AOUSERD AND THE ANCIENT HISTORY
Broadcast date April 25, 2008
From the Dakhla Peninsula, we started diving in the direction of Wadi Al-Dahab Al-Gweira and traveled through its sands that extended in sight, to read on its pages what the hand of time had made with it.
On the sands of this land we walked up and down to reach a surface where the martyrs of the Battle of “Leglat” which took place in 1957 lay.
After that, we set off southwest of Ausserd to visit other cemeteries that are thousands of years older, the cemetery of Ould Attia and the cemetery of Bou Lirah.
Circular rams with a diameter of about ten meters, over which vertical slabs of sandy clay were inscribed with Berber inscriptions and vague drawings were drawn on them.
After standing on these funerary monuments, we headed towards an archaeological site that includes carved rocks confirming that life took place in this land and developed on its surface. It is a clear picture of what this land was like thousands of years ago and the embodiment of huge animals that can only live in an abundant water environment plants and trees. However, the vicissitudes of time and the changes of the climate perched on the chest of these regions, choking their breath, turning their buildings into ruins, and fertilizing them in ruins.
- , Southern Morocco
- , Moroccan Sahara
- , History
- , Tourism
- , Archaeology
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