Difference between revisions of "Antipatris"
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Revision as of 06:39, 12 October 2011
- SCHOLARLY AND FICTIONAL WORKS: see Category:Antipatris (subject)
- ANCIENT SOURCES: see Antipatris (sources)
Antipatris (Pegai / Aphek) was a town in Judah.
Overview
The ancient Philistine and then Israelite town of Aphek was renamed Pegai ("springs") in Hellenistic times.
Herod the Great turned it into a town (Antipatris) in honor of his father Antipater.
The Acts of Apostles reports that Paul and his guards stopped for the night in fortified Antipatris on their way from Jerusalem to Caesarea Maritima.
The city was destroyed in 363 CE by an earthquake. It was later used as a fort by the Crusaders, Arabs and Turks.
Antipatris in ancient sources
Antipatris in Scholarship
Antipatris in Fiction
References
- Antipatris / Moshe Kochavi / In: The Anchor Bible Dictionary (1992 Freedman), dictionary, 1:272-274