Smyrna in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
smur'-na (Smurna):
1. Ancient:
Smyrna, a large ancient city on the western coast of Asia
Minor, at the head of a gulf which reaches 30 miles inland,
was originally peopled by the Asiatics known as the Lelages.
The city seems to have been taken from the Lelages by the
Aeolian Greeks about 1100 BC; there still remain traces of
the cyclopean masonry of that early time. In 688 BC it
passed into the possession of the Ionian Greeks and was made
one of the cities of the Ionian confederacy, but in 627 BC
it was taken by the Lydians. During the years 301 to 281 BC,
Lysimachus entirely rebuilt it on a new site to the
Southwest of the earlier cities, and surrounded it by a
wall. Standing, as it did, upon a good harbor, at the head
of one of the chief highways to the interior, it early
became a great trading-center and the chief port for the
export trade. In Roman times, Smyrna was considered the most
brilliant city of Asia Minor, successfully rivaling Pergamos
and Ephesus. Its streets were wide and paved. Its system of
coinage was old, and now about the city coins of every
period are found. It was celebrated for its schools of
science and medicine, and for its handsome buildings. Among
them was the Homerium, for Smyrna was one of several places
which claimed to be the birthplace of the poet. On the slope
of Mt. Pagus was a theater which seated 20,000 spectators.
In the 23 AD year a temple was built in honor of Tiberius
and his mother Julia, and the Golden Street, connecting the
temples of Zeus and Cybele, is said to have been the best in
any ancient city. Smyrna early became a Christian city, for
there was one of the Seven Churches of the Book of
Revelation (2:8-11). There Polycarp, the bishop of Smyrna,
was martyred, though without the sanction of the Roman
government. It seems that the Jews of Smyrna were more
antagonistic than were the Romans to the spread of
Christianity, for it is said that even on Saturday, their
sacred day, they brought wood for the fire in which Polycarp
was burned. His grave is still shown in a cemetery there.
Like many other cities of Asia Minor, Smyrna suffered
frequently, especially during the years 178-80 AD, from
earthquakes, but it always escaped entire destruction.
During the Middle Ages the city was the scene of many
struggles, the most fierce of which was directed by Timur
against the Christians. Tradition relates that there he
built a tower, using as stones the heads of a thousand
captives which he put to death, yet Smyrna was the last of
the Christian cities to hold out against the Mohammedans; in
1424 it fell into the hands of the Turks. It was the
discovery of America and the resulting discovery...
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