The National Museum of Baldo was rebuilt in 1882 as the world's second richest collection of mosaics/mosaics after Cairo. The mosaics were first created in the Iraqi Mesopotamies. They were burned, clay, pebbles and shells. People called them "washable murals" and "stampable carpets" permanent paintings brought by the Phoenicians to North Africa to decorate Gaja. The last of the treasures of Taiji's palaces, towns and halls, the portrait of Villegris, with more than a dozen coloured stones and green glass inlaid in Villegris, holding a volume of poems, listened to the sadness of the goddess of history reciting tragedy.