Philippi in Easton's Bible Dictionary
(1.) Formerly Crenides, "the fountain," the capital of the
province of Macedonia. It stood near the head of the
Sea, about
8 miles north-west of Kavalla. It is now a ruined
village,
called Philibedjik. Philip of Macedonia fortified
the old
Thracian town of Crenides, and called it after his
own name
Philippi (B.C. 359-336). In the time of the Emperor
Augustus
this city became a Roman colony, i.e., a military
settlement of
Roman soldiers, there planted for the purpose of
controlling the
district recently conquered. It was a "miniature
Rome," under
the municipal law of Rome, and governed by military
officers,
called duumviri, who were appointed directly from
Rome. Having
been providentially guided thither, here Paul and
his companion
Silas preached the gospel and formed the first
church in Europe.
(See LYDIA -T0002339.) This success stirred up the
enmity of the
people, and they were "shamefully entreated" (Acts
16:9-40; 1
Thess. 2:2). Paul and Silas at length left this city
and
proceeded to Amphipolis (q.v.).
(2.) When Philip the tetrarch, the son of Herod,
succeeded to
the government of the northern portion of his
kingdom, he
enlarged the city of Paneas, and called it Caesarea,
in honour
of the emperor. But in order to distinguish it from
the Caesarea
on the sea coast, he added to it subsequently his
own name, and
called it Caesarea-Philippi (q.v.).
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