Cilicia in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
si-lish'-i-a (he Kilikia): An important province at the
Southeast angle of Asia Minor, corresponding nearly with the
modern Turkish vilayet of Adana; enfolded between the Taurus
mountains and the Mediterranean Sea, with the Amanus range
on the East and Pamphylia on the West; chief rivers, the
Pyramus, Sarus, Cydnus and Calycadnus. The character of
Cilician history has been largely determined by the physical
features of the province. It is divided by nature into a
mountainous part to the West, called Tracheia, and a broad,
alluvial plain, hot and fertile, toward the East, termed
Campestris or Pedias. Cilicia has always been isolated from
its neighbors by land by its encircling mountains, save for
its two famous mountain passes, the "Syrian Gates," which
offer an easy road to Antioch and the South, and the
wonderful "Cilician Gates," which open a road to central and
western Asia Minor. Through these passes the armies and the
pilgrims, the trade and the travel of the centuries have
made their way. Alexander was one of the most renowned
leaders of such expeditions, and at Issus he met and
shattered the power of the Persian empire.
The early settlers of Cilicia are held to have been Semitic
Syrians and Phoenicians, but in the still earlier days the
inhabitants must have been Hittites. While few Hittite
remains have been brought to light in Cilicia proper, the
province was so surrounded by Hittites, and such important
works of Hittite art and industry remain on the outskirts of
the province, as at Ivriz, Marash, Sinjirli and Sakche
Geuzi, that the intervening territory could hardly fail to
be overspread with the same civilization and imperial power.
See Professor John Garstang's The Land of the Hittites.
Cilicia appears as independent under Syennesis, a
contemporary of Alyattes of Lydia, 610 BC. Later it passed
under the Persian sway, but retained its separate line of
kings. After Alexander the Seleucid rulers governed Cilicia
from Antioch. The disturbances of the times enabled the
pirates so to multiply and establish themselves in their
home base, in Cilicia, Tracheia, that they became the
scourge of the Mediterranean until their power was broken by
Pompey (67-66 BC). Cilicia was by degrees incorporated in
the Roman administration, and Cicero, the orator, was
governor (51-50 BC).
The foremost citizen of the province was Saul of Tarsus
(Acts 21:39; 22:3; 23:34). Students or pilgrims from Cilicia
like himself disputed with Stephen (Acts 6:9). Some of the
earliest labors of the great apostle were near his home, in
Syria and Cilicia (Gal 1:21; Acts 15:23,11). On his voyage
to Rome he sailed across the sea which is off Cilicia (Acts
27:5). Constantinople and Antioch may be regarded as the
front and back door of Asia Minor, and as the former was not
founded till the 4th century, Asia Minor may be regarded as
fronting during apostolic days on Antioch. Cilicia was
intimately connected with its neighbor province on the
South. The first Christian apostles and evangelists followed
the great highways, through the famous mountain passes, and
carried the religion of Jesus to Asia Minor from Antioch as
a base.
Armenians migrating from the North founded kingdom in
Cilicia under Roupen which was terminated by the overthrow
of King Levon, or Leo, by the conquering Turks in 1393. A
remnant of this kingdom survives in the separate Armenian
catholicate of Sis, which has jurisdiction over few
bishoprics, and Armenians are among the most virile of the
present inhabitants of the province.
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