Satellite Image of Antioch of Syria

Many locations only approximate.
Modern city    Roman Antioch
Zoom out to Asia Minor satellite view
Zoom way out to "Lands of the Eastern Mediterranean"

Antioch-on-theOrontes, also known as Antioch of Syria, was the largest of many cities named Antioch scattered throughout the Seleucid kingdom, including Antioch of Pisidia mentioned in Acts 13. The kingdom's founder, Seleucus I Nicator, established the city in the fourth century BCE, digging the canal that created the island and encircling both it and the city east of the Orontes with defensive walls.

As the city expanded beyond these narrow confines, it was laid out in the usual grid pattern of Hippodamus, with a major road running roughly north-south, intersected at right angles with a smaller, east-west artery. See the plan of the Roman city

Not much is left to see of ancient Antioch. If you visit the city, be sure to spend many hours at the archaeological museum, which has one of the best collections of ancient mosaics in the world. You will also want to visit the Grotto of St. Peter (S. Pierre), a cave believed by many to be the oldest Christian church in the world.

Want to go deeper?

The following are recommended to help you look deeper into the history and archaeology of Antioch of Syria.

Recommended for purchase:

Jerome Crowe – From Jerusalem to Antioch: The Gospel Across Cultures (Liturgical Press, 1997) – What happens when the gospel is carried from one world to another and a Christian community is born in a new culture? How does the dynamism of gospel reshape the culture that accepts it? How does that culture enrich the gospel with new ways of self-expression? This book explains what happened when Jewish missioners carried the Gospel from the Jewish world of Jerusalem into the Hellenistic world of Antioch to found the first "Christian" community. It presents the results of modern research on the church of Jerusalem and the church of Antioch.

Hatay Muzesi – Hatay Museum and Environs (1991)

Claude E. Fant & Mitchell G. Reddish – A Guide to Biblical Sites in Greece and Turkey (Oxford, 2003). Excerpt

Christine Kondoleon – Antioch: The Lost Ancient City (Princeton, 2000) – This lavish exhibition catalog brings to life Antioch. Featuring 118 objects excavated from the city's ruins, all reproduced in full color. Displays and describes the excavated artifacts--mosaics, sculpture, glass, metalwork, coins--within their architectural and cultural contexts, thereby evoking the street life as well as the domestic lives of Antioch's citizens.

CD-ROM: Turkey: Pictorial Library of Bible Lands (2004)

Online resources:

Edmond S. Bouchier – A Short History of Antioch: 300 B.C. – A.D. 1268 (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1921) – try the flip book version.

Christine Eslik – Current excavations

Sacred Destinations – "Antioch (Antakya)" – many pages, all excellent.

Christopher Ecclestone – "Antiochepedia" – This is perhaps the most complete site dedicated to the study of ancient Antioch of Syria. It has a wealth of material for understanding the ancient city and its archaeology and contains a helpful bibliography. CAUTION: This site is very slow in opening and refreshing.

Troels Myrup Kristensen. The Archaeology of Antioch, Part I – Kristensen is a post-graduate classical archaeology student at a university in Denmark, involved in an ongoing project: "Art & Sociel Identities in Late Antiquity."

Dick Osseman's excellent photos of Antakya-Hatay, the St. Peter's Grotto, and the Archaeological Museum's fabulous collection of ancient mosaics and other objects.


HOME  Newsletter  Shallows  Depths  Studylinks   DS Bookstore
About DS  Contact DS

© 2008 DeeperStudy.com | Steve Singleton, All Rights Reserved | Antioch of Syria Satellite Image