Assos in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
as'-os (Assos): An ancient city of Mysia in the Roman
province of Asia, at which, according to Acts 20:13, Paul
and Luke rested while on their way from Troas to Mitylene.
Standing upon a conical-shaped rock on the southern coast of
the Troad, it occupied one of the finest sites in Asia. The
rock is about 700 ft. high; its sides are covered with
terraces, both natural and artificial, and so steep is it
that Stratoricus wrote of it: "If you wish to hasten your
death, try and climb Assos." The view from the summit is
extensive and magnificent.
The city, which is very ancient, is said to have been
rounded by the Aeolians, and to have always been singularly
Greek. As early as the 5th century BC it struck its own
coins, and its coinage system continued until 235 AD. One of
its early rulers or tyrants was Hermeas, a eunuch, once a
slave, who gave his niece in marriage to Aristotle. There
the great Greek philosopher lived three years, from 348 to
345 BC. During the time of the kings of Pergamus, the city
bore the name of Apollonia. To the Byzantines it was known
as Machramion, and at present the town, which has dwindled
in importance under Turkish rule, is called Bekhram, a
Turkish corruption of the Byzantine name.
The ruins of Assos are among the most imposing in Asia
Minor, and yet they have long served as a quarry; from its
public buildings the stones for the Constantinople docks
were taken. The Turkish sultan Murad II presented the many
beautiful bas-reliefs of the Doric temple of Athene to the
French government, which are now preserved in the Louvre.
The ruins were carefully explored and partially excavated in
1882-83 by Mr. Clarke for the Archaeological Institute of
America, and the entire plan of the ancient city is clear.
Upon the very summit of the hill stood the temple of Athena
which is said to have been erected about 470 BC. Among its
ruins Clarke found eight other bas-reliefs which are now in
the Boston Museum and which possess a special interest
because of their connection between the art of the Orient
and of Greece. Upon the several natural terraces of the hill
which have been enlarged by artificial means, stood the many
public buildings, as the gymnasium, the public treasury, the
baths, the market place and theater, of which but little now
remains. The city was surrounded by a double wall which in
places is still well preserved. The inner wall of dressed
stones laid without mortar, and filled with loose stones, is
8 ft. thick, and the larger outer wall was protected with
towers at intervals of 60 ft. The ancient road leading to
Troas was well paved. The harbor from which Paul sailed has
now been filled up and is covered with gardens, but at its
side is the modern harbor protected by an artificial mole,
about which are clustered the few houses bearing the name of
Bekhram. Upon the summit of the hill, by the ruins of the
temple, are cisterns, a Turkish fortress and a Byzantine
church which has been converted into a mosque. Without the
city walls is a necropolis. Its many sarcophagi of all ages
and sizes and shapes are made of the native trachyte stone
which, so the ancients believed, possessed the quality of
consuming the bodies buried in it. The stone is the famous
"Lapis Assius," or the flesh-eating, hence the word
sarcophagus. In former times wheat was raised extensively in
the fields about Assos, but now valonia, or acorn cups, form
the chief article for export.
E. J. Banks
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