration of justice for the natives, and the supervision of the landed property of the natives. The other branches of the administration are directed by the French ministers. The administration of justice is a double one: all legal disputes in which Europeans are concerned are settled by French law; the natives are under Mohammedan law. As regards the Catholic Church Tunis forms the Archdiocese of Carthage; cf. also the article LAVIGERIE.

ASHBEE, Bibl. of Tunisia (London, 1889); BROADLEY, Tunis Past and Present (London, 1882); TISSOT, Exploration scientifique de la Tunisie (Paris, 1884-87); FAUCON, La Tunisie avant et depuis l'occupation franÁaise (Paris, 1893); FITZNER, Die Regentschaft Tunis (Berlin, 1895); CLAIN DE LA RIVE, Hist. générale de la Tunisie (Paris, 1895); LOTH, Hist. de la Tunisie (Paris, 1898); VIVIAN, Tunisia and the Modern Barbary Pirates (London, 1899); OLIVER AND DUBOIS, La Tunisie (Paris, 1898); HESSE-WARTEGG, Tunis, the Land and the People (2nd ed., London, 1899); BAHAR, Le protectorat tunisien (Paris, 1904); La Tunisie au début du XXe siËcle (Paris, 1904); SCH÷NFELD, Aus den staaten der Barbaresken (Berlin, 1902); SCHANZ, Algerien, Tunisien u. Tripolitanien (Halle, 1905); LOTH, La peuple italien en Tunisie et en Algérie (Paris, 1905); IDEM, La Tunisie et l'Êuvre du protectorat franÁais (Paris, 1907); BABELON, CAGNAT, AND REINACH, Atlas archéologique de la Tunisie (Paris, 1905-); VIOLARD, La Tunisie du Nord (Paris, 1906); SLADEN, Carthage and Tunis (London, 1907); PETRIE, Tunis, Kairouan and Carthage (New York, 1909); RECLUS, Algérie et Tunisie (Paris, 1909).; GUADIANI AND THIAUCOURT, La Tunisie (Paris, 1910); GEPT, La Tunisie économique (Paris, 1910); Statistique générale (Tunis, annually); LECORE-CHARPENTIER, L'indicateur tunisien (Tunis, 1899-).

JOSEPH LINS