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Once a small Berber village perched on a hill and then extending down its side, Tunis is one of those special places favoured by geography and chosen by history.
And yet, at the beginning, nothing could make one think that it could happen to Carthage, its terrible neighbour located on the seacoast, and then to Kairouan, well protected on the interior, and finally to Mahdia, also facing the sea and its dangers. Perhaps it is because of its position, neither on the coast nor in the country's interior, that Tunis owes its survival.
