Carthage Paleo-Christian Museum

The Danish consul, Christian Tuxen Falbe, conducted the first examination of the archaeological site in 1830.

Charles Ernest Beulé and Alfred Louis Delattre carried out excavations in the second half of the 19th century.

French archaeologists' excavations in the 1920s initially garnered a great deal of attention due to the proof they provided regarding child sacrifice.

The Carthage Paleo-Christian Museum is home to a sizable collection of mosaics that were discovered amid the city's ruins.

The artifacts on show are from the Roman, Paleo-Christian, and African civilizations and date as far back as the first century BCE.