Philippi in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
fi-lip'-i (Philippoi, ethnic Philippesios, Phil 4:15):
1. Position and Name:
A city of Macedonia, situated in 41ø 5' North latitude and
24ø 16' East longitude. It lay on the Egnatian Road, 33
Roman miles from Amphipolis and 21 from Acontisma, in a
plain bounded on the East and North by the mountains which
lie between the rivers Zygactes and Nestus, on the West by
Mt. Pangaeus, on the South by the ridge called in antiquity
Symbolum, over which ran the road connecting the city with
its seaport, NEAPOLIS (which see), 9 miles distant. This
plain, a considerable part of which is marshy in modern, as
in ancient, times, is connected with the basin of the
Strymon by the valley of the Angites (Herodotus vii.113),
which also bore the names Gangas or Gangites (Appian, Bell.
Civ. iv.106), the modern Anghista. The ancient name. of
Philippi was Crenides (Strabo vii.331; Diodorus xvi.3, 8;
Appian, Bell. Civ. iv.105; Stephanus Byz. under the word),
so called after the springs which feed the river and the
marsh; but it was refounded by Philip II of Macedon, the
father of Alexander the Great, and received his name.
2. History:
Appian (Bell. Civ. iv.105) and Harpocration say that
Crenides was afterward called Daton, and that this name was
changed to Philippi, but this statement is open to question,
since Daton, which became proverbial among the Greeks for
good fortune, possessed, as Strabo tells us (vii.331 fr.
36), "admirably fertile territory, a lake, rivers, dockyards
and productive gold mines," whereas Philippi lies, as we
have seen, some 9 miles inland. Many modern authorities,
therefore, have placed Daton on the coast at or near the
site of Neapolis. On the whole, it seems best to adopt the
view of Heuzey (Mission archeologique, 35, 62 ff) that Daton
was not originally a city, but the whole district which lay
immediately to the East of Mt. Pangaeus, including the
Philippian plain and the seacoast about Neapolis. On the
site of the old foundation of Crenides, from which the Greek
settlers had perhaps been driven out by the Thracians about
a century previously, the Thasians in 360 BC founded their
colony of Daton with the aid of the exiled Athenian
statesman Callistratus, in order to exploit the wealth, both
agricultural and mineral, of the neighborhood. To Philip,
who ascended the Macedonian throne in 359 BC, the possession
of this spot seemed of the utmost importance. Not only is
the plain itself well watered and of extraordinary
fertility, but a strongly-fortified post planted here would
secure the natural land-route from Europe to Asia and
protect the eastern frontier of Macedonia against Thracian
inroads. Above all, the mines of the district might meet his
most pressing need, that of an abundant supply of gold. The
site was therefore seized in 358 BC, the city was enlarged,
strongly fortitled, and renamed, the Thasian settlers either
driven out or reinforced, and the mines, worked with
characteristic energy, produced over 1,000 talents a year
(Diodorus xvi.8) and enabled Philip to issue a gold currency
which in the West soon superseded the Persian darics (G.F.
Hill, Historical Greek Coins, 80 ff). The revenue thus
obtained was of inestimable value to Philip, who not only
used it for the development of the Macedonian army, but also
proved himself...
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