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Difference between revisions of "Coos"

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== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_15832" /> ==
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_15832" /> ==
<p> [[A]] small island of the [[Grecian]] archipelago, at a short distance from the southwest point of Asia Minor. Paul passed it in his voyage to Jerusalem, &nbsp;Acts 21:1 . It is now called Stanchio. It was celebrated for its fertility, for wine and silkworms, and for the manufacture of silk and cotton of a beautiful texture. </p>
<p> A small island of the [[Grecian]] archipelago, at a short distance from the southwest point of Asia Minor. Paul passed it in his voyage to Jerusalem, &nbsp;Acts 21:1 . It is now called Stanchio. It was celebrated for its fertility, for wine and silkworms, and for the manufacture of silk and cotton of a beautiful texture. </p>
          
          
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_72134" /> ==
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_72134" /> ==
<p> '''Co'os.''' &nbsp;Acts 21:1. ''See '' '''Cos''' ''.'' </p>
<p> '''Co'os.''' &nbsp;Acts 21:1. ''See '' [[Cos]] ''.'' </p>
          
          
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31089" /> ==
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31089" /> ==
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== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_39224" /> ==
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_39224" /> ==
[[Cos]]
Cos
          
          
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_34753" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_34753" /> ==
<p> [or rather Cos, as it is usually written] (Κῶς, contracted for Κόως, Anglicized "Coos" only in &nbsp;Acts 21:1), a small island (about 80 stadia in circumference, [[Strabo]] 10:488), one of the Sporades, in the [[''A'']] Egean Sea, near the coast of [[Caria]] in Asia Minor, and almost between the promontories on which the cities [[Cnidus]] and [[Halicarnassus]] were situated (Pliny v. 36). Its more ancient names were Cea, Staphylus, Nymphcea, and Meropis, of which the last was the most common (Thucyd. 8:41). [[Homer]] mentions it as a populous settlement (Il. 2:184; 14:255), no doubt of Dorian origin. Its fertility is attested by its celebrity for wine (Pliny 15:18; 17:30), its costly ointments (Athen. 15:688), and its fabrics of a transparent texture (Horace, Od. 4:13, 7; Tibull. 2:4, 6). It was the birthplace of Hippocrates. "It is specified, in the edict which resulted from the communications of Simon Maccabeus with Rome, as one of the places which contained [[Jewish]] residents (&nbsp;1 [[Maccabees]] 15:23). Josephus, quoting Strabo, mentions that the [[Jews]] had a great amount of treasure stored there during the Mithridatic war (Ant. 14:7, 2). From the same source we learn that [[Julius]] [[Caesar]] issued an edict in favor of the Jews of [[Cos]] (ib. 10, 15). Herod the Great conferred many favors on the island (Joseph. War, 1:21, 11); and an inscription in Bockh (No. 2502) associates it with Herod the Tetrarch. The apostle Paul, on the return from his third missionary journey, passed the night here, after sailing from Miletus. The next day he went on to [[Rhodes]] (&nbsp;Acts 21:1). The proximity of Cos to these two important places, and to Cnidus, and its position at the entrance to the Archipelago from the east, made it an island of considerable consequence. It was celebrated also for a temple of [[''A'']] Esculapius, to which a school of physicians was attached, and which was virtually, from its votive models, a museum of anatomy and pathology. The emperor [[Claudius]] bestowed upon Cos the privileges of a free state (''Tac. Ann'' . 12:61). The chief town (of the same name) was on the [[N.E.,]] near a promontory called Scandarium, and perhaps it is to the town that reference is made in the Acts (''l. c.'' )" (Smith). It is now called ''Stazco'' or ''Stanchio'' (a corruption of ἐς τὰν Κῶ ), and presents to the view fine plantations of lemon-trees, intermixed with stately maples. Its population is about eight thousand, who mostly profess the Greek religion (Turner's Tour in the Levant, 3, 41). "There is a monograph on Cos by Kiuster (De Co Insula, Halle, 1833), and a very useful paper on the subject by Col. Leake (in the Trans. of the [[Royal]] Soc. of Literature, vol. 1, second series). An account of the island will be found in Clarke's Travels (vol. 2, pt. 1, p. 196-213, and vol. 2, pt. 2, p. 321-333); but the best description is in Ross (Reisen nach Kos, Halicarnassus, u. w. Halle, 1852, with which his Reisen auf den Griech. Insein should be compared, vol. 2. [1843], p. 86-l2; vol. 3. [1845], p. 126-139)" (Smith). See also the [[Penny]] Cyclopaedia and Smith's Dict. of Class. Geogr. s.v. Cos. </p>
<p> [or rather Cos, as it is usually written] ( '''''Κῶς''''' , contracted for '''''Κόως''''' , Anglicized "Coos" only in &nbsp;Acts 21:1), a small island (about 80 stadia in circumference, [[Strabo]] 10:488), one of the Sporades, in the ''A'' Egean Sea, near the coast of [[Caria]] in Asia Minor, and almost between the promontories on which the cities [[Cnidus]] and [[Halicarnassus]] were situated (Pliny v. 36). Its more ancient names were Cea, Staphylus, Nymphcea, and Meropis, of which the last was the most common (Thucyd. 8:41). [[Homer]] mentions it as a populous settlement (Il. 2:184; 14:255), no doubt of Dorian origin. Its fertility is attested by its celebrity for wine (Pliny 15:18; 17:30), its costly ointments (Athen. 15:688), and its fabrics of a transparent texture (Horace, Od. 4:13, 7; Tibull. 2:4, 6). It was the birthplace of Hippocrates. "It is specified, in the edict which resulted from the communications of Simon Maccabeus with Rome, as one of the places which contained [[Jewish]] residents (&nbsp;1 [[Maccabees]] 15:23). Josephus, quoting Strabo, mentions that the [[Jews]] had a great amount of treasure stored there during the Mithridatic war (Ant. 14:7, 2). From the same source we learn that [[Julius]] [[Caesar]] issued an edict in favor of the Jews of Cos (ib. 10, 15). Herod the Great conferred many favors on the island (Joseph. War, 1:21, 11); and an inscription in Bockh (No. 2502) associates it with Herod the Tetrarch. The apostle Paul, on the return from his third missionary journey, passed the night here, after sailing from Miletus. The next day he went on to [[Rhodes]] (&nbsp;Acts 21:1). The proximity of Cos to these two important places, and to Cnidus, and its position at the entrance to the Archipelago from the east, made it an island of considerable consequence. It was celebrated also for a temple of ''A'' Esculapius, to which a school of physicians was attached, and which was virtually, from its votive models, a museum of anatomy and pathology. The emperor [[Claudius]] bestowed upon Cos the privileges of a free state ( ''Tac. Ann'' . 12:61). The chief town (of the same name) was on the N.E., near a promontory called Scandarium, and perhaps it is to the town that reference is made in the Acts ( [[''L. C'']]  )" (Smith). It is now called ''Stazco'' or ''Stanchio'' (a corruption of '''''Ἐς''''' '''''Τὰν''''' '''''Κῶ''''' ), and presents to the view fine plantations of lemon-trees, intermixed with stately maples. Its population is about eight thousand, who mostly profess the Greek religion (Turner's Tour in the Levant, 3, 41). "There is a monograph on Cos by Kiuster (De Co Insula, Halle, 1833), and a very useful paper on the subject by Col. Leake (in the Trans. of the [[Royal]] Soc. of Literature, vol. 1, second series). An account of the island will be found in Clarke's Travels (vol. 2, pt. 1, p. 196-213, and vol. 2, pt. 2, p. 321-333); but the best description is in Ross (Reisen nach Kos, Halicarnassus, u. w. Halle, 1852, with which his Reisen auf den Griech. Insein should be compared, vol. 2. [1843], p. 86-l2; vol. 3. [1845], p. 126-139)" (Smith). See also the [[Penny]] Cyclopaedia and Smith's Dict. of Class. Geogr. s.v. Cos. </p>
          
          
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15391" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15391" /> ==