ACTS
The continued Life of Jesus
through the Apostles
Amphipolis
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City Wall with Gate, 5th century B.C.
Just north of the Aegean Sea sat Amphipolis, a city of
northeastern Macedonia. It was approximately 30 miles (45 km)
southwest of Philippi and 5 miles (8 km) inland of the port city
Eion.
The city was best known for its oil, timber, wine, figs, gold,
silver, and woolen textiles.
Thracians first founded this site, a strategic military and
commercial location, in the 5th century B.C. |
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Byzantine Basilica Mosaics
The Greek Archaeological Service has excavated Amphipolis since
1956.
Inscriptions, coins, remains of a Roman aqueduct, and classical and
Hellenistic tombs are among their finds. The walls, bridge, and
gymnasium have also been well preserved.
Five churches have been uncovered in which several floor mosaics
can still be seen, many showing representations of birds. |
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Amphipolis Lion
The Lion of Amphipolis was constructed in the 3rd or 2nd
century B.C. and may have honored Laomedon, companion of Alexander
the Great who became governor of Syria.
Reassembled in the 1930s, it sits in the city today, just as it
did when Paul came to the city during the 1st century A.D. Paul
came through Amphipolis with Silas during his second missionary
journey, traveling on the Ignatia Way from Philippi to
Thessalonica (Acts
17:1). |
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Stremones River
Amphipolis rested on a terraced hill at a bend in the Stremones
River, which drained into Lake Cercinitus. The river surrounded
the city on three sides, while a wall protected the city’s eastern
side.
The Ignatia Way, the main east-west Roman road traveling from
Asia to Italy, passed through the city along a bridge over the
Stremones in the 1st century A.D. Fossilized woodpiles remaining
from the bridge can be seen today. |
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