Philippi in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(named from Philip of Macedonia), a city of Macedonia about
nine miles from the sea, to the northwest of the island of
Thasos which is twelve miles distant from its port Neapolis,
the modern Kavalla. It is situated in a plain between the
ranges of Pangaeus and Haemus. The Philippi which St. Paul
visited was a Roman colony founded by Augustus after the
famous battle of Philippi, fought here between Antony and
Octavius and Brutus and Cassius, B.C. 42. The remains which
strew the ground near the modern Turkish village Bereketli
are no doubt derived from that city. The original town,
built by Philip of Macedonia, was probably not exactly on
the same site. Philip, when he acquired possession of the
site, found there a town named Datus or Datum, which was
probably in its origin a factory of the Phoenicians, who
were the first that worked the gold-mines in the mountains
here, as in the neighboring Thasos. The proximity of the
goldmines was of course the origin of so large a city as
Philippi, but the plain in which it lies is of extraordinary
fertility. The position, too, was on the main road from Rome
to Asia, the Via Egnatia, which from Thessalonica to
Constantinople followed the same course as the existing
post-road. On St. Paul's visits to Philippi, see the
following article. At Philippi the gospel was first preached
in Europe. Lydia was the first convert. Here too Paul and
Silas were imprisoned. Ac 16:23 The Philippians sent
contributions to Paul to relieve his temporal wants.
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