ruins of the Church House in Dura Europos, courtesy, Wikipedia |
Originally a fortress, Dura Europos was founded in 303 BC on Aramean Syrian land by settlers from, what is today, Greece and Macedonia in southeastern Europe, under Emperor Seleucus I Nicator, a former general in the army of Alexander the Great. The Greeks called the place “Dura”, located on the east-west and Euphrates trade routes. Indeed, Dura controlled the river crossing on the route between the newly founded cities of Antioch and Seleucia on the Tigris. Because of the city’s importance in location, it became a regional capital and a great caravan city and had close ties with nearby Palmyra. (The Palmyrene Gate was the principal entrance to the city.) Soon, the population became cosmopolitan and allowed for a co-mingling of cultural traditions. Aside from the original Greek and Syriac inhabitants, the general population was also made up of Romans, Israelites, Palmyrenes, Persians, and south Semitic peoples but the local social system continued to have the descendants of the original Macedonian/Greek settlers as the aristocracy. Even though the Greeks were eventually outnumbered by people of Semitic stock by the first century BC, and the city became eastern in character, this social system remained intact until the city’s abandonment in the middle of the 3rd century. The mix of populations was also reflected in the area's sacred architecture. For instance, by the 1st century, citizens from Palmyra, an important trade center, built temples to their gods Aphlat and Azzanathkona, and later (168-9) built the Mithraeum to honor the sun god Mithras. At the same time, citizens from nearby Anah built the Temple of Zeus Kyrios. In the first half of the 3rd century, the indigenous Syriacs built the Christian Church House, one of the oldest churches in the world outside of Israel. Inside of the church is the earliest known baptismal font as well as what is thought to be the earliest depiction of Jesus dating back to 235.
In 113 BC, the Parthians from Persia
conquered the city, and held it, with one brief Roman intermission (114), until
165 when the Romans decisively conquered the city and built a military camp adjacent to it. The
Romans added “Europos” to the city name because of its long-time European Macedonian/Greek
aristocracy. Through an agreement with the new overlords, Dura Europos retained
its status as regional headquarters for the section of the Euphrates between
the Khabur and modern Abu Kemal and the local inhabitants would retain
considerable freedom. In exchange the city’s military role was abandoned.
In 256, Dura
Europos was conquered by the Persian Sassanid Empire and the town was laid
siege for a year. Most of the population was deported. The rest were marched
off to Ctesiphon and
there sold as slaves. Afterwards, it was bereft of any population at all and
over time, the site was covered over by sand and mud and disappeared from
sight.
Since then,
the existence of Dura-Europos had long been known through literary sources. In
1885, it was rediscovered by the American "Wolfe Expedition" when the
Palmyrene Gate was photographed by John Henry Haynes. British troops under
Capt. Murphy in the aftermath of World War I and the Arab Revolt also explored the
ruins. On March 30, 1920, a soldier digging a trench uncovered brilliantly
fresh wall-paintings in
the Temple of
Bel. Afterwards, major excavations were
carried out by French and American teams. Archaeological activity continued
until renewed hostilities in the area caused the site to be closed. In 1933, excavations
resumed. Sites uncovered included: the Temple of the Oriental Gods; the Temple of Adonis; the Temple of the Gadde; the Temple of Zeus Theos; and the Dura-Europos
Route map, the fragment of a specialty map discovered in 1923.
Since 1986,
joint excavations were established between French and Syrian Arab
archaeologists under the direction of Pierre Leriche but the site was looted
and mostly destroyed between 2011 and 2014 by the Islamic
State during the Syrian Arab Civil War.
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