Orthosias in Phoenicia

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File:Monnaie - Bronze, Orthosia, Phénicie, Élagabale - btv1b8536329h (2 of 2).jpg
A coin of Orthosia, depicting the temple of Astarte and Astarte herself standing, with a river god of Nahr el bared under her foot[1]
File:Monnaie - Bronze, Orthosia, Phénicie, Auguste - btv1b8473742p (2 of 2).jpg
A coin of Orthosia[2]

Orthosias in Phoenicia or Orthosia (Template:Langx)[3] was a Phoenician town near Nahr el Bared river.[4] Administratively, it was located in the Roman province of Phoenicia PrimaTemplate:Clarification needed, and was a bishopric that was a suffragan of Tyre.

History and geography

The city is mentioned for the first time in 1 Maccabees, 15:37, as a Phœnician port;[5][6] Pliny[7] places it between Tripoli, on the south, and the River Eleutherus, on the north; Strabo,[8] near the Eleutherus; Peutinger's Table, agreeing with Hierocles, George of Cyprus, and others, indicates it between Tripoli and Antaradus.

The discovery on the banks of the Eleutherus of Orthosian coins, dating from Antoninus Pius and bearing figures of Astarte, led to the identification of the site of Orthosias near the Nahr al-Bared river at a spot marked by ruins, called Bordj Hakmon el-Yehoudi.

Bishops

Le Quien[9] mentions four bishops, beginning with Phosphorus in the fifth century. Two Latin titulars of the fourteenth century appear in Eubel.[10] In the Notitiae Episcopatuum of Antioch for the 6th century[11] Orthosias is a suffragan of Tyre, while in that of the 10th century (op. cit., X, 97) it is confused with Antaradus or Tortosa.

Notes

  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. For the type of this coin, see Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  3. Strabo, Geography, 14.5.3
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. D. V., Orthosias.
  6. Septuagint, 1 Maccabees, 37
  7. Hist. Nat., V, xvii.
  8. Geographia, XVI, ii, 12, 15.
  9. Oriens Christianus, II, 825.
  10. "Hierarchia cath. medii ævi", I, 396.
  11. "Échos d'Orient", X, 145.

References

Attribution

External links