Crete in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
kret (Krete, ethnic Kretes, Acts 2:11; Tit 1:12): An island
bounding the Aegean Sea on the South. It stretches from 34
degrees 50' to 35 degrees 40' North latitude and from 23
degrees 30' to 26 degrees 20' East long. With Cythera on the
North and Carpathos and Rhodos on the Northeast, it forms a
continuous bridge between Greece and Asia Minor. The center
of the island is formed by a mountain chain rising to a
height of 8,193 ft. in Mt. Ida, and fringed with low valleys
beside the coast. There are no considerable rivers; the
largest, the Metropole, on the South, is a tiny stream,
fordable anywhere. An island of considerable extent (156
miles long, and from 7 to 30 miles broad), in several
districts very fertile and possessing one or two good
harbors, it seems marked out by its position for an
important role in the history of the eastern Mediterranean.
But never since an age which was already legendary when
Greek history began has Crete occupied a dominating position
among the powers of the surrounding continents. Internal
dissensions, due in ancient times to the diversity of races
inhabiting its soil (Eteocretans--the original inhabitants--
Pelasgians, Acheans, Cydonians and Dorians), and in modern
times to the fact that a large minority of the population
has accepted the Ottoman religion along with Ottoman
government, have kept Crete in a position of political
inferiority throughout the historical period.
1. Early History:
Mt. Ida in Crete was famous in Greek legend as the
birthplace of Zeus. The half-legendary, half-historical King
Minos was said to be the son of Zeus, and to have derived
from his father the wisdom to which, by a type of myth
common in Greek lands, the constitution of the Cretan cities
was ascribed. Minos was accepted as a historical personage
by Thucydides and Aristotle, who say that he was the first
dynast in Greece to establish dominion on the sea. One of
his exploits was the suppression of piracy in Cretan waters,
a feat which had to be repeated by the Roman Pompeius at a
later period. Aristotle compares the Cretan institutions
with those of Sparta; the island was said to have been
colonized by Dorians from Peloponnesus (Politics ii.10). The
most important cities in Crete were Knossos (whose palace
has been excavated with fruitful results by Mr. Arthur
Evans), Gortyna, near the Gulf of Messara, and Cydonia, with
its river Iardanus. The excavations of Mr. Evans at Knossos
and of the Italians at Phastos (near Fair Havens) prove that
Crete was a center of Mediterranean civilization in an early
age. In the Homeric poems, Crete is said to have contained
an hundred cities; at that period the Cretans were still
famed as daring sailors. In the classical age of Greek
history they never held a leading position. They are
mentioned chiefly as traders and mercenary soldiers, skilled
especially in archery. During the Hellenistic period Crete
remained free. Demetrius Nicator made the island his base of
operations before his defeat at Azotus in 148.
2. The Jews in Crete:
In 141, the Cretan Jews were influential...
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