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Apamea
Q617550Apamea: Hellenistic city in Syria.
Hellenistic City
Apamea, situated in the plain of the Orontes, consisted of a straight and wide main street (now called the "Colonnaded Street"), walls that followed a course determined by the shape of the site, and a separate citadel on a hill. It was therefore a typical Macedonian colony, as could be expected from a town that belonged to the Syrian tetrapolis (Antioch, Seleucia, Laodicea, Apamea), which was created by Seleucus I Nicator in abour 300 BCE. The city, which had a surface of about 250 hectares, was named after his Iranian wife Apame.
- Earlier settlement, Pharnace, renamed Pella by Alexander the Great
- Citadel may be even older: founded by king Irhuleni of Hamath, mid-ninth century
- After Seleucus: satrapal residence; the plain used for the Seleucid war elephants
- Military school; Seleucid treasury
- 188 BCE: Peace of Apamea
- Eclipsed by Antioch
- Taken by the Romans in 64; citadel razed
Roman City
- 115 Earthquake; rebuilt by Trajan (a/o North Gate, Roman Baths)
- 129 Hadrian visits Apamea
- Colonnaded Street: completed in c.180; 1800 meters long, 37½ meters wide
- Birthplace of Sex. Varius Marcellus and Julia Soeamias, parents of Heliogabalus
- Tombstones of legionaries, especially IIII Flavia and II Parthica
- 256 Captured by Sasanian king Shapur I
- Neoplatonic philosophers (Numenius, Iamblichus)
- 281 Revolt of Saturninus
- 392 Synagogue rebuilt
Late Antiquity
- c.410 Capital of the province of Syria Secunda; the Hunters Mosaic was discovered in what must have been the audience hall of the Roman governor
- 413 Byzantine bishopric; center of the Jacobite Monophysites; relic of the True Cross (attracts pilgrims)
- 526, 528 earthquakes
- 540 Sacked by the Sasanian Persians
- 573 Sacked by the Sasanian Persians
- 574 (or 566) Justin II brings the relic of the True Cross to Constantinople
- 612-628 Occupied by the Sasanians
- Arab conquest; remains importants as center of Jacobite Monophysitism