The Decapolis (Greek: ) was a group of ten Greek Hellenization cities on the eastern frontier of the Greek and late Roman Empire in the Southern Levant in the first centuries BC and AD. Most of the cities were located to the east of the Jordan Rift Valley, between Judaea, Iturea, Nabataea, and Roman Syria.
The Decapolis was a center of Hellenistic culture in a region which was otherwise populated by Jews, Arab Nabataeans and Arameans. The cities formed a group because of their Greek language, culture, religion, location, and political status, with each functioning as an autonomous city-state dependent on Rome. They are sometimes described as a league of cities, although some scholars believe that they were never formally organized as a political unit.
In the time of the Emperor Trajan, the cities were incorporated into the provinces of Roman Syria and Arabia Petraea; several cities were later placed in Syria Palaestina and Palaestina Secunda. The Decapolis region is located in modern-day Jordan (Philadelphia, Gerasa, Pella and Gadara), Israel (Scythopolis and Hippos) and Syria (Raphana, Dion, Canatha and Damascus).
Capital of modern Jordan | Amman, Jordan | |
Gerasa | Jerash, Jordan | |
Gadara | Umm Qais, Jordan | |
Pella | West of Irbid | Tabaqat Fahl, Jordan |
Dion (Tell Ashari) | Sometimes also identified with Aydoun | Tell Ashari, Syria |
Raphana | Usually identified also with Raepta and Arpha | Ar-Rafi'ah, Syria |
Scythopolis | Only city west of the Jordan River | Beit She'an, Israel |
Hippos | Mentioned by Pliny as Dio Hippos, usually this entity is divided into Dion and Hippos. The Aramaic name of Hippos was Sussita | Sussita, Northern District |
Qanawat | A city rich on water, at the north-western slope of the Hauran (Mons Al-Sadamus, Jabal al-Druze) | Qanawat, Syria |
Damascus | Capital of modern Syria | Damascus, Syria |
Pliny also mentions in his enumeration important regions around and between the cities | ||
Trachonitis | the Lajat/Leja, including the surroundings from Al-Sanamayn (west) until the Ard of Batanea (Batanaea Plain) in the east of it. | el-Mushmije, Ezra, Khalkhale, Syria |
Paneas | The region around Banias/Caesarea Phillipi | Banias, Syria |
Abilene | The small realm of Lysanias, see Abila Lysaniou | Souq Wadi Barada, Syria |
Arca | The western part around the See of Galilee with Tarichaea (Greek language: Ταριχαία or Ταριχέα) and Philoteria at its southern end. | Al-Sinnabra, Yardenit, Israel |
Ampelloessa | Usually identified with Abila also known as "Abila Viniferos", 12 miles east of Gadara (see Onomasticon) and Capitolias | Abila, Beit Ras, Ard el-Karm, Jordan |
Gabe | Region of Gabe, later also known as Jabiyah | Muzeirib / Nawa, Syria |
In 63 BC, the Roman general Pompey conquered the eastern Mediterranean. The people of the Hellenized cities, who were under the rule of the Jewish Hasmonean Kingdom, welcomed Pompey as a liberator. When Pompey reorganized the region, he awarded a group of these cities with autonomy under Roman protection; this was the origin of the Decapolis. For centuries the cities based their calendar era on this conquest: 63 BC was the epochal year of the Pompeian era, used to count the years throughout the Roman and Byzantine periods.
The Romans left their cultural stamp on all of the cities. Each one was eventually rebuilt with a Roman-style grid of streets based around a central cardo and/or decumanus. The Romans sponsored and built numerous temples and other public buildings. The imperial cult, the worship of the Roman emperor, was a very common practice throughout the Decapolis and was one of the features that linked the cities. A small open-air temple or façade, called a kalybe, was unique to the region. The cities may also have enjoyed strong commercial ties, fostered by a network of new Roman roads. This has led to their common identification today as a "federation" or "league". The Decapolis was probably never an official political or economic union; most likely it signified the collection of city-states which enjoyed special autonomy during early Roman rule."Decapolis" in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East. Ed. Eric M. Meyers, S. Thomas Parker. Oxford Biblical Studies Online. Nov 14, 2016.
The New Testament gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke mention that the Decapolis region was a location of the ministry of Jesus. According to the Decapolis was one of the areas from which Jesus drew his multitude of disciples, attracted by His "healing all kinds of sickness". The Decapolis was one of the few regions where Jesus travelled in which were in the majority: most of Jesus' ministry focused on teaching to Jews. Mark 5:1-20 emphasizes the Decapolis' gentile character when Jesus encounters a herd of pigs, an animal forbidden by Kashrut, the Jewish dietary laws. A demon-possessed man healed by Jesus in this passage asks to be included among the disciples who traveled with Jesus; but Jesus does not permit him, as he wanted him to tell his friends what the Lord had done and instructs him to remain in the Decapolis region.
The Roman and Byzantine Empire Decapolis region was influenced and gradually taken over by Christianity. Some cities were more receptive than others to the new religion. Pella was a base for some of the earliest church leaders (Eusebius reports that the Apostle fled there to escape the First Jewish–Roman War). In other cities, paganism persisted long into the Byzantine era. Eventually, however, the region became almost entirely Christian, and most of the cities served as seats of .
Most of the cities continued into the late Roman and Byzantine periods. Some were abandoned in the years following Palestine's conquest by the Rashidun Caliphate in 641, but other cities continued to be inhabited long into the Islamic period.
The cities acted as centers for the diffusion of Hellenistic culture. Some local deities began to be called by the name Zeus, from the chief Greek god. Meanwhile, in some cities Greeks began worshipping these local "Zeus" deities alongside their own Zeus Olympios. There is evidence that the colonists adopted the worship of other Semitic gods, including deities and the chief Nabatean god, Dushara (worshipped under his Hellenized name, Dusares). The worship of these Semitic gods is attested in coins and inscriptions from the cities.
|
|