Melita in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
The scene of Paul's shipwreck (Acts 27-28). Not the Melita
now Meleda in the gulf of Venice near Dalmatia; but the
Melita between Sicily and Africa, Malta, where tradition
names the place of the wreck "Paul's bay" (Mr. Smith, of
Jordan Hill, Shipwreck of Paul). After leaving Fair Havens
in Crete, and while sailing along its S. coast, the wind
blew from E.N.E. (Euraquilon in the Sinaiticus, Vaticanus,
Alexandrinus manuscripts instead of Euroclydon), carrying
them under the lee of the island Clauda (or Cauda, Vaticanus
manuscript), 20 miles to the S.W. The Greek (Acts 27:15,
antofthalmein) is, "when the ship could not keep her eyes to
the wind"; either figuratively, or literally eyes were
carved or painted on the bows of the ship, an eastern usage
still existing. Here, to enable the ship to weather the
storm, they hoisted the boat on board, "undergirded the
vessel" (trapping it by passing four or five turns of cable
round the hull), and "lowered the gear" (chalasantes to
skeuos not "struck sail," which if they had done they would
have been driven directly toward the Syrtis or quicksand),
i.e. brought down the topsails and heavy yard with sail
attached.
They then turned the ship's head to the N. on the
starboard tack. the only course whereby to escape falling
into the Syrtis. Thus, for 13 days they drifted through
Adria, i.e. the middle of the Mediterranean between Crete
and Sicily. If we deduce the ship's course from that of the
wind, from the angle of the ship's head with the wind, and
from the leeway, she must have drifted nearly W. by N., the
precise bearing of the N. of Malta from the S. of Clauda.
The rate of drift would average a mile and a half an hour,
so that in 13 days she would pass over 468 miles; and Malta
is from Clauda, just 476 miles. The striking coincidence at
once identifies Malta as the scene, and confirms Luke's
accuracy. On the 14th night "the seamen deemed that land was
approaching them" (Greek), probably hearing the surf
breaking. A ship entering Paul's bay from E. must pass
within a quarter of a mile the point of Koura; but before
reaching it the land is too low and too far to be seen in a
dark night, but at this distance the breakers may be heard
and also if the night admit, be seen.
The "land" then is the point of Koura E. of Paul's
bay. A ship drifting W. by N. toward Paul's bay would come
to it without touching any other part of the island, for the
coast trends from this bay to the S.E. On Koura point, the
bay's S.E. extremity, there must have been breakers with the
wind blowing from N.E. Sounding they first found 20 fathoms,
and a little further 15; and, fearing rocks ahead, east four
anchors from the stern. Purdy ...
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