Greek city of Thessalonica in Macedonia Bronze As 16mm (4.92 grams) Struck circa 88-21 B.C. under Roman domination Reference: HGC 3, 743; Moushmov 6607; AMNG III.2, no. 21 Laureate and bearded head of Janus. ΘEΣΣAΛONIKEΩN, Two Centaurs prancing, back to back, each holding branch.
Thessalonica, more anciently Therma, an ancient city in Macedonia, situated at the N.E. Extremity of the Sinus Thermaicus. Under the name of Therma it was not a place of much importance. It was taken and occupied by the Athenians a short time before the commencement of the Peloponnesian war (B.C. 432), but was soon after restored by them to Perdiccas. It was made an important city by Cassander, who collected in this place the inhabitants of several adjacent towns (about B.C. 315), and who gave it the name of Thessalonica, in honor of his wife, the daughter of Philip and sister of Alexander the Great. From this time it became a large and flourishing city. Its harbor was swell situated for commercial intercourse with the Hellespont and the Aegean; and under the Romans it had the additional advantage of lying on the Via Egnatia, which led from the W. shores of Greece to Byzantium and the East. It was visited by Apostle Paula about A.D. 53; and about 2 years afterwards he addressed from Corinth 2 epistles to his converts in the city. Thessalonica continued to be, under the empire, one of the most important cities of Macedonia; and at a later time it became the residence of the prefect, and the capital, of the Illyrian provinces. It is celebrated at this period on account of the fearful massacre of its inhabitants by order of Theodosius, in consequence of a riot in which some of the Roman officers had been assassinated by the populace.
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In ancient Roman religion and myth, Janus is the god of beginnings, gates, transitions, time, doorways, passages, and endings. He is usually depicted as having two faces, since he looks to the future and to the past. It is conventionally thought that the month of January is named for Janus (Ianuarius), but according to ancient Roman farmers’ almanacs Juno was the tutelary deity of the month.
Janus presided over the beginning and ending of conflict, and hence war and peace. The doors of his temple were open in time of war, and closed to mark the peace. As a god of transitions, he had functions pertaining to birth and to journeys and exchange, and in his association with Portunus, a similar harbor and gateway god, he was concerned with travelling, trading and shipping.
Janus had no flamen or specialised priest (sacerdos) assigned to him, but the King of the Sacred Rites (rex sacrorum) himself carried out his ceremonies. Janus had a ubiquitous presence in religious ceremonies throughout the year, and was ritually invoked at the beginning of each one, regardless of the main deity honored on any particular occasion.
The ancient Greeks had no equivalent to Janus, whom the Romans claimed as distinctively their own.
A centaur, or occasionally hippocentaur, is a mythological creature with the upper body of a human and the lower body of a horse.
The centaurs were usually said to have been born of Ixion and Nephele (the cloud made in the image of Hera). Another version, however, makes them children of a certain Centaurus, who mated with the Magnesian mares. This Centaurus was either himself the son of Ixion and Nephele (inserting an additional generation) or of Apollo and Stilbe, daughter of the river god Peneus. In the later version of the story his twin brother was Lapithes, ancestor of the Lapiths, thus making the two warring peoples cousins.
Centaurs were said to have inhabited the region of Magnesia and Mount Pelion in Thessaly, the Foloi oak forest in Elis, and the Malean peninsula in southern Laconia.
Another tribe of centaurs was said to have lived on Cyprus. According to Nonnus, they were fathered by Zeus, who, in frustration after Aphrodite had eluded him, spilled his seed on the ground of that land. Unlike those of mainland Greece, the Cyprian centaurs were horned.
There were also the Lamian Pheres, twelve rustic daimones of the Lamos river. They were set by Zeus to guard the infant Dionysos, protecting him from the machinations of Hera but the enraged goddess transformed them into ox-horned Centaurs. The Lamian Pheres later accompanied Dionysos in his campaign against the Indians.
Centaurs subsequently featured in Roman mythology, and were familiar figures in the medieval bestiary. They remain a staple of modern fantastic literature. The centaur’s half-human, half-horse composition has led many writers to treat them as liminal beings, caught between the two natures, embodied in contrasted myths, both as the embodiment of untamed nature, as in their battle with the Lapiths (their kin), or conversely as teachers, like Chiron.
The city of
Thessalonica in Macedonia
was founded around 315 BC by
King
Cassander of Macedon, on or near the site of the ancient town of
Therma and
twenty-six other local villages.
King
Cassander of Macedon named the new city after his wife
Thessalonike
, a half-sister of
Alexander the Great
. She gained her name (“victory of Thessalians”, from
Greek
:
nikē
“victory”) from her father,
Philip II
, to commemorate her birth on the day of his gaining a victory over
the
Phocians
, who were defeated with the help of
Thessalian
horsemen, the best in Greece at that time. Thessaloniki developed
rapidly and as early as the 2nd century BC, it had its first walls built, which
enclosed and protected the city. The city also came to be an autonomous part of
the Kingdom of
Macedon
, with its own parliament where a King was represented that could
interfere in the city’s domestic affairs.
Roman era
Further information: Roman Greece
After the fall of the Kingdom of
Macedon
in 168 BC, Thessalonica as it came to be called in Latin, became a
city of the
Roman Republic
. It grew to be an important trade-hub located on the
Via
Egnatia, the
Roman road
connecting
Byzantium
(later
Constantinople
) with
Dyrrhachium
(now Durrës in
Albania),
which facilitated trade between Europe and Asia. The city became the capital of
one of the four Roman districts of Macedonia while it kept its privileges but
was ruled by a praetor
and had a Roman garrison. Also for a short time in the 1st century
BC, Thessalonica even became capital for all the Greek provinces. Due to the
city’s key commercial importance, a spacious harbour was built by the Romans,
the famous Burrowed Harbour (Σκαπτός Λιμήν) that accommodated the city’s
trade, up to the 18th century. Later, with the help of silt deposits from the
Axios river,
land was reclaimed and the port was expanded. Remnants of the old harbour’s
docks can be found in present-day under Frangon Street, near the city’s Catholic
Church.
Thessaloniki’s
acropolis,
located in the northern hills, was built in 55 BC for security reasons,
following
Thracian
raids in the city’s outskirts at the time.
About 50 AD, while on his second missionary journey,
Paul the Apostle
reasoned with the Jews from the
Scriptures
in this city’s chief synagogue on three Sabbaths and sowed the
seeds for Thessaloniki’s first Christian church. During Paul’s time in the city,
both Jews and Greeks came to believe the
Gospel, as
well as some of the city’s leading women. However, because the remaining Jews at
the synagogue were furious with Paul for what he’d done in their community and
were also furious with those who had come to believe Paul’s message, the Apostle
and his traveling companions,
Silas and
Timothy
, were eventually sent out of Thessaloniki during the night by the
new Christian converts. From there the
church planters
went to
Veroia
, aka
Berea
, where the people in that city also heard and believed the Gospel.
This so enraged the Thessalonian Jews when they found out what Paul and his
companions had done, the Jews went to Berea and persecuted the evangelists in
that city also. The three men eventually continued their travels and ministry;
and, Paul wrote two
letters
to the new church at Thessaloniki, probably between 51 and 53, the
First Epistle to the Thessalonians
and the
Second Epistle to the Thessalonians
. These letters were to encourage the new
believers to persist in the faith in the face of strong opposition, to encourage
personal sanctification, to encourage them about those who had “fallen asleep,”
yet to warn about the Lord returning as a “thief in the night” and to correct
incorrect thinking about the coming
Antichrist,
among writing about other important matters.
In 306, Thessaloníki acquired a patron saint,
St. Demetrius
. He is credited with a number of miracles that saved the city
and was the Roman
Proconsul
of Greece, under the anti-Christian emperor
Maximian.
St. Demetrius was martyred at a Roman prison, where the
Church of St. Demetrius
lies today. The church was first built by the Roman
sub-prefect
of
Illyricum
, Leontios
, in 463. Other important remains from this period include the
Arch and Tomb of Galerius
, located in the city centre of the modern
Thessaloniki
.
In 390 Gothic troops under the commands of the Roman Emperor
Theodosius I
, led a
massacre
against the inhabitants of Thessalonica, who had risen in revolt
against the
Germanic
soldiers.
Macedonia or Macedon was an ancient kingdom on the northern periphery of Classical Greece and later the dominant state of Hellenistic Greece. It was ruled during most of its existence initially by the legendary founding dynasty of the Argeads, the intermittent Antipatrids and finally the Antigonids. Home to the Macedonians, the earliest kingdom was centered on the northeastern part of the Greek peninsula, bordered by Epirus to the west, Paeonia to the north, the region of Thrace to the east and Thessaly to the south.
The rise of Macedon, from a small kingdom at the fringe of typical Greek city states affairs, to one which came to control the fate of the entire Hellenic world, occurred under the reign of Philip II. With the innovative Macedonian army, he defeated the old powers of Athens and Thebes in the decisive Battle of Chaeronea in 338 BC and subdued them, while keeping Sparta in check. His son Alexander the Great pursued his father’s effort to command the whole of Greece through the federation of Greek states, a feat he finally accomplished after destroying a revolting Thebes. Young Alexander was then ready to lead this force, as he aspired, in a large campaign against the Achaemenid Empire, in retaliation for the invasion of Greece in the 5th century BC.
In the ensuing wars of Alexander the Great, he was ultimately successful in conquering a territory that came to stretch as far as the Indus River. For a brief period his Macedonian Empire was the most powerful in the world, the definitive Hellenistic state, inaugurating the transition to this new period of Ancient Greek civilization. Greek arts and literature flourished in the new conquered lands and advancements in philosophy and science were spread to the ancient world. Of most importance were the contributions of Aristotle, a teacher to Alexander, whose teachings carried on many centuries past his death.
After the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC, the following wars of the Diadochi and the partitioning of his short-lived empire, Macedonia proper carried on as a Greek cultural and political center in the Mediterranean region along with Ptolemaic Egypt, the Seleucid Empire, and the Attalid kingdom. Important cities like Pella, Pydna, and Amphipolis were involved in power struggles for control of the territory, and new cities were founded, like Thessalonica by the usurper Cassander, which is now the second largest city of modern day Greece. Macedonia’s decline of influence began with the rise of Rome until its ultimate subjection during the second Macedonian Wars.
The Roman province of Macedonia (Latin: Provincia Macedoniae, Greek: Ἐπαρχία Μακεδονίας) was officially established in 146 BC, after the Roman general Quintus Caecilius Metellus defeated Andriscus of Macedon, the last self-styled King of the ancient kingdom of Macedonia in 148 BC, and after the four client republics (the “tetrarchy“) established by Rome in the region were dissolved. The province incorporated ancient Macedonia, with the addition of Epirus, Thessaly, and parts of Illyria, Paeonia and Thrace. This created a much larger administrative area, to which the name of ‘Macedonia’ was still applied. The Dardanians, to the north of the Paeonians, were not included, because they had supported the Romans in their conquest of Macedonia.
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