Difference between revisions of "Category:Philadelphia (subject)"
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
==Related categories== | ==Related categories== | ||
*[[Decapolis]] (Canatha, [[Damascus]], [[Dion]], [[Gadara]], [[Gerasa]], [[Hippos]], [[Pella]], [[Philadelphia]], [[Raphana]], [[Scythopolis]]) | *[[Decapolis]] (Canatha, [[Damascus]], [[Dion]], [[Gadara]], [[Gerasa]], [[Hippos]], [[Pella]], [[Philadelphia]], [[Raphana]], [[Scythopolis]]) | ||
==Select Bibliography (articles)== | |||
*'''Amman''' / [[Adnan Hadidi]] / In: [[The Anchor Bible Dictionary (1992 Freedman), dictionary]], 1:189-192 | |||
*''' ''' / [[]] / In: [[The Eerdmans Dictionary of Early Judaism (2010 Collins / Harlow), dictionary]], | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 15:02, 24 January 2011
Philadelphia (now Amman, Jordan) was an Hellenistic polis, one of cities of the Decapolis.
Overview
The ancient capital of the Ammonites was conquered by the Assyrians, followed by the Persians, and then the Greeks. Ptolemy II Philadelphus turned it into a Hellenistic polis and renamed it Philadelphia. The city was conquered by the Seleucids in 218 BC and it gradually passed into the Kingdom of Nabataea.
After the Roman conquest in 63 BCE, the city became part of the Decapolis.
Later in 106 AD, when the Nabataean Empire was absorbed by the Romans, Philadelphia became part of the new Province of Arabia, and was connected to other cities in the province via the 'Via Nova Traiana' road that linked Aqaba with Damascus.
Philadelphia continued to flourish in the Byzantine period (when it was the seat of a diocese) and in the early Muslim period (when it was renamed Amman). A series of natural disasters then reduces the city to a small village, until the late 19th century. In contemporary times the city has expanded dramatically as the capital of new State of Jordan.
Philadelphia in ancient sources
Philadelphia in scholarship
Philadelphia in fiction
Related categories
- Decapolis (Canatha, Damascus, Dion, Gadara, Gerasa, Hippos, Pella, Philadelphia, Raphana, Scythopolis)
Select Bibliography (articles)
- Amman / Adnan Hadidi / In: The Anchor Bible Dictionary (1992 Freedman), dictionary, 1:189-192
External links
Pictures from the web
- Roman Theatre <Wikimedia>
- Odeon <Wikimedia>
- Temple of Hercules <Wikimedia>
This category currently contains no pages or media.