Ἀντιόχεια: Difference between revisions

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{{StrongGR
{{StrongGR
|strgr=from [[Antiochus]] (a Syrian [[king]]); Antiochia, a [[place]] in [[Syria]]: [[Antioch]].
|strgr=from [[Antiochus]] (a Syrian [[king]]); Antiochia, a [[place]] in [[Syria]]: [[Antioch]].
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{{Thayer
|txtha=Ἀντιοχείας, ἡ, [[Antioch]], the [[name]] ([[derived]] from [[various]] monarchs) of [[several]] Asiatic cities, [[two]] of [[which]] are mentioned in the N. T.;<br /><b class="num">1.</b> The [[most]] [[celebrated]] of [[all]], and the [[capital]] of [[Syria]], [[was]] [[situated]] on the [[river]] [[Orontes]], founded by [[Seleucus]] I ([[sometimes]] (cf. Suidas [[under]] the [[word]] [[Σέλευκος]], Colossians 3277b., Gaisf. edition) called) Nicanor ([[elsewhere]] (cf. id. Colossians 2137b. [[under]] the [[word]] Κολασσαεύς) [[son]] of Nicanor; [[but]] [[commonly]] Nicator (cf. Appian de rebus Syr., § 57; Spanh. de numis. diss. vii., § 3, vol. i., p. 413)), and named in honor of his [[father]] [[Antiochus]]. Many ἑλληνισται, Greek-Jews, lived in it; and [[there]] those [[who]] professed the [[name]] of Christ were [[first]] called Christians: Schenkel 1:141 f; (BB. DD. [[under]] the [[word]]; Conyb. and Howson, St. Paul, 1:121-126; [[also]] the [[latter]] in the Diet. of Geogr. [[under]] the [[word]]; Renan, Les Apotres, [[chapter]] xii.).<br /><b class="num">2.</b> A [[city]] of [[Phrygia]], [[but]] called in [[Antioch]] of [[Pisidia]] (or according to the [[critical]] texts the Pisidian [[Antioch]] ([[see]] Πισίδιος)) [[because]] it [[was]] on the [[confines]] of [[Pisidia]] ([[more]] [[exactly]] ἡ [[πρός]] [[Πισιδία]], Strabo 12, p. 577,8): BB. DD. [[under]] the [[word]]; Conyb. and Howson, St. Paul, i., 168ff).
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