fbpx
Wikipedia

Apamea, Syria

Apamea (Greek: Ἀπάμεια, Apameia; Arabic: آفاميا, Afamia), on the right bank of the Orontes River, was an ancient Greek and Roman city. It was the capital of Apamene under the Macedonians,[1] became the capital and Metropolitan Archbishopric of late Roman province Syria Secunda, again in the crusader period.

Apamea
Greek: Ἀπάμεια
Arabic: آفاميا
View of Apamea ruins
Shown within Syria
LocationHama Governorate, Syria
RegionGhab plain
Coordinates35°25′05″N 36°23′53″E / 35.418°N 36.398°E / 35.418; 36.398
Typesettlement
History
BuilderSeleucus I Nicator
Foundedca. 300 BC
Abandoned13th century
CulturesHellenistic, Roman, Medieval Greek, Arab
Site notes
Conditionruins
OwnershipPublic
Public accessYes

Amongst the impressive ancient remains, the site includes the Great Colonnade which ran for nearly 2 km (1.2 mi) making it among the longest in the Roman world and the Roman Theatre, one of the largest surviving theatres of the Roman Empire with an estimated seating capacity in excess of 20,000.

The site is about 55 km (34 mi) to the northwest of Hama, Syria, overlooking the Ghab valley.

History edit

 
Contoured map of Apamea
 
Houses and shops along the Colonnade street, Apamea in 2002
 
Colonnade street, detail, Apamea

Hellenistic era edit

After the conquest of the region by Alexander the Great and the subsequent wars between his generals, and according to the new interpretation of a new historical and iconographic source for Hellenistic history, a mosaic of Apamea discovered in 2011, proposed by Olszewski and Saad,[2] the foundation of Pella, the Macedonian military camp (katoikia) took place in the fall 320 BC, just after the Treaty of Triparadeisos (320 BC) at the initiative of Antipater, and Cassander's inspiration. In view of this interpretation, the authors disagree with the earlier hypothesises attributing the foundation of Pella to Alexander the Great or to Antigonus I Monophthalmus. From about 300 BC Pella receive a new status of polis, was fortified and established as a city (polis) by Seleucus I Nicator who named it after his Bactrian wife, Apama, daughter of the Sogdian warlord Spitamenes.[3] The site was enclosed in a loop of the Orontes which, with the lake and marshes, gave it a peninsular form whence its other name of Cherronêsos. It was located at a strategic crossroads for Eastern commerce and became one of the four cities of the Syrian tetrapolis. Seleucus also made it a military base with 500 elephants, and an equestrian stud with 30,000 mares and 300 stallions.

After 142 BC, the pretender Diodotus Tryphon made Apamea the base of his operations.[4]

Q. Aemilius Secundus[5] did a population survey of the city and its territory which belonged to it in AD 6, in which he counted "117,000 hom(ines) civ(ium)" – 117,000 citizen human beings, a figure that has been interpreted as giving a total population of either 130,000 or 500,000, depending on methods used.[6]

In 64 BC, Pompey marched south from his winter quarters probably at or near Antioch and razed the fortress of Apamea when the city was annexed to the Roman Republic.[7] In the revolt of Syria under Quintus Caecilius Bassus, it held out against Julius Caesar for three years till the arrival of Cassius in 46 BC.[8] On the outbreak of the Jewish War, the inhabitants of Apamea spared the Jews who lived in their midst and would not suffer them to be murdered or led into captivity.[9] Apamea was briefly captured in 40 BC by the Pompeian-Parthian forces.

Much of Apamea was destroyed in the 115 AD earthquake, but was subsequently rebuilt.

Roman era edit

From 218 until 234 AD, the legion II Parthica was stationed in Apamea, when it abandoned support of the usurper Macrinus to the emperor and sided with Elagabalus' rise to the purple who then defeated Macrinus in the Battle of Antioch.[10] Apamea was destroyed by Chosroes I in the 6th century.[11][12]

During the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628, the city fell in 613 to Shahrbaraz and was in Sasanian hands until near the end of the war.[13]

Byzantine era edit

The Targum of Pseudo-Jonathan (Num. xxxiv. 11) has Apamea (אפמיאה)[14] for the city name Shepham as occurring in the Targumim Jerusalem and Neofiti.[15] Since Apamea virtually belonged to Rabbinic Palestine, the first-fruits brought by Ariston from that town were accepted for sacrifice in Jerusalem.[16]

Islamic era edit

Following the Muslim conquest of Syria, Apamea was partially rebuilt and known in Arabic as Afāmiya or Fāmiya.[11][12] The city was conquered by the Rashidun along with Al-Suqaylabiyah city after the battle of the Yarmuk.[17] Apamea was then used as an observation post to warn against enemy attack.[17]

It was settled by the Arab tribes of Bahra and Udhra. However, it only regained its importance under the rule of Aleppo-based Hamdanid dynasty.[12] Ruled by Khalaf ibn Mula'ib from 1095–1106, the city was taken by Tancred after Khalaf's murder by Assassins.[18] It was destroyed by an earthquake in 1152.[11]

Remains edit

 
Facade (portico).
 
An example of the ornamental ruins.

Many remains of the ancient acropolis are still standing, consisting probably of the remains of highly decorated temples of which Sozomen speaks;[19] it is now enclosed in ancient castle walls called Kalat el-Mudik (Kŭlat el-Mudîk); the remainder of the ancient city is to be found in the plain.

 
Museum, view of the courtyard, Apamea in 2002

The most significant collection of objects from the site, including many significant architectural and artistic objects, that can be seen outside of Syria are in Brussels at the Cinquantenaire Museum.

As a result of the civil war in Syria, the ancient city has been damaged and looted by treasure hunters.[20][21] In April 2017, Al-Masdar News published satellite photographs revealing the site was covered in hundreds of holes dug by treasure hunters seeking ancient artifacts.[22]

Great Colonnade edit

 
The Great Colonnade at Apamea

The Great Colonnade was situated along the main avenue of Apamea and ran for nearly 2 kilometres (1.2 mi), making it among the longest in the Roman world. It was rebuilt after the original, dating from the Seleucid Empire, was devastated along with the rest of Apamea in the 115 AD earthquake. Reconstruction started immediately and over the course of the second century the city was completely rebuilt, starting with the Great Colonnade.[23] The colonnade was aligned along the north-south axis, making up the city's "cardo maximus". Starting at the city's north gate, the colonnade ran in an uninterrupted straight line to the south gate. The northern third of the colonnade's stretch is marked by a monumental votive column that stood opposite the baths.[24] The colonnade passed through the centre of the city and several important buildings were clustered around it, including the baths, the agora, the Temple of Tyche, the nymphaeum, the rotunda, the atrium church and the basilica.[25] On either side of the street a 6.15 metres (20.2 ft)-wide colonnade ran its full length. The columns were 9 metres (30 ft) high and 0.9 metres (2 ft 11 in) in diameter. They stood on square bases of 1.24 m on a side and 0.47 m high. The columns display two main designs: plain and distinctive spiral flutes. Archaeologist Jean Lassus argues that the former dates back to the Trajanic period, and the latter to that of Antoninus Pius.[26] The colonnade's porticoes were paved with extensive mosaics along the full stretch of the colonnade.[24]

Under the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I, several parts of the colonnade were restored. The street was narrowed to 12 m by adding a walkway on either side. Several stretches of the street had their Roman pavement replaced with a new pavement made of squared blocks of limestone. The new pavement also covered a completely overhauled drainage system. Justinian's changes included erecting a monumental tetrastylon made up of four 9 m high columns with a metre-high capitals.[27] The city, was however, later sacked by the Sasanians under Adarmahan.[28]

A reconstructed section of the colonnade can be seen in the Brussels Cinquantenaire Museum.

Roman theatre edit

 
Great Hunting Mosaic from the Governor's residence, 414–420 AD

Originally built as a Hellenistic style theatre in the early Seleucid Empire, the theatre was expanded and remodelled in the early Roman period,[29] when the main stage and entrances were reorganized in a more typical Roman fashion. The 115 Antioch earthquake caused severe damage to the structure. It was rebuilt soon afterwards, under the patronage of both Trajan and Hadrian. The theatre was further expanded in the first half of the third century CE.[30] Under the Byzantine Empire the theatre's drainage basin was restructured and a qanat was built through the middle of the lower stage. By the late Byzantine period the theatre had stopped serving as a centre for theatrical performances. However, the theatre and its qanat continued to be an important water source during the Byzantine and Islamic periods.[31] The theatre was built into a steep hill overlooking the Orontes River valley.[32]

The theatre, along with the one at Ephesus, is one of the largest surviving theatres of the Roman Empire with an estimated seating capacity in excess of 20,000. The only other known theatre that is considerably larger was the Theatre of Pompey in Rome.[33] Much of its structure is in ruins due to architectural collapses and extensive quarrying in later epochs,[34] and only one-eighth of the site has been exposed so far.[33] One of the main features at the theatre is its water basin and the elaborate Roman piping system used in it. The recently excavated terracotta system is located along the eastern ground entrance and is well preserved.[35]

Great hunting mosaic edit

This mosaic, now in the Cinquantenaire Museum, Brussels, was discovered in 1935 in the reception room of what was probably the palace of the Roman governor of the province of Syria Secunda. Its area is 120 m².

The great mosaic dates from 415–420 AD and is amongst the most prestigious of this type of composition. It is comparable technically and thematically with mosaics in the Palace of the Byzantine emperors in Constantinople, of the same period.

An inscription at the entrance states: "During the most beautiful Apellion, the triclinium was rebuilt in the month Gorpiaios, third indict, in the year 851" (September, 539 AD).

Bishopric edit

Christianity came to the area within the first century. Bishops included:

  • Marcellus of Apamea (fl. 375)
  • Alexander of Apamea (fl. 431)
  • Julian of Apamea, saint and opponent of Montanism
  • Domnus (fl. 451)
  • Epiphanius (451/457–after 471)[36]
  • Isaac (ordained bef. 512, died c. 513/514)[37]
  • Stephen (in 512–516)[37]
  • Cosmas (in 512–516)[37]
  • Peter of Apamea, monophysite[38] (515/516–518/519)

Today a number of Christian denominations maintain titular sees for the town. These include

People edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ (Stephanus of Byzantium s. v.; Strabo xvi. p. 752; Ptolemy v. 15. § 19; Festus Avienius, v. 1083; Anton. Itin.; Hierocles)
  2. ^ 1. Marek Titien Olszewski, Houmam Saad, "Pella-Apamée sur l'Oronte et ses héros fondateurs à la lumière d’une source historique inconnue: une mosaïque d’Apamée", in: M. P. Castiglioni, R. Carboni, M. Giuman, H. Bernier-Farella (eds.), Héros fondateurs et identités communautaires dans l’Antiquité, entre mythe, rite et politique, Morlacchi University Press, Padoue,2018, pp. 365–416 (ISBN 978-88-9392-053-7)
  3. ^ not his mother, as Stephanus asserts; compare Strabo, p. 578
  4. ^ Strab. l. c.
  5. ^ Tombstone of Q. Aemilius Secundus, Livius.org 2019-08-27 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ David Kennedy (20 Nov 2013). Gerasa and the Decapolis. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 111. ISBN 9781472537737.
  7. ^ Josephus 'Ant. xiv. 3. § 2
  8. ^ Dion. Cass. xlvii. 26–28; Joseph. Bel. Jud. i. 10. § 10.
  9. ^ Josephus, Bell. Jud. ii. 18, § 5
  10. ^ Apamea in Syria in the Second and Third Centuries A.D. Jean Ch. Balty The Journal of Roman Studies Vol. 78 (1988), pp. 91–104 Published by: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies DOI: 10.2307/301452 Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/301452
  11. ^ a b c Hogarth, David George (1911). "Apamea s.v. 1" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). p. 159.
  12. ^ a b c Gibb, p. 215
  13. ^ Crawford, Peter (2013). The War of the Three Gods: Romans, Persians and the Rise of Islam. Pen and Sword. pp. 42–43. ISBN 9781473828650.
  14. ^ Moses Ginsburger, Pseudo-Jonathan (Thargum Jonathan ben Usiel zum Pentateuch) (Berlin, 1903), p. 296
  15. ^ Neofiti https://mg.alhatorah.org/Tanakh/Bemidbar/34.1#m7e0n6
  16. ^ Mishnah Ḥal. iv. 11
  17. ^ a b Qunduraq, Adib (2001). السقيلبية، سلوقوبيلوس (in Arabic). عكرمة للطباعة والنشر والتوزيع. pp. 17, 18, 40. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  18. ^ Wilken, Gesch. der Ks. vol. ii. p. 474; Abulfeda, Tab. Syr. pp. 114, 157.
  19. ^ vii. 15
  20. ^ Rebecca Ananda (26 May 2015). "The History and Culture I Saw in Syria Is Now Scarred by War". Huffington Post.
  21. ^ Andrew Lawler, "Satellites track heritage loss across Syria and Iraq", Science, Year 2014, Volume 346, n° 6214, pp. 1162–1163, DOI:10.1126/science.346.6214.1162
  22. ^ Shocking satellite images show illicit archeological excavation in Syria [1] 2017-10-19 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ Balty, 1988, p. 91.
  24. ^ a b Foss, 1997, p. 207.
  25. ^ Foss, 1997, p. 209.
  26. ^ Crawford; Goodway, 1990, p. 119.
  27. ^ Foss, 1997, p. 208.
  28. ^ Greatrex, Geoffrey; Lieu, Samuel N. C. (2002). The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars (Part II, 363–630 AD). Routledge. pp. 146–149, 150. ISBN 0-415-14687-9.
  29. ^ Finlayson, 2012, p. 308.
  30. ^ Finlayson, 2012, p. 309.
  31. ^ Finlayson, 2012, p. 310.
  32. ^ Finlayson, 2012, p. 292.
  33. ^ a b Finlayson, 2012, p. 278.
  34. ^ Finlayson, 2012, p. 285.
  35. ^ Finlayson, Cynthia (31 May 2012). . Popular Archaeology. Archived from the original on 4 July 2012. Retrieved 6 November 2012.
  36. ^ Michael Peppard, Mosaics from a Church in the Diocese of Apamea, Syria (463 CE) Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik Bd. 190 (2014), pp. 168-172
  37. ^ a b c Volker L. Menze, Justinian and the Making of the Syrian Orthodox Church (Oxford University Press, 2008), p. 82.
  38. ^ Peter, Bishop of Apamea.
  39. ^ Sāmī Nasīb Makārim (1974). The Druze faith. Caravan Books. ISBN 978-0-88206-003-3. Retrieved 12 September 2012.
  40. ^ Wahbah A. Sayegh (1996). The Tawhid Faith: Pioneers and their shrines. The Society. Retrieved 12 September 2012.

Sources and external links edit

  • GCatholic Latin titular see with incumbent biography links
  • GCatholic Melkite titular Metropolitan see with incumbent biography links
  • GCatholic Syrian Catholic titular Metropolitan see with incumbent biography links
  • GCatholic Maronite titular episcopal see with incumbent biography links
  • Suggestion to have Apamea recognized as a UNESCO world heritage site (in French)
  • Images by Michał Jacykiewicz
  • Photos of Apamea at the American Center of Research

Bibliography edit

  • Marek Titien Olszewski, Houmam Saad, "Pella-Apamée sur l'Oronte et ses héros fondateurs à la lumière d’une source historique inconnue: une mosaïque d’Apamée", in: M. P. Castiglioni, R. Carboni, M. Giuman, H. Bernier-Farella (eds.), Héros fondateurs et identités communautaires dans l’Antiquité, entre mythe, rite et politique, Morlacchi University Press, Padoue, pp. 365–416 (ISBN 978-88-9392-053-7)
  • William Smith (editor); Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography, "Apameia", London, (1854)
  • R. F. Burton and T. Drake, Unexplored Syria
  • E. Sachau, Reise in Syrien, 1883.

apamea, syria, post, roman, byzantine, history, apamea, modern, town, qalaat, madiq, apamea, greek, Ἀπάμεια, apameia, arabic, آفاميا, afamia, right, bank, orontes, river, ancient, greek, roman, city, capital, apamene, under, macedonians, became, capital, metro. For the post Roman Byzantine history of Apamea and the modern town see Qalaat al Madiq Apamea Greek Ἀpameia Apameia Arabic آفاميا Afamia on the right bank of the Orontes River was an ancient Greek and Roman city It was the capital of Apamene under the Macedonians 1 became the capital and Metropolitan Archbishopric of late Roman province Syria Secunda again in the crusader period ApameaGreek Ἀpameia Arabic آفامياView of Apamea ruinsShown within SyriaLocationHama Governorate SyriaRegionGhab plainCoordinates35 25 05 N 36 23 53 E 35 418 N 36 398 E 35 418 36 398TypesettlementHistoryBuilderSeleucus I NicatorFoundedca 300 BCAbandoned13th centuryCulturesHellenistic Roman Medieval Greek ArabSite notesConditionruinsOwnershipPublicPublic accessYes Amongst the impressive ancient remains the site includes the Great Colonnade which ran for nearly 2 km 1 2 mi making it among the longest in the Roman world and the Roman Theatre one of the largest surviving theatres of the Roman Empire with an estimated seating capacity in excess of 20 000 The site is about 55 km 34 mi to the northwest of Hama Syria overlooking the Ghab valley Contents 1 History 1 1 Hellenistic era 1 2 Roman era 1 3 Byzantine era 1 4 Islamic era 2 Remains 2 1 Great Colonnade 2 2 Roman theatre 2 3 Great hunting mosaic 3 Bishopric 4 People 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources and external links 8 BibliographyHistory edit nbsp Contoured map of Apamea nbsp Houses and shops along the Colonnade street Apamea in 2002 nbsp Colonnade street detail Apamea Hellenistic era edit After the conquest of the region by Alexander the Great and the subsequent wars between his generals and according to the new interpretation of a new historical and iconographic source for Hellenistic history a mosaic of Apamea discovered in 2011 proposed by Olszewski and Saad 2 the foundation of Pella the Macedonian military camp katoikia took place in the fall 320 BC just after the Treaty of Triparadeisos 320 BC at the initiative of Antipater and Cassander s inspiration In view of this interpretation the authors disagree with the earlier hypothesises attributing the foundation of Pella to Alexander the Great or to Antigonus I Monophthalmus From about 300 BC Pella receive a new status of polis was fortified and established as a city polis by Seleucus I Nicator who named it after his Bactrian wife Apama daughter of the Sogdian warlord Spitamenes 3 The site was enclosed in a loop of the Orontes which with the lake and marshes gave it a peninsular form whence its other name of Cherronesos It was located at a strategic crossroads for Eastern commerce and became one of the four cities of the Syrian tetrapolis Seleucus also made it a military base with 500 elephants and an equestrian stud with 30 000 mares and 300 stallions After 142 BC the pretender Diodotus Tryphon made Apamea the base of his operations 4 Q Aemilius Secundus 5 did a population survey of the city and its territory which belonged to it in AD 6 in which he counted 117 000 hom ines civ ium 117 000 citizen human beings a figure that has been interpreted as giving a total population of either 130 000 or 500 000 depending on methods used 6 In 64 BC Pompey marched south from his winter quarters probably at or near Antioch and razed the fortress of Apamea when the city was annexed to the Roman Republic 7 In the revolt of Syria under Quintus Caecilius Bassus it held out against Julius Caesar for three years till the arrival of Cassius in 46 BC 8 On the outbreak of the Jewish War the inhabitants of Apamea spared the Jews who lived in their midst and would not suffer them to be murdered or led into captivity 9 Apamea was briefly captured in 40 BC by the Pompeian Parthian forces Much of Apamea was destroyed in the 115 AD earthquake but was subsequently rebuilt Roman era edit From 218 until 234 AD the legion II Parthica was stationed in Apamea when it abandoned support of the usurper Macrinus to the emperor and sided with Elagabalus rise to the purple who then defeated Macrinus in the Battle of Antioch 10 Apamea was destroyed by Chosroes I in the 6th century 11 12 During the Byzantine Sasanian War of 602 628 the city fell in 613 to Shahrbaraz and was in Sasanian hands until near the end of the war 13 Byzantine era edit The Targum of Pseudo Jonathan Num xxxiv 11 has Apamea אפמיאה 14 for the city name Shepham as occurring in the Targumim Jerusalem and Neofiti 15 Since Apamea virtually belonged to Rabbinic Palestine the first fruits brought by Ariston from that town were accepted for sacrifice in Jerusalem 16 Islamic era edit Following the Muslim conquest of Syria Apamea was partially rebuilt and known in Arabic as Afamiya or Famiya 11 12 The city was conquered by the Rashidun along with Al Suqaylabiyah city after the battle of the Yarmuk 17 Apamea was then used as an observation post to warn against enemy attack 17 It was settled by the Arab tribes of Bahra and Udhra However it only regained its importance under the rule of Aleppo based Hamdanid dynasty 12 Ruled by Khalaf ibn Mula ib from 1095 1106 the city was taken by Tancred after Khalaf s murder by Assassins 18 It was destroyed by an earthquake in 1152 11 Remains edit nbsp Facade portico nbsp An example of the ornamental ruins Many remains of the ancient acropolis are still standing consisting probably of the remains of highly decorated temples of which Sozomen speaks 19 it is now enclosed in ancient castle walls called Kalat el Mudik Kŭlat el Mudik the remainder of the ancient city is to be found in the plain nbsp Museum view of the courtyard Apamea in 2002 The most significant collection of objects from the site including many significant architectural and artistic objects that can be seen outside of Syria are in Brussels at the Cinquantenaire Museum As a result of the civil war in Syria the ancient city has been damaged and looted by treasure hunters 20 21 In April 2017 Al Masdar News published satellite photographs revealing the site was covered in hundreds of holes dug by treasure hunters seeking ancient artifacts 22 Great Colonnade edit Main article Great Colonnade at Apamea nbsp The Great Colonnade at Apamea The Great Colonnade was situated along the main avenue of Apamea and ran for nearly 2 kilometres 1 2 mi making it among the longest in the Roman world It was rebuilt after the original dating from the Seleucid Empire was devastated along with the rest of Apamea in the 115 AD earthquake Reconstruction started immediately and over the course of the second century the city was completely rebuilt starting with the Great Colonnade 23 The colonnade was aligned along the north south axis making up the city s cardo maximus Starting at the city s north gate the colonnade ran in an uninterrupted straight line to the south gate The northern third of the colonnade s stretch is marked by a monumental votive column that stood opposite the baths 24 The colonnade passed through the centre of the city and several important buildings were clustered around it including the baths the agora the Temple of Tyche the nymphaeum the rotunda the atrium church and the basilica 25 On either side of the street a 6 15 metres 20 2 ft wide colonnade ran its full length The columns were 9 metres 30 ft high and 0 9 metres 2 ft 11 in in diameter They stood on square bases of 1 24 m on a side and 0 47 m high The columns display two main designs plain and distinctive spiral flutes Archaeologist Jean Lassus argues that the former dates back to the Trajanic period and the latter to that of Antoninus Pius 26 The colonnade s porticoes were paved with extensive mosaics along the full stretch of the colonnade 24 Under the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I several parts of the colonnade were restored The street was narrowed to 12 m by adding a walkway on either side Several stretches of the street had their Roman pavement replaced with a new pavement made of squared blocks of limestone The new pavement also covered a completely overhauled drainage system Justinian s changes included erecting a monumental tetrastylon made up of four 9 m high columns with a metre high capitals 27 The city was however later sacked by the Sasanians under Adarmahan 28 A reconstructed section of the colonnade can be seen in the Brussels Cinquantenaire Museum Roman theatre edit nbsp Great Hunting Mosaic from the Governor s residence 414 420 AD Main article Roman Theatre at Apamea Originally built as a Hellenistic style theatre in the early Seleucid Empire the theatre was expanded and remodelled in the early Roman period 29 when the main stage and entrances were reorganized in a more typical Roman fashion The 115 Antioch earthquake caused severe damage to the structure It was rebuilt soon afterwards under the patronage of both Trajan and Hadrian The theatre was further expanded in the first half of the third century CE 30 Under the Byzantine Empire the theatre s drainage basin was restructured and a qanat was built through the middle of the lower stage By the late Byzantine period the theatre had stopped serving as a centre for theatrical performances However the theatre and its qanat continued to be an important water source during the Byzantine and Islamic periods 31 The theatre was built into a steep hill overlooking the Orontes River valley 32 The theatre along with the one at Ephesus is one of the largest surviving theatres of the Roman Empire with an estimated seating capacity in excess of 20 000 The only other known theatre that is considerably larger was the Theatre of Pompey in Rome 33 Much of its structure is in ruins due to architectural collapses and extensive quarrying in later epochs 34 and only one eighth of the site has been exposed so far 33 One of the main features at the theatre is its water basin and the elaborate Roman piping system used in it The recently excavated terracotta system is located along the eastern ground entrance and is well preserved 35 Great hunting mosaic edit This mosaic now in the Cinquantenaire Museum Brussels was discovered in 1935 in the reception room of what was probably the palace of the Roman governor of the province of Syria Secunda Its area is 120 m The great mosaic dates from 415 420 AD and is amongst the most prestigious of this type of composition It is comparable technically and thematically with mosaics in the Palace of the Byzantine emperors in Constantinople of the same period An inscription at the entrance states During the most beautiful Apellion the triclinium was rebuilt in the month Gorpiaios third indict in the year 851 September 539 AD Bishopric editChristianity came to the area within the first century Bishops included Marcellus of Apamea fl 375 Alexander of Apamea fl 431 Julian of Apamea saint and opponent of Montanism Domnus fl 451 Epiphanius 451 457 after 471 36 Isaac ordained bef 512 died c 513 514 37 Stephen in 512 516 37 Cosmas in 512 516 37 Peter of Apamea monophysite 38 515 516 518 519 Today a number of Christian denominations maintain titular sees for the town These include Latin Catholic titular Metropolitan archbishopric Melkite Catholic titular Metropolitan archbishopric Syriac Catholic Catholic titular Metropolitan archbishopric Maronite Catholic titular bishopricPeople editAl Muqtana 11th century Ismaʿili Governor and a founder of the Druze Faith the primary exponent of the Divine call and author of several of the Epistles of Wisdom 39 40 Marinus praetorian prefect Archigenes physician Diodotus Tryphon official under King Alexander I Balas Aristarchus of Thessalonica bishop one of the Seventy Apostles Evagrius Scholasticus 6th century historian Iamblichus of Chalcis Neo Platonist philosopher Sopater of Apamea sophist and Neoplatonist philosopher Junias 1st century bishop Numenius of Apamea 2nd century philosopher Polychronius bishop and brother of Theodore of Mopsuestia Posidonius Greek philosopher and author 2nd 1st Century BCE Pseudo Oppian poet Sextus Varius Marcellus 3rd century Roman Equestrian and later governor of Numidia Husband of Julia Soaemias and father of Roman emperor Elagabalus Theodoret 5th century bishop See also editQalaat al Madiq modern city Apamea Babylonia List of ancient Greek citiesReferences edit Stephanus of Byzantium s v Strabo xvi p 752 Ptolemy v 15 19 Festus Avienius v 1083 Anton Itin Hierocles 1 Marek Titien Olszewski Houmam Saad Pella Apamee sur l Oronte et ses heros fondateurs a la lumiere d une source historique inconnue une mosaique d Apamee in M P Castiglioni R Carboni M Giuman H Bernier Farella eds Heros fondateurs et identites communautaires dans l Antiquite entre mythe rite et politique Morlacchi University Press Padoue 2018 pp 365 416 ISBN 978 88 9392 053 7 not his mother as Stephanus asserts compare Strabo p 578 Strab l c Tombstone of Q Aemilius Secundus Livius org Archived 2019 08 27 at the Wayback Machine David Kennedy 20 Nov 2013 Gerasa and the Decapolis Bloomsbury Publishing p 111 ISBN 9781472537737 Josephus Ant xiv 3 2 Dion Cass xlvii 26 28 Joseph Bel Jud i 10 10 Josephus Bell Jud ii 18 5 Apamea in Syria in the Second and Third Centuries A D Jean Ch Balty The Journal of Roman Studies Vol 78 1988 pp 91 104 Published by Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies DOI 10 2307 301452 Stable URL https www jstor org stable 301452 a b c Hogarth David George 1911 Apamea s v 1 Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed p 159 a b c Gibb p 215 Crawford Peter 2013 The War of the Three Gods Romans Persians and the Rise of Islam Pen and Sword pp 42 43 ISBN 9781473828650 Moses Ginsburger Pseudo Jonathan Thargum Jonathan ben Usiel zum Pentateuch Berlin 1903 p 296 Neofiti https mg alhatorah org Tanakh Bemidbar 34 1 m7e0n6 Mishnah H al iv 11 a b Qunduraq Adib 2001 السقيلبية سلوقوبيلوس in Arabic عكرمة للطباعة والنشر والتوزيع pp 17 18 40 Retrieved 1 January 2022 Wilken Gesch der Ks vol ii p 474 Abulfeda Tab Syr pp 114 157 vii 15 Rebecca Ananda 26 May 2015 The History and Culture I Saw in Syria Is Now Scarred by War Huffington Post Andrew Lawler Satellites track heritage loss across Syria and Iraq Science Year 2014 Volume 346 n 6214 pp 1162 1163 DOI 10 1126 science 346 6214 1162 Shocking satellite images show illicit archeological excavation in Syria 1 Archived 2017 10 19 at the Wayback Machine Balty 1988 p 91 a b Foss 1997 p 207 Foss 1997 p 209 Crawford Goodway 1990 p 119 Foss 1997 p 208 Greatrex Geoffrey Lieu Samuel N C 2002 The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars Part II 363 630 AD Routledge pp 146 149 150 ISBN 0 415 14687 9 Finlayson 2012 p 308 Finlayson 2012 p 309 Finlayson 2012 p 310 Finlayson 2012 p 292 a b Finlayson 2012 p 278 Finlayson 2012 p 285 Finlayson Cynthia 31 May 2012 Uncovering the Great Theater of Apamea Popular Archaeology Archived from the original on 4 July 2012 Retrieved 6 November 2012 Michael Peppard Mosaics from a Church in the Diocese of Apamea Syria 463 CE Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik Bd 190 2014 pp 168 172 a b c Volker L Menze Justinian and the Making of the Syrian Orthodox Church Oxford University Press 2008 p 82 Peter Bishop of Apamea Sami Nasib Makarim 1974 The Druze faith Caravan Books ISBN 978 0 88206 003 3 Retrieved 12 September 2012 Wahbah A Sayegh 1996 The Tawhid Faith Pioneers and their shrines The Society Retrieved 12 September 2012 Sources and external links edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Apamea nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Apamea GCatholic Latin titular see with incumbent biography links GCatholic Melkite titular Metropolitan see with incumbent biography links GCatholic Syrian Catholic titular Metropolitan see with incumbent biography links GCatholic Maronite titular episcopal see with incumbent biography links Suggestion to have Apamea recognized as a UNESCO world heritage site in French Images by Michal Jacykiewicz Photos of Apamea at the American Center of ResearchBibliography editMarek Titien Olszewski Houmam Saad Pella Apamee sur l Oronte et ses heros fondateurs a la lumiere d une source historique inconnue une mosaique d Apamee in M P Castiglioni R Carboni M Giuman H Bernier Farella eds Heros fondateurs et identites communautaires dans l Antiquite entre mythe rite et politique Morlacchi University Press Padoue pp 365 416 ISBN 978 88 9392 053 7 William Smith editor Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography Apameia London 1854 R F Burton and T Drake Unexplored Syria E Sachau Reise in Syrien 1883 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apamea Syria amp oldid 1216043021 Titular Syrian see, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.