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Κολοσσαί (Kolossaí) | |
Ruins of Colossae | |
| Region | Phrygia |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 37°47′12″N29°15′36″E / 37.78667°N 29.26000°E /37.78667; 29.26000 |
| Part of | West Asia |


Colossae (/kəˈlɒsi/;Ancient Greek:Κολοσσαί), sometimes calledColosse,[1] also identified by medieval writers asChonae (Greek: Χῶναι), was a city inPhrygia, in southernAsia Minor.
A significant city from the 5th century BC onwards, it was notable for its healing springs and its veneration ofArchangel Michael.[2] TheEpistle to the Colossians, an early Christian text which identifies its author asPaul the Apostle, is addressed to the church in Colossae. The city was part of the Roman and Byzantine province ofPhrygia Pacatiana.
Colossae was inPhrygia, in Asia Minor.[3] It was located 15 km (9.3 mi) southeast ofLaodicea on the road through theLycus Valley near the Lycus River at the foot ofMt. Cadmus, the highest mountain in Turkey's westernAegean Region, between the cities ofSardis andCelaenae, and southeast of the ancient city ofHierapolis.[4][5]Herodotus said that at Colossae "the river Lycos falls into an opening of the earth and disappears from view, and then after an interval of about five furlongs it comes up to view again, and this river also flows into theMeander River".[6] Ancient Colossae is situated in the modern province ofHonaz, to the north of its later medieval counterpart of Chonae, with what remains of the buried ruins of Colossae ("the mound") lying 3 km (1.9 mi) to the north of Honaz.[7][8][9]
The medieval poetManuel Philes incorrectly said that the nameColossae was connected to theColossus of Rhodes.[10] More recently, in an interpretation that ties Colossae to an Indo-European root that happens to be shared with the wordkolossos, Jean-Pierre Vernant has connected the name to the idea of setting up a sacred space or shrine.[11] Another proposal relates the name to the Greekkolazo 'to punish'.[10] Others have said the name derives from its manufacture of dyed wool, orcolossinus.[12]
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The first mention of the city may be in a 17th-century BCHittite inscription, which speaks of a city called Huwalušija, which some archeologists believe is a reference to early Colossae.[citation needed]
The 5th-century geographerHerodotus first mentions Colossae by name and said it was a "great city in Phrygia", which accommodates the Persian kingXerxes I while en route to wage war against the Greeks in theGreco-Persian Wars, showing the city had already reached a certain level of wealth and size by this time.[13] Writing in the 5th century BC,Xenophon said Colossae was "a populous city, wealthy and of considerable magnitude".[14]Strabo said the city drew great revenue from its sheep, and that the wool of Colossae gave its name to a colour,colossinus.[15]
In 396 BC Colossae was the site of the execution of the rebellious Persian satrapTissaphernes, who was lured there and slain by an agent of the party ofCyrus the Younger.[16]
By the 1st century it had dwindled greatly in size and significance.[17] The city was decimated by an earthquake in the 60s AD, and was rebuilt independently of the support of Rome.[18]
The canonical biblical textEpistle to the Colossians is addressed to the Christian community in Colossae. The epistle has traditionally been attributed toPaul the Apostle due to its autobiographical salutation and style,[19][20] but some modern critical scholars now believe it to be written by another author some time after Paul's death.[21] It is believed that one aim of the letter was to address the challenges that the community faced in its context of the syncretistic Gnostic religions that were developing in Asia Minor.[22]
According to the epistle,Epaphras seems to have been a person of some importance in the Christian community in Colossae,[23] and tradition presents him as its first bishop.[24] The epistle also seems to imply thatPaul had never visited the city, because it only speaks of him having "heard" of the Colossians' faith,[25] and in theEpistle to Philemon Paul tellsPhilemon of his hope to visit Colossae upon being freed from prison.[26] Tradition also gives Philemon as the second bishop of the see.
The Apostolic Constitutions list Philemon as a bishop of Colossae.[27] On the other hand, theCatholic Encyclopedia considers Philemon doubtful.[28] The first historically documented bishop is Epiphanius,[when?] who was not personally at theCouncil of Chalcedon, but whose metropolitan bishop Nunechius ofLaodicea, the capital of theRoman province ofPhrygia Pacatiana, signed the acts on his behalf.[citation needed]
Colossae was associated with a miracle, where a sacristan named Archippos was said to have witnessed the Archangel thwart a plan by non-Christians to destroy a church by flooding it with the waters of nearby mountain rivers. The Archangel with his staff opened a wide fissure in a rock and commanded the rushing water to plunge into it, saving the church. TheEastern Orthodox Church commemorates this event on September 6, and the city of Colossae was identified as Chonae (meaning "to plunge") since.[29] Though according to modern researchers, the locations of the ancient city of Colossae and the medieval city of Chonae are separate from one another, as Colossae was situated further to the north.[8][9]

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The city's fame and renowned status continued into the Byzantine period, when the settlement was distinguished in 858 as a Metropolitan See and possibly served as the capital of theThracesian Theme from the 7th to the 11th century. The Byzantines also built the Church of Archangel Michael in the vicinity of Chonae, one of the largest churches in the Middle East. The town may have decreased in size, or may have even been temporarily abandoned due to Arab invasions in the 7th and 8th centuries,[12] but it soon recovered and became a vital economic and religious center.[30]

In 1070 Chonae was sacked by theSeljuks and the Church of Archangel Michael was pillaged and turned into a horse stable for the invading Turks. The residents of the city attempted to escape in a nearby cave close to a river, but the water level suddenly rose and flooded the cave, drowning all the survivors who escaped there.[30]
The city slightly recovered during theKomnenian period, and became a suffragan diocese of Laodicea in Phyrigia Pacatiana.[5] Chonae and its church were ravaged on two more occasions in the latter half of the 12th century by the Turkish mercenaries of the rebelsTheodore Mangaphas andPseudo-Alexios II. The Turks destroyed the mosaics, the altar, and then the church itself.[30] The city was conquered by the Seljuks and was governed by the Byzantine renegadeManuel Maurozomes in the early 13th century.
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Most archeological attention has been focused on nearby Laodicea and Hierapolis.[31] Excavations of Colossae began in 2021 led by Bariş Yener of Pammukale University in Denizli.[32] The first several years involve surface surveys to analyze pottery and survey the landscape. They hope to start digging in 2023–24.
The site exhibits a biconicalacropolis almost 100 feet (30 m) high, and encompasses an area of almost 22 acres (8.9 ha). On the eastern slope there sits a theater which probably seated around 5,000 people, suggesting a total population of 25,000–30,000 people. The theater was probably built during the Roman period, and may be near an agora that abuts thecardo maximus, or the city's main north–south road. Ceramic finds around the theater confirm the city's early occupation in the third and second millennia BC. Northeast of thetell, and most likely outside the city walls, anecropolis displaysHellenistic tombs with two main styles of burial: one with an antecedent room connected to an inner chamber, andtumuli, or underground chambers accessed by stairs leading to the entrance. Outside the tell, there are also remains of sections of columns that may have marked a processional way, or thecardo. Today, the remains of one column marks the location where locals believe a church once stood, possibly that of Archangel Michael.[31] Near the Lycus River, there is evidence that water channels had been cut out of the rock with a complex of pipes and sluice gates to divert water for bathing and for agricultural and industrial purposes.[33]
The holiness and healing properties associated with the waters of Colossae during the Byzantine era continue to this day, particularly at a pool fed by the Lycus River at the Göz picnic grounds west of Colossae at the foot of Mt. Cadmus. Locals consider the water to be therapeutic.[34]
[Quoting:] Those churches which claimed an apostolic foundation attached great importance to the maintenance of the teaching which they had originally received. There were powerful forces at work in many of them which militated against the maintenance of that teaching; chief among these were those tendencies which in a few decades blossomed forth in the elaborate systems of the various schools of Gnosticism. One form of incipient Gnosticism is the syncretistic angel-cult of nonconformist Jewish foundation and pagan superstructure attacked in the Epistle to the Colossians.
Colossæ was the home of...Onesimus and Epaphras, who probably founded the Church of Colossæ.
Of Colossæ, Philemon.
Besides St. Epaphras... Archippus and Philemon, especially the latter, are very doubtful.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domain: Easton, Matthew George (1897). "Colossae".Easton's Bible Dictionary (New and revised ed.). T. Nelson and Sons.