Patmos in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
pat'-mos (Patomos; Italian: San Giovanni di Patino): A
Turkish island of the group Sporades, Southwest of Samos,
mentioned once in the Bible, Rev 1:9, "I, John .... was in
the isle that is called Patmos, for the word of God and the
testimony of Jesus" (dia ton logon tou theou kai ten
marturian Iesou). The island is 10 miles long, and about 6
broad along the northern coast. It is for the most part
rocky. The highest part is Mount Elias, which rises to a
height of over 800 ft. As in Greece, and in the adjacent
mainland of Asia Minor, the land is treeless. Near the city
of Patmos there is a good harbor. A famous monastery,
Christodulos, was founded on the island in 1088. Near this
is a thriving school, attended by students from all parts of
the Archipelago. The population of the island numbers 3,000,
almost entirely Greek. The ancient capital was on an isthmus
between the inlets of La Scala and Merika. Many ruins can
still be seen. The huge walls of Cyclopean masonry, similar
to those at Tiryns, attest their great age. In Roman times
Patmos was one of the many places to which Rome banished her
exiles. In 95 AD, according to a tradition preserved by
Irenaeus, Eusebius, Jerome and others, John was exiled here-
-in the 14th year of the reign of Domitian--whence he
returned to Ephesus under Nerva (96 AD). The cave in which
he is said to have seen his visions is still pointed out to
the traveler. Only a small part of the once valuable library
in the monastery of Christodulos is left. Just 100 years ago
(1814) Mr. E.D. Clark purchased here the manuscript of Plato
which is now in the Bodleian Library, the celebrated
Clarkianus, a parchment written in the year 895, and
admittedly the best of all for the 1st of the 2 volumes into
which the works of Plato were divided for convenience.
Patmos is mentioned by Thucydides (iii.33), by Pliny (NH,
iv.23), and by Strabo (x.5).
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