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Philippi was
a Macedonian
town, bordering Thracia. Situated on the summit of a hill, it dominated
a large and fertile plain, intersected by the Egnatian Way. It was
north-west of Mount Pangea, near the River Gangites and the Aegean
Sea. In 358 BCE Philip II of Macedonia enlarged and fortified a pre-existing
settlement called Crenides, renaming it after himself, Philippi (see
Strabo, Geography, 7. fr. 41). After the defeat of Brutus and
Cassius, Philippi was further enlarged and settled by Roman veterans
of the battle of Philippi (42 BCE) and later by soldiers loyal to
the defeated Marcus Antonius in the battle of Actium (31 BCE). After
the battle of Philippi, Antonius and Octavius made Philippi a Roman
colony and renamed it Colonia Julia Philippensis in honor of
Julius Caesar (see Acts 16:12). To be a Roman colony meant the conferring
of jus Italicum, which made the citizens of Philippi full Roman
citizens. After the battle of Actium, in honor of Octavius (Augustus),
the name was expanded to become Colonia Augusta Julia Philippensis
(Finegan, Light from the Ancient Past, 2.350). Thus the city
was populated by Macedonians, Romans and even Jews (Acts 16:13). Although
most of the ruins date from after Paul's time, the general layout
of the forum was the same as in the first century.
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