- Antinopolis
Antinopolis (Antinoöpolis) (Greek: polytonic|Ἀντινόου πόλις, Coptic Ansena, modern Sheikh 'Ibada) was a city founded at an older Egyptian village by the Roman emperor
Hadrian to commemorate his deified young beloved,Antinous , on the east bank of theNile , not far from the site inUpper Egypt whereAntinous drowned in130 A.D. Antinopolis was a little to the south of theEgypt ian village of Besa (polytonic|Βῆσσα), named after the goddess and oracle of Besa, which was consulted occasionally even as late as the age ofConstantine I . Antinopolis was built at the foot of the hill upon which Besa was seated. The city is located nearly opposite ofHermopolis Magna .History
During the
New Kingdom , the city was the location ofRamesses II 's great temple, dedicated to the gods of Khmun and Heliopolis. The city of Antinopolis exhibited theGraeco-Roman architecture ofTrajan 's age in immediate contrast with the Egyptian style. The city was the center of the official cult ofAntinous . It first belonged to theHeptanomis , but underDiocletian (286 A.D.) Antinopolis became the capital of the nome of theThebaid . As a cultural center, it was the native city of the fourth-century mathematicianSerenus of Antinopolis . Antinopolis was still a "most illustrious' city in a surviving divorce decree of569 A.D. [ [http://web.upmf-grenoble.fr/Haiti/Cours/Ak/Francogallica/Divorce_fran.htm "Une acte de divorce par consentement mutuel"] ] The city was abandoned around the 10th century A.D. It continued to host a massiveGreco-Roman temple until the 19th century, when it was destroyed.Relevance to Christian History
The city of Antinopolis, known in Coptic as Ansena, has a particular relevance to the
Christians ofEgypt .Christian historians assert that the location of the city was blessed by the visit of theHoly Family while inEgypt . A well, known as "The Well of the Cloud" is said to have sprung from the ground when babyJesus wanted to drink. The well is still found today, and it is the only fresh-water well in a region where all other wells produce salty water.Ansena is also important in
Egypt ianChristian history, because was in front of the city's governors that hundreds of thousands ofChristians were tortured and killed in the third and fourth centuries, in an attempt to contain the rapid spread ofChristianity inEgypt . In fact,Christians were brought to the city from every place in theRoman Empire for the renowned brutality of its governors. Some of theChristian martyr s killed in Ansena include Saint Dasya and Saint Arianus.In the reign of
Valens (364 -378 A.D.), Antinopolis became the seat of rival bishoprics, one Orthodox and one Arian.tructure and Organization
The city of Antinopolis was governed by its own senate and "prytaneus" or president. The senate was chosen from the members of the wards (polytonic|φυλαί), of which we learn the name of one – polytonic|Ἀθηναί̈ς – from inscriptions (Orelli, No. 4705); and its decrees, as well as those of the prytaneus, were not, as usual, subject to the revision of the nomarch, but to that of the prefect (polytonic|ἐπιστράτηγος) of the
Thebaid . Divine honours were paid in the Antinoeion toAntinous as a local deity, and games and chariot-races were annually exhibited in commemoration of his death and ofHadrian 's sorrow. (Dictionary of Antiquities, s. v. polytonic|Ἀντινόεια.)Archeological Finds
The earliest finds at the site date to the
New Kingdom , whenBes andHathor were important deities (ref. Princeton). A grotto, once inhabited byChristian anchorite s, probably marks the seat of the shrine and oracle, andGrecian tombs with inscriptions point to thenecropolis of Antinopolis. The ruins of Antinopolis attest, by the area which they fill, the ancient grandeur of the city. The direction of the principal streets may still be traced. One at least of them, which ran from north to south, had on either side of it a corridor supported by columns for the convenience of foot-passengers. The walls of the theatre near the southern gate, and those of the hippodrome without the walls to the east, are still extant. At the north-western extremity of the city was a portico, of which four columns remain, inscribed to Good Fortune, and bearing the date of the 14th and last year of the reign ofAlexander Severus ,235 .As far as can be ascertained from the space covered with mounds of masonry, Antinopolis was about a mile and a half in length, and nearly half a mile broad. Near the Hippodrome are a well and tanks appertaining to an ancient road, which leads from the eastern gate to a valley behind the town, ascends the mountains, and, passing through the desert by the Wádee Tarfa, joins the roads to the quarries of the Mons Porphyrites. (Wilkinson, "Topography of Thebes", p. 382.)
At the beginning of the nineteenth century, when
Napoleon ic surveys were made, a theater, many temples, a triumphal arch, two streets with double colonnades, illustrated in "Description de l'Egypte ", a circus, and a hippodrome nearby were still to be seen. Today there is little left: blocks of stone were rebuilt into the new sugar factories atEl-Rodah (ref. Princeton). Some excavations wrere undertaken by the University of Rome, 1965-68. Papyri from the site were edited and translated by J. W. B. Barns and H. Zilliacus.Notes
References
* [http://icarus.umkc.edu/sandbox/perseus/pecs/page.311.a.php Richard Stillwell, ed. "Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites", 1976:] "Antinopolis (Sheikh-'Ibada) Egypt"
*Ptol. iv. 5. § 61; Paus. viii. 9; Dion Cass. lxix. 11; Amm. Marc. xix. 12, xxii. 16; Aur. Vict. Caesar, 14; Spartian. Hadrian. 14; Chron. Pasch. p. 254, Paris edit.; It. Anton. p. 167; Hierocl. p. 730; polytonic|Ἀντινόεια, Steph. B. "s. v.", also Adrianopolis, Steph. B. polytonic|Ἁδριανούπολις)
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01564a.htm Antinoe] -Catholic Encyclopedia article on thetitular see
*Citation
year=2007
first=Simon
last=Corcoran
contribution=Two tales, two cities:Antinoopolis andNottingham
editor-first=John
editor-last=Drinkwater
editor2-first=Benet
editor2-last=Salway
title=Wolf Liebeschuetz reflected: Essays presented by Colleagues, Friends, and Pupils BICS Supplement 91
publisher=University of London, School of Advanced Study, Institute of Classical Studies
pages=193-209
isbn=9781905670048
**SmithDGRGExternal links
* [http://www.antinous.eu Antinous Homepage]
* [http://www.antinopolis.org The Temple of Antinous]
* [http://www.antinous.wai-lung.com/antinous_de_antinoe.htm Antinopolis Website]
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