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Mysia (UK , US or ; ; ; ) was a in the northwest of ancient Asia Minor (, Asian part of modern ). It was located on the south coast of the Sea of Marmara. It was bounded by on the east, on the southeast, on the south, on the southwest, on the west, and the on the north. In ancient times it was inhabited by the , , and other groups.


Geography
The precise limits of Mysia are difficult to assign. The Phrygian frontier was fluctuating, while in the northwest the was only sometimes included in Mysia. The northern portion was known as "Lesser Phrygia" or (; ), while the southern was called "Greater Phrygia" or "Pergamene Phrygia". Mysia was in later times also known as Hellespontine Phrygia (; ) or "Acquired Phrygia" (; ), so named when the region was annexed to the ., Geographia, XII.5.3

Under , Mysia occupied the whole of the northwest corner of Asia Minor, between the and the to the north, and to the east, to the south, and the to the west.


Land and elevation
The chief physical features of Mysia are the two —Mount Olympus at (7600 ft) in the north and Mount Temnus in the south, which for some distance separates Mysia from and afterwards prolonged through Mysia to the neighbourhood of the Gulf of Adramyttium. The major rivers in the northern part of the province are the and its tributary the , both of which rise in and, after diverging widely through Mysia, unite their waters below the lake of Apolloniatis about from the Propontis. The Caïcus in the south rises in Temnus, and from thence flows westward to the , passing within a few miles of . In the northern portion of the province are two considerable lakes, Artynia or Apolloniatis (Abulliont Geul) and Aphnitis (Maniyas Geul), which discharge their waters into the Macestus from the east and west respectively.


Cities
The most important cities were Pergamon in the valley of the Caïcus, and on the . The whole sea-coast was studded with Greek towns, several of which were places of considerable importance; thus the northern portion included , and Abydos, and the southern , . Further south, on the Eleatic Gulf, were Elaea, Myrina and Cyme.


History
A minor episode in the cycle in has the Greek fleet land at Mysia, mistaking it for . wounds their king, , after he slays a Greek; Telephus later pleads with Achilles to heal the wound. This coastal region ruled by Telephus is alternatively named "Teuthrania" in Greek mythology, as it was previously ruled by King . In the , represents the Mysians as allies of Troy, with the Mysian forces led by (a prophet) and Chromius, sons of Arsinous. Homeric Mysia appears to have been much smaller in extent than historical Mysia, and did not extend north to the Hellespont or the Propontis. does not mention any cities or landmarks in Mysia, and it is not clear exactly where Homeric Mysia was situated, although it was probably located somewhere between the (to the northwest of Mysia) and Lydia/Maeonia (to its south).

A number of Mysian inscriptions have survived in a dialect of the Phrygian language, written using a variant of the Phrygian alphabet. There are also a small number of references to a Lutescan language indigenous to Mysia in sources.Titchener, J.B. (1926), Synopsis of Greek and Roman Civilization, Cambridge MA

Under the Persian Achaemenid Empire, the northwest corner of Asia Minor, still occupied by Phrygians but mainly by , was called "Phrygia Minor" – and by the Greeks "Hellespontos".

After Rome's defeat of Antiochus the Great in the of 192 to 188 BC, the area, which had been held by the , passed to Rome's ally, the , and, on the death of King in 133 BC, to Rome itself, which made it part of the province of Asia and, later, a separate proconsular , called " Hellespontus". William Smith, New Classical Dictionary of Biography, Mythology, and Geography, entry: "Mysia"

According to the Acts of the Apostles, the apostles Paul, and came to (or passed by) Acts 16:7 states , 'to Mysia' in most English translations, whereas Acts 16:8 states , generally translated 'passing by Mysia' and in some cases 'bypassing Mysia', e.g. Holman Christian Standard Bible; all references taken from BibleGateway.com accessed 23 September 2015 Mysia during Paul's second missionary journey. The narrative suggests that they were uncertain where to travel during this part of the journey, being "forbidden by the Holy Spirit to preach the word in ".

Shortly afterwards Paul had a vision of a "man of Macedonia" who invited the apostles to travel westwards to Macedonia.


Ancient bridges
The remains of several can still be found:


See also


External links
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