Hammam-Lif

Hammam-Lif (Arabic: حمام الأنف) is a coastal town about 20 km south-east of Tunis, the capital of Tunisia.

It has been known since antiquity for its thermal springs originating in Mount Bou Kornine.

Naro, which means fire, was Hammam-Lif's Punic name.

In 1883, the French captain Ernest De Prudhomme discovered in his Hammam-lif residence the ruins of an ancient synagogue that once stood in Hammam-Lif in the 3rd-5th century, when it was part of the province of Africa Byzacena.

[2] Hammam-Lif was once the home of Italian, Greek and Jewish communities, especially before the end of the French colonial period.