Miletus in Smiths Bible Dictionary
Ac 20:15,17 less correctly called MILETUM in 2Ti 4:20 It lay
on the coast, 36 miles to the south of Ephesus, a day's sail
from Trogyllium. Ac 20:15 Moreover, to those who are sailing
from the north it is in the direct line for Cos. The site of
Miletus has now receded ten miles from the coast, and even in
the apostles' time it must have lost its strictly maritime
position. Miletus was far more famous five hundred years
before St. Paul's day than it ever became afterward. In early
times it was the most flourishing city of the Ionian Greeks.
In the natural order of events it was absorbed in the Persian
empire. After a brief period of spirited independence, it
received a blow from which it never recovered, in the siege
conducted by Alexander when on his eastern campaign. But still
it held, even through the Roman period, the rank of a second-
rate trading town, and Strabo mentions its four harbors. At
this time it was politically in the province of Asia, though
Caria was the old ethnological name of the district in which
it was situated. All that is left now is a small Turkish
village called Melas, near the site of the ancient city.
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