[251]Sidi Aïch.

[252]This monument is known by the name of Soumat el-Hamra, the red minaret. The inscription as here given is corrected by the subsequent rendering of Guérin. See his work, i. p. 288.

[253]Obscure in original.

[254]Known as Thermyle el-Bey, two large open basins communicating by a vault, used as bathing-places, one by men and the other by women.

[255]Used as a bathing-place by the Jews. Both contain numerous snakes of the genus Tropidonotus, and fish, probably Chromidæ.

[256]Djebel Arbet. 3,612 feet high.

[257]Oued Gourbaia.

[258]Left blank in MS.

[259]More correctly Degeuche, the ancient Thiges.

[260]Shaw’s Travels, p. 212.