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Dura Europos
Q464266History
- Founded in about 303 BCE by Macedonian settlers; typical Seleucid design with a central, colonnaded street, agridiron plan, walls following the contours of the landscape, and a separate citadel on a hill (cf. Apamea, Chalcis, Cyrrhus, Diocaesarea, and Damascus.)
- In the 140s taken over by the Parthians; military function and station along the route from Babylonia and the Persian Gulf in the southeast to Palmyra and the Mediterranean in the west
- Iranian religious cults
- Temporarily occupied under Trajan
- Flourishing in the second century; civil center
- Mixed population: Macedonians, Greeks, Syrians, Iranians, Romans
- Syncretism of religions
- 164 Roman conquest by Lucius Verus: easternmost point
- Remilitarized in the Severan age
- Decline because changed course Euphrates
- 256 CE: captured by the Sasanians (a mine has been found)
Seleucid Buildings
- Old Citadel
- Old Palace
- Redoute
- Agora
- City walls with gates (especially the Palmyra Gate in the west)
- Temple of Artemis
Parthian Buildings
- Temples: Aphlad, Gad of Dura and Gad of Palmyra, Hadad and Atargatis, Palmyrene gods, Zeus Kyrios, Zeus Theos
- House of the Priest
Roman Buildings
- Roman baths (2x)
- Praetorium
- Palace of the Dux Ripae
- Amphitheater
- Temples: Mithras, Dolichenus, Roman archers
The End
- Synagogue (oldest picture of the Aqedah!)
- Christian House Church (pre-Constantinian)
- Sasanian siege ramp