GREEK - Antioch in Syria - Quasi-Autonomous Status -
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Antioch on the Orontes (Greek:
Ἀντιόχεια ἡ ἐπὶ Δάφνῃ, Ἀντιόχεια ἡ ἐπὶ Ὀρόντου or
Ἀντιόχεια ἡ Μεγάλη;
Latin: Antiochia ad Orontem;
also Great Antioch or Syrian Antioch; Arabic:انطاکیه) was an
ancient city on the eastern side of the
Orontes River. It is near the modern city of
Antakya,
Turkey.
Founded near the end of the 4th century BC by
Seleucus I Nicator, one of
Alexander the Great's generals, Antioch eventually rivaled
Alexandria
as the chief city of the Near East and was a cradle of
gentile
Christianity.[1]
It was one of the four cities of the
Syrian tetrapolis. Its residents were known as Antiochenes.
Geography
Location of Antioch, in present Turkey.
Two routes from the
Mediterranean, lying through the Orontes gorge and the Beilan Pass, converge
in the plain of the
Antioch Lake
(Balük Geut or El Bahr) and are met there by
- the road from the Amanic Gates (Baghche Pass) and western
Commagene, which descends the valley of the Kara Su,
- the roads from eastern Commagene and the Euphratean crossings at
Samosata
(Samsat) and Apamea Zeugma (Birejik), which descend the valleys of the Afrin
and the Kuwaik, and
- the road from the Euphratean ford at
Thapsacus,
which skirts the fringe of the Syrian steppe. A single route proceeds south
in the Orontes valley.
History
Prehistory
The settlement of Meroe pre-dated Antioch. A shrine of
Anat, called by the
Greeks the "Persian Artemis," was located here. This site was included in the
eastern suburbs of Antioch. There was a village on the spur of Mount Silpius
named or Iopolis. This name was always adduced as evidence by Antiochenes
(e.g.
Libanius) anxious to affiliate themselves to the Attic
Ionians--an
eagerness which is illustrated by the Athenian types used on the city's coins.
Io may have been a small early colony of trading Greeks (Javan).
John
Malalas mentions also an archaic village, Bottia, in the plain by the
river.
According to most of the writers, this is the city that is mentioned in the
Quran 36:13.
Foundation
by Seleucus I
Alexander the Great is said to have camped on the site of Antioch, and
dedicated an altar to
Zeus Bottiaeus, which lay in the northwest of the future city. This account
is found only in the writings of Libanius, a 4th century AD orator from Antioch,
and may be legend intended to enhance Antioch's status. But the story is not
unlikely in itself.[2]
After Alexander's death in 323 BC, his
generals
divided up the territory he had conquered.
Seleucus I Nicator won the territory of Syria, and he proceeded to found
four "sister cities" in northwestern Syria, one of which was Antioch. Like the
other three, Antioch was named by Seleucus for a member of his family. He is
reputed to have built sixteen Antiochs.[3]
Seleucus founded Antioch on a site chosen through ritual means. An
eagle, the bird
of Zeus, had been
given a piece of sacrificial meat and the city was founded on the site to which
the eagle carried the offering. He did this in the twelfth year of his reign.
Antioch soon rose above
Seleucia Pieria to become the Syrian capital.
Hellenistic
age
The original city of Seleucus was laid out in imitation of the
grid plan
of
Alexandria by the architect
Xenarius.
Libanius describes the first building and arrangement of this city (i. p.
300. 17). The citadel was on Mt. Silpius and the city lay mainly on the low
ground to the north, fringing the river. Two great colonnaded streets
intersected in the centre. Shortly afterwards a second quarter was laid out,
probably on the east and by
Antiochus I, which, from an expression of
Strabo, appears
to have been the native, as contrasted with the Greek, town. It was enclosed by
a wall of its own. In the Orontes, north of the city, lay a large island, and on
this
Seleucus II Callinicus began a third walled "city," which was finished by
Antiochus III. A fourth and last quarter was added by
Antiochus IV Epiphanes (175-164 BC); and thenceforth Antioch was known as
Tetrapolis. From west to east the whole was about 6 km in diameter and
little less from north to south, this area including many large gardens.
The new city was populated by a mix of local settlers that Athenians brought
from the nearby city of Antigonia, Macedonians, and Jews (who were given full
status from the beginning). The total free population of Antioch at its
foundation has been estimated at between 17,000 and 25,000, not including slaves
and native settlers.[2]
During the late Hellenistic period and Early Roman period, Antioch population
reached its peak of over 500,000 inhabitants (estimates vary from 400,000 to
600,000) and was the third largest city in the world after Rome and Alexandria.
By the 4th century, Antioch's declining population was about 200,000 according
to
Chrysostom, a figure which again does not include slaves.
About 6 km west and beyond the suburb Heraclea lay the paradise of Daphne, a
park of woods and waters, in the midst of which rose a great temple to the
Pythian Apollo, also founded by Seleucus I and enriched with a cult-statue of
the god, as Musagetes, by
Bryaxis. A
companion sanctuary of Hecate was constructed underground by
Diocletian.
The beauty and the lax morals of Daphne were celebrated all over the western
world; and indeed Antioch as a whole shared in both these titles to fame. Its
amenities awoke both the enthusiasm and the scorn of many writers of antiquity.[citation
needed]
Antioch became the capital and court-city of the western Seleucid empire
under
Antiochus I, its counterpart in the east being
Seleucia on the Tigris; but its paramount importance dates from the battle
of Ancyra (240 BC), which shifted the Seleucid centre of gravity from Asia
Minor, and led indirectly to the rise of
Pergamum.
The Seleucids reigned from Antioch.[4]
We know little of it in the
Hellenistic period, apart from
Syria, all our
information coming from authors of the late Roman time. Among its great Greek
buildings we hear only of the theatre, of which substructures still remain on
the flank of Silpius, and of the royal palace, probably situated on the island.
It enjoyed a reputation for letters and the arts (Cicero
pro Archia, 3); but the only names of distinction in these pursuits
during the Seleucid period, that have come down to us, are Apollophanes, the
Stoic, and one Phoebus, a writer on dreams. The mass of the population seems to
have been only superficially
Hellenic, and to have spoken
Aramaic in non-official life. The nicknames which they gave to their later
kings were Aramaic; and, except
Apollo and
Daphne, the
great divinities of north Syria seem to have remained essentially native, such
as the "Persian Artemis" of Meroe and
Atargatis
of
Hierapolis Bambyce.
The epithet, "Golden," suggests that the external appearance of Antioch was
impressive, but the city needed constant restoration owing to the
seismic
disturbances to which the district has always been subjected. The first
great earthquake in recorded history was related by the native chronicler
John
Malalas. It occurred in 148 BC and did immense damage.
Local politics were turbulent. In the many dissensions of the Seleucid house
the population took sides, and frequently rose in rebellion, for example against
Alexander Balas in 147 BC, and Demetrius II in 129 BC. The latter, enlisting a
body of Jews, punished his capital with fire and sword. In the last struggles of
the Seleucid house, Antioch turned against its feeble rulers, invited
Tigranes of Armenia to occupy the city in 83 BC, tried to unseat Antiochus
XIII in 65 BC, and petitioned Rome against his restoration in the following
year. Its wish prevailed, and it passed with Syria to the
Roman Republic in 64 BC, but remained a civitas libera.
Roman
period
The Roman emperors favoured the city from the first, seeing it as a more
suitable capital for the eastern part of the empire than Alexandria could be,
because of the isolated position of Egypt. To a certain extent they tried to
make it an eastern Rome.
Julius Caesar visited it in 47 BC, and confirmed its freedom. A great temple
to Jupiter Capitolinus rose on Silpius, probably at the insistence of
Octavian,
whose cause the city had espoused. A
forum of Roman type was laid out.
Tiberius
built two long colonnades on the south towards Silpius.
Agrippa and Tiberius enlarged the theatre, and
Trajan finished
their work.
Antoninus Pius paved the great east to west artery with granite. A circus,
other colonnades and great numbers of baths were built, and new
aqueducts to supply them bore the names of Caesars, the finest being the
work of Hadrian.
The Roman client, King Herod, erected a long
stoa on the
east, and
Agrippa encouraged the growth of a new suburb south of this.
At Antioch
Germanicus
died in 19 AD, and his body was burnt in the forum.
An earthquake that shook Antioch in AD 37 caused the emperor
Caligula to
send two senators to report on the condition of the city. Another quake followed
in the next reign.
Titus set up
the
Cherubim, captured from the
Jewish temple, over one of the gates.
In 115, during
Trajan's sojourn in the place with his army of Parthia, the whole site was
convulsed by an earthquake, the landscape altered, and the emperor himself
forced to take shelter in the circus for several days. He and his successor
restored the city.
Commodus
had
Olympic games celebrated at Antioch.
Edward Gibbon wrote:
Fashion was the only law, pleasure the only pursuit, and the splendour of
dress and furniture was the only distinction of the citizens of Antioch. The
arts of luxury were honoured, the serious and manly virtues were the subject
of ridicule, and the contempt for female modesty and reverent age announced
the universal corruption of the capital of the East.[5]
In 256 the town was suddenly raided by the Persians, who slew many in the
theatre.
In 526, after minor shocks, the calamity returned in a terrible form; the
octagonal cathedral which had been erected by the emperor
Constantius II suffered and thousands of lives were lost, largely those of
Christians gathered to a great church assembly. Especially terrific earthquakes
on
November
29, 528
and
October 31,
588 are also
recorded.
Late
Antiquity
Christianity
Antioch was a chief center of early Christianity. The city had a large
population of Jewish origin in a quarter called the
Kerateion,
and so attracted the earliest missionaries[6].
Evangelized, among others, by
Peter
himself, according to the tradition upon which the
Antiochene patriarchate still rests its claim for primacy,[7]
and certainly later[8]
by Barnabas
and
Paul during Paul's first missionary journey. Its converts were the first to
be called Christians.[9]
This is not to be confused with
Antioch in
Pisidia, to which the early missionaries later travelled.[10]
The population was estimated by
Chrysostom at about 100,000 people at the time of
Theodosius I. Between 252 and 300, ten assemblies of the church were held at
Antioch and it became the seat of one of the four original
patriarchates, along with
Jerusalem,
Alexandria,
and Rome (see
Pentarchy). Today Antioch remains the seat of a
patriarchate of the
Oriental Orthodox churches. One of the canonical
Eastern Orthodox churches is still called the
Antiochian Orthodox Church, although it moved its headquarters from Antioch
to Damascus,
Syria, several centuries ago (see
list of Patriarchs of Antioch), and its prime bishop retains the title
"Patriarch of Antioch," somewhat analogous to the manner in which several Popes,
heads of the
Roman Catholic Church remained "Bishop of Rome" even while residing in
Avignon, France in the 14th century.
During the 4th century, Antioch was one of the three most important cities in
the eastern Roman empire (along with Alexandria and Constantinople), which led
to it being recognized as the seat of one of the five early Christian
patriarchates (see
Pentarchy).
The
age of Julian
When
the emperor Julian visited in 362 on a detour to Persia, he had high hopes
for Antioch, regarding it as a rival to the imperial capital of
Constantinople. Antioch had a mixed pagan and Christian population, which
Ammianus Marcellinus implies lived quite harmoniously together. However
Julian's visit began ominously as it coincided with a lament for
Adonis, the
doomed lover of
Aphrodite.
Thus, Ammianus wrote, the emperor and his soldiers entered the city not to the
sound of cheers but to wailing and screaming.
Not long after, the Christian population railed at Julian for his favour to
Jewish and pagan rites, and, outraged by the closing of its great church of
Constantine, burned down the temple of
Apollo in
Daphne. Another version of the story had it that the chief priest of the temple
accidentally set the temple alight because he had fallen asleep after lighting a
candle. In any case Julian had the man
tortured for
negligence (for either allowing the Christians to burn the temple or for burning
it himself), confiscated Christian property and berated the pagan Antiochenes
for their impiety.
Julian found much else about which to criticize the Antiochenes. Julian had
wanted the empire's cities to be more self-managing, as they had been some
200 years before. However Antioch's
city councilmen showed themselves unwilling to shore up Antioch's food
shortage with their own resources, so dependent were they on the emperor.
Ammianus wrote that the councilmen shirked their duties by bribing unwitting men
in the marketplace to do the job for them.
The city's impiety to the old religion was clear to Julian when he attended
the city's annual feast of Apollo. To his surprise and dismay the only
Antiochene present was an old priest clutching a
chicken.
The Antiochenes in turn hated Julian for worsening the food shortage with the
burden of his
billeted troops, wrote
Ammianus. The soldiers were often to be found gorged on sacrificial meat,
making a drunken nuisance of themselves on the streets while Antioch's hungry
citizens looked on in disgust. The Christian Antiochenes and Julian's pagan
Gallic soldiers
also never quite saw eye to eye.
Even Julian's piety was distasteful to the Antiochenes retaining the old
faith. Julian's brand of paganism was very much unique to himself, with little
support outside the most educated
Neoplatonist circles. The irony of Julian's enthusiasm for large scale
animal sacrifice could not have escaped the hungry Antiochenes. Julian
gained no admiration for his personal involvement in the sacrifices, only the
nickname axeman, wrote Ammianus.
The emperor's high-handed, severe methods and his rigid administration
prompted Antiochene
lampoons
about, among other things, Julian's unfashionably
pointed beard.[11]
Valens
and after
Julian's successor,
Valens, who
endowed Antioch with a new forum, including a statue of Valentinian on a central
column, reopened the great church of Constantine, which stood till the Persian
sack in 538 by
Chosroes.
In 387, there was a great sedition caused by a new tax levied by order of
Theodosius I, and the city was punished by the loss of its metropolitan
status.
Justinian I, who renamed it Theopolis ("City of God"), restored many
of its public buildings after the
great earthquake of 526, whose destructive work was completed by the Persian
king, Khosrau
I, twelve years later. Antioch lost as many as 300,000 people. Justinian I
made an effort to revive it, and
Procopius
describes his repairing of the walls; but its glory was past.
Antioch gave its name to a
certain school of Christian thought, distinguished by literal interpretation
of the Scriptures and insistence on the human limitations of
Jesus.
Diodorus of Tarsus and
Theodore of Mopsuestia were the leaders of this school. The principal local
saint was
Simeon Stylites, who lived an extremely ascetic life atop a pillar for 40
years some 65 km east of Antioch. His body was brought to the city and buried in
a building erected under the emperor
Leo.
Arab
period
The ramparts of Antioch climbing Mons Silpius during the Crusades
(lower left on the map, above left)
In 637, during the reign of the Byzantine emperor
Heraclius,
Antioch was conquered by the Arabs in the caliphate of al-Rashidun
during the
Battle of Iron Bridge. The city became known in Arabic as أنطاكيّة (Antākiyyah).
Since the
Umayyad dynasty was unable to penetrate the
Anatolian
plateau, Antioch found itself on the frontline of the conflicts between two
hostile empires during the next 350 years, so that the city went into a
precipitous decline.
In 969, the city was recovered for the
Byzantine Emperor
Nicephorus II Phocas by Michael Burza and Peter the Eunuch. In 1078,
Armenians seized power until the
Seljuk Turks captured Antioch in 1084, but held it only fourteen years
before the Crusaders arrived.
Crusader
era
The Crusaders'
Siege of Antioch conquered the city, but caused significant damage during
the
First Crusade. Although it contained a large Christian population, it was
ultimately betrayed by Islamic allies of
Bohemund, prince of Taranto who, following the defeat of the Turkish
garrison, became its overlord. It remained the capital of the Latin
Principality of Antioch for nearly two centuries. It fell at last to the
Egyptian
Mamluk Sultan
Baibars, in 1268, after
another siege. Baibars proceeded to massacre the Christian population.[12]
In addition to the ravages of war, the city's port became inaccessible to large
ships due to the accumulation of sand in the Orontes river bed. As a result,
Antioch never recovered as a major city, with much of its former role falling to
the port city of
Alexandretta (Iskenderun).
Archaeology
Few traces of the once great Roman city are visible today aside from the
massive fortification walls that snake up the mountains to the east of the
modern city, several aqueducts, and the
Church of St Peter (St Peter's Cave Church, Cave-Church of St. Peter), said
to be a meeting place of an early Christian community.[13]
The majority of the Roman city lies buried beneath deep sediments from the
Orontes River, or has been obscured by recent construction.
Purchasing
silkworm cocoons in Antioch, circa 1895.
Between 1932 and 1939, archaeological excavations of Antioch were undertaken
under the direction of the "Committee for the Excavation of Antioch and Its
Vicinity," which was made up of representatives from the
Louvre Museum, the
Baltimore Museum of Art, the
Worcester Art Museum,
Princeton University, and later (1936) also the
Fogg Art Museum at
Harvard University and its affiliate
Dumbarton Oaks.
The excavation team failed to find the major buildings they hoped to unearth,
including Constantine's Great Octagonal Church or the imperial palace. However,
a great accomplishment of the expedition was the discovery of high-quality Roman
mosaics from villas and baths in Antioch, Daphne and Seleucia. One mosaic
includes a border that depicts a walk from Antioch to Daphne, showing many
ancient buildings along the way. The mosaics are now displayed in the Hatay
Archaeological Museum in
Antakya and
in the museums of the sponsoring institutions.
A statue in the
Vatican and a number of figurines and statuettes perpetuate the type of its
great patron goddess and civic symbol, the
Tyche (Fortune)
of Antioch – a majestic seated figure, crowned with the ramparts of Antioch's
walls, with the river Orontes as a youth swimming under her feet.
In recent years, what remains of the Roman and late antique city have
suffered severe damage as a result of construction related to the expansion of
Antakya. In the 1960s, the last surviving Roman bridge was demolished to make
way for a modern two-lane bridge.[citation
needed] The northern edge of Antakya has been growing rapidly over
recent years, and this construction has begun to expose large portions of the
ancient city, which are frequently bulldozed and rarely protected by the local
museum.
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