Vatican, 28 August, 2023 / 1:00 pm (ACI Africa).
St. Augustine, whose feast day is today, Aug. 28, is associated most prominently with Hippo, the city that constitutes his well-known epithet. Yet well before his ancient bishopric, Augustine hailed from a now-long-vanished town located just a few dozen miles from that city, a place that still bears at least one landmark popularly associated with the venerated saint.
Augustine was born to St. Monica in the city of Thagaste, a Berber village located amid what historians say were dense growths of forest.
Like many smaller municipalities of antiquity, most of the details of the city have been lost to history; it was, however, evidently important enough to warrant a mention in Pliny the Elder’s “Natural History,” with the Roman historian identifying it as among the “free towns” in the region.
Rebecca Denova, a lecturer in religious studies at the University of Pittsburgh, said that prior to Augustine’s birth, the area was part of the Numidian kingdom that included the Berber tribes into which Augustine was born.
“The Romans then defeated Numidia and began colonizing the area for its grain and olive orchards,” Denova said. “At the same time, Roman businessmen settled in the area.”