The Ain Nechma inscriptions, also known as the Guelma inscriptions are a number of Punic language inscriptions, first found in the 1837 in the necropolis of Ain Nechma, in the Guelma Province of Algeria (ancient Calama). By the early 20th century, about 40 such inscriptions had been discovered - they had become well known in Semitic epigraphy due to their unique use of certain turns of phrase and unique form given to some letters of the Punic-Phoenician alphabet. The inscriptions are in the Louvre, the Musée archéologique de Narbonne, and other locations.
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