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Difference between revisions of "Coele-Syria"

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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_33500" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_33500" /> ==
<p> (ἡ κοίλη Συρία; Vulg. ''Celesyria'' )'','' "the [[Hollow]] Syria," was (strictly speaking) the name given by the Greeks, in the times of the Seleucidae, to the remarkable valley or hollow (κοιλία ) which intervenes between Libanus and Anti-Libanus, stretching from lat. 33° 20' to 34° 40', a distance of nearly a hundred miles. As applied to this region the word is strikingly descriptive (see Dionysius, Perieg. 899-900). Thus a modern traveler observes: "We finally looked down on the vast green and red valley — green from its yet unripe corn, red from its vineyards not yet verdant — which divides the range of Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon; the former reaching its highest point in the snowy crest to the north, behind which lie the Cedars; the latter in the still more snowy crest of Hermonthe culmination of the range being thus in the one at the northern, in the other at the southern extremity of the valley which they bound. The view of this great valley is chiefly remarkable as being exactly to the eye what it is on maps — the ‘ hollow' between the two mountain ranges of Syria. A screen through which the [[Leontes]] (Litany) breaks out closes the south end of the plain. There is a similar screen at the north end, but too remote to be visible" (Stanley's Palestine, p. 399). The plain gradually rises towards its center, near which, but a little on the southern declivity, stand the ruins of [[Baalbek]] or Heliopolis. In the immediate neighborhood of Baalbek rise the two streams of the Orontes (Nahr-el-Asy) and the Litany, which, flowing in opposite directions to the north-west and the south-east, give freshness and fertility to the tract enclosed between the mountain ranges. Amyce, the name of the plain through which the Orontes flowed (τὸ Ἀμύκης πεδίον, Polyb. v. 59), is derived by Bochart from the [[Syriac]] עמיקא, Amica, which means [[Deep]] , and is nearly synonymous with the Greek ''Caele'' (''Geogr. Sac'' . I, 1, 1). </p> <p> The term [[Coele-Syria]] was also used in a much wider sense. In the first place it was extended so as to include the inhabited tract to the east of the [[Anti-Libanus]] range, between it and the desert, in which stood the great city of Damascus; and then it was further carried on upon that side of Jordan, through [[Trachonitis]] and Peraea, to [[Idumaea]] and the borders of Egypt (Strab. 16, § 21; Polyb. v. 80, § 3; Josephus, Ant. 1:11, 5). [[Ptolemy]] (v. 15) and Josephus (Ant. 13:13, 2) even place [[Scythopolis]] in Coele-Syria, though it was upon the west side of Jordan; but they seem to limit its extent southwards to about lat. 31° 30', or the country of the [[Ammonites]] (Ptol. v. 15; Josephus, Ant. 1:11, 5). Ptolemy distinctly includes in it the [[Damascus]] country. In the time of David, Caele-Syria was probably included in "Syria of Damascus," which was conquered by that monarch (&nbsp;2 Samuel 8:6), but recovered from [[Solomon]] by Rezon, the son of [[Eliadah]] (&nbsp;1 Kings 11:24). The possession of it was an object of many struggles between the Seleucidae and the kings of Egypt (Polyb. 1:3; 2:71; 3:1; v. 40; 16:39; 27:17). </p> <p> There can be little doubt that a part at least of Coele-Syria was included in that "Valley of Lebanon" (בַּקְעִת הִלְּבָנוֹן ) mentioned by Joshua (&nbsp;Joshua 11:17; &nbsp;Joshua 12:7), the extent of which has been too much restricted by recent geographers. The name "Valley of Lebanon" could scarcely be applied with propriety ''Exclusively'' to that section of the great valley which lies at the base of Hermon, at a considerable distance from the range of Lebanon. [[Doubtless]] [[Baal-Gad]] was situated "under Mount Hermon;" but we have reason to believe that the "Valley of Lebanon" includes the whole of that valley which separates the ridge of Hermon from that of Lebanon. It seems that at a subsequent period this valley was called by Amos, apparently in contempt, "the valley of idols" (בַּקְעִת אָוֶן, &nbsp;Amos 1:5). SEE AVEN. The name was most appropriate. The whole sides of the valley are thickly studded with old heathen temples. Mr. [[Porter]] visited no less than fourteen of them, and he heard of several others. Some of them were of- great size and splendor, such as those of Baalbek, Mejdel, Niha, and Hibbariyeh. This appears, in fact, to have been the chosen house of idolatry (Porter's Damascus, 1:12; 2:320; ''Hand-Book Of S. And P.'' p. 568, 570; Robinson, ''Later Bib. Res'' . p. 438, 492, 520). The modern name of the valley confirms the above view. It is called ''El-Bukaa'' , which is strictly the same as the Hebrews ''Bikah'' (בַּקְעָה ). </p> <p> In the apocryphal books there is frequent mention of Coele-Syria in a somewhat vague sense, nearly as an equivalent for Syria (&nbsp;1 [[Esdras]] 2:17; &nbsp;1 Esdras 2:24; &nbsp;1 Esdras 2:27; &nbsp;1 Esdras 4:48; &nbsp;1 Esdras 6:29; &nbsp;1 Esdras 7:1; &nbsp;1 Esdras 8:67; &nbsp;1 [[Maccabees]] 10:69; 2 Maccabees 3, 5, 8; &nbsp;2 Maccabees 4:4; &nbsp;2 Maccabees 8:8; &nbsp;2 Maccabees 10:11). In all these cases the word is given in the A. V. as "Celo- Syria," i.e. Coele-Syria. In &nbsp;Ezra 6:3, it is called simply "Syria." Under the emperor Diocletian, [[Phoenice]] and Coele-Syria formed one province, called [[Phoenicia]] Libanica. Under the present Turkish government the western part of Coele-Syria is in the pashalic of Saide, and the eastern in the pashalic of Damascus. (See [[Syria]]). </p>
<p> ( '''''Ἡ''''' '''''Κοίλη''''' '''''Συρία''''' ; Vulg. ''Celesyria'' ) '','' "the [[Hollow]] Syria," was (strictly speaking) the name given by the Greeks, in the times of the Seleucidae, to the remarkable valley or hollow ( '''''Κοιλία''''' ) which intervenes between Libanus and Anti-Libanus, stretching from lat. 33 '''''°''''' 20' to 34 '''''°''''' 40', a distance of nearly a hundred miles. As applied to this region the word is strikingly descriptive (see Dionysius, Perieg. 899-900). Thus a modern traveler observes: "We finally looked down on the vast green and red valley '''''''''' green from its yet unripe corn, red from its vineyards not yet verdant '''''''''' which divides the range of Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon; the former reaching its highest point in the snowy crest to the north, behind which lie the Cedars; the latter in the still more snowy crest of Hermonthe culmination of the range being thus in the one at the northern, in the other at the southern extremity of the valley which they bound. The view of this great valley is chiefly remarkable as being exactly to the eye what it is on maps '''''''''' the '''''''''' hollow' between the two mountain ranges of Syria. A screen through which the [[Leontes]] (Litany) breaks out closes the south end of the plain. There is a similar screen at the north end, but too remote to be visible" (Stanley's Palestine, p. 399). The plain gradually rises towards its center, near which, but a little on the southern declivity, stand the ruins of [[Baalbek]] or Heliopolis. In the immediate neighborhood of Baalbek rise the two streams of the Orontes (Nahr-el-Asy) and the Litany, which, flowing in opposite directions to the north-west and the south-east, give freshness and fertility to the tract enclosed between the mountain ranges. Amyce, the name of the plain through which the Orontes flowed ( '''''Τὸ''''' '''''Ἀμύκης''''' '''''Πεδίον''''' , Polyb. v. 59), is derived by Bochart from the [[Syriac]] '''''עמיקא''''' , Amica, which means [[Deep]] , and is nearly synonymous with the Greek ''Caele'' ( ''Geogr. Sac'' . I, 1, 1). </p> <p> The term [[Coele-Syria]] was also used in a much wider sense. In the first place it was extended so as to include the inhabited tract to the east of the [[Anti-Libanus]] range, between it and the desert, in which stood the great city of Damascus; and then it was further carried on upon that side of Jordan, through [[Trachonitis]] and Peraea, to [[Idumaea]] and the borders of Egypt (Strab. 16, '''''§''''' 21; Polyb. v. 80, '''''§''''' 3; Josephus, Ant. 1:11, 5). [[Ptolemy]] (v. 15) and Josephus (Ant. 13:13, 2) even place [[Scythopolis]] in Coele-Syria, though it was upon the west side of Jordan; but they seem to limit its extent southwards to about lat. 31 '''''°''''' 30', or the country of the [[Ammonites]] (Ptol. v. 15; Josephus, Ant. 1:11, 5). Ptolemy distinctly includes in it the [[Damascus]] country. In the time of David, Caele-Syria was probably included in "Syria of Damascus," which was conquered by that monarch (&nbsp;2 Samuel 8:6), but recovered from [[Solomon]] by Rezon, the son of [[Eliadah]] (&nbsp;1 Kings 11:24). The possession of it was an object of many struggles between the Seleucidae and the kings of Egypt (Polyb. 1:3; 2:71; 3:1; v. 40; 16:39; 27:17). </p> <p> There can be little doubt that a part at least of Coele-Syria was included in that "Valley of Lebanon" ( '''''בַּקְעִת''''' '''''הִלְּבָנוֹן''''' ) mentioned by Joshua (&nbsp;Joshua 11:17; &nbsp;Joshua 12:7), the extent of which has been too much restricted by recent geographers. The name "Valley of Lebanon" could scarcely be applied with propriety ''Exclusively'' to that section of the great valley which lies at the base of Hermon, at a considerable distance from the range of Lebanon. [[Doubtless]] [[Baal-Gad]] was situated "under Mount Hermon;" but we have reason to believe that the "Valley of Lebanon" includes the whole of that valley which separates the ridge of Hermon from that of Lebanon. It seems that at a subsequent period this valley was called by Amos, apparently in contempt, "the valley of idols" ( '''''בַּקְעִת''''' '''''אָוֶן''''' , &nbsp;Amos 1:5). SEE AVEN. The name was most appropriate. The whole sides of the valley are thickly studded with old heathen temples. Mr. [[Porter]] visited no less than fourteen of them, and he heard of several others. Some of them were of- great size and splendor, such as those of Baalbek, Mejdel, Niha, and Hibbariyeh. This appears, in fact, to have been the chosen house of idolatry (Porter's Damascus, 1:12; 2:320; ''Hand-Book Of S. And P.'' p. 568, 570; Robinson, ''Later Bib. Res'' . p. 438, 492, 520). The modern name of the valley confirms the above view. It is called ''El-Bukaa'' , which is strictly the same as the Hebrews ''Bikah'' ( '''''בַּקְעָה''''' ). </p> <p> In the apocryphal books there is frequent mention of Coele-Syria in a somewhat vague sense, nearly as an equivalent for Syria (&nbsp;1 [[Esdras]] 2:17; &nbsp;1 Esdras 2:24; &nbsp;1 Esdras 2:27; &nbsp;1 Esdras 4:48; &nbsp;1 Esdras 6:29; &nbsp;1 Esdras 7:1; &nbsp;1 Esdras 8:67; &nbsp;1 [[Maccabees]] 10:69; 2 Maccabees 3, 5, 8; &nbsp;2 Maccabees 4:4; &nbsp;2 Maccabees 8:8; &nbsp;2 Maccabees 10:11). In all these cases the word is given in the A. V. as "Celo- Syria," i.e. Coele-Syria. In &nbsp;Ezra 6:3, it is called simply "Syria." Under the emperor Diocletian, [[Phoenice]] and Coele-Syria formed one province, called [[Phoenicia]] Libanica. Under the present Turkish government the western part of Coele-Syria is in the pashalic of Saide, and the eastern in the pashalic of Damascus. (See [[Syria]]). </p>
          
          
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_2654" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_2654" /> ==
<p> '''''sē''''' -'''''lē̇''''' -'''''sir´i''''' -'''''a''''' (the King James Version Celosyria; Κοίλη Συρία , <i> '''''Koı́lē Surı́a''''' </i> , "hollow Syria"): So the [[Greeks]] after the time of [[Alexander]] the Great named the valley lying between the two mountain ranges, Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon. It is referred to in the Old [[Testament]] as נ , <i> '''''Biḳ‛ath ha''''' </i> - <i> '''''Lebhānōn''''' </i> , "the valley of Lebanon" (&nbsp;Joshua 11:17 ), a name the echo of which is still heard in <i> '''''el''''' </i> - <i> '''''Buḳā‛''''' </i> , the designation applied today to the southern part of the valley. This hollow, which extends about 100 miles in length, is the continuation northward of the Jordan valley. The main physical features are described under Lebanon (which see). The name, however, did not always indicate the same tract of territory. In [[Strabo]] (xvi.2) and Ptolemy (v.15), it covers the fertile land between <i> '''''Jebel esh''''' </i> - <i> '''''Sharḳy''''' </i> and the desert presided over by Damascus. In 1 Esdras 2:17; 2 Macc 3:8, etc., it indicates the country South and East of Mt. Lebanon, and along with Phoenicia it contributed the whole of the Seleucid dominions which lay South of the river Eleutherus. Josephus includes in Coele-Syria the country east of the Jordan, along with Scythopolis (Beisan) which lay on the West, separated by the river from the other members of the Decapolis ( <i> Ant. </i> , Xiii , xiii, 2, etc.). In Xiv , iv, 5, he says that "Pompey committed Coele-Syria as far as the river Euphrates and Egypt to Scaurus." The term is therefore one of some elasticity. </p>
<p> ''''' sē ''''' - ''''' lē̇ ''''' - ''''' sir´i ''''' - ''''' a ''''' (the King James Version Celosyria; Κοίλη Συρία , <i> ''''' Koı́lē Surı́a ''''' </i> , "hollow Syria"): So the [[Greeks]] after the time of [[Alexander]] the Great named the valley lying between the two mountain ranges, Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon. It is referred to in the Old [[Testament]] as נ , <i> ''''' Biḳ‛ath ha ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Lebhānōn ''''' </i> , "the valley of Lebanon" (&nbsp;Joshua 11:17 ), a name the echo of which is still heard in <i> ''''' el ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Buḳā‛ ''''' </i> , the designation applied today to the southern part of the valley. This hollow, which extends about 100 miles in length, is the continuation northward of the Jordan valley. The main physical features are described under Lebanon (which see). The name, however, did not always indicate the same tract of territory. In [[Strabo]] (xvi.2) and Ptolemy (v.15), it covers the fertile land between <i> ''''' Jebel esh ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Sharḳy ''''' </i> and the desert presided over by Damascus. In 1 Esdras 2:17; 2 Macc 3:8, etc., it indicates the country South and East of Mt. Lebanon, and along with Phoenicia it contributed the whole of the Seleucid dominions which lay South of the river Eleutherus. Josephus includes in Coele-Syria the country east of the Jordan, along with Scythopolis (Beisan) which lay on the West, separated by the river from the other members of the Decapolis ( <i> Ant. </i> , Xiii , xiii, 2, etc.). In Xiv , iv, 5, he says that "Pompey committed Coele-Syria as far as the river Euphrates and Egypt to Scaurus." The term is therefore one of some elasticity. </p>
          
          
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_71060" /> ==
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_71060" /> ==
<p> Howe of Syria), or '''''' </p> <p> valley between the Lebanons, about 100 m. long by 10 m. broad. </p>
<p> Howe of Syria), or </p> <p> valley between the Lebanons, about 100 m. long by 10 m. broad. </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==