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    • Decapolis | Ten Cities, Hellenistic Culture, Roman Rule, & Map

      Ancient Greek

      • Decapolis, league of 10 ancient Greek cities in eastern Palestine that was formed after the Roman conquest of Palestine in 63 bce, when Pompey the Great reorganized the Middle East to Rome’s advantage and to his own.
      www.britannica.com › place › Decapolis-ancient-cities-Palestine
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DecapolisDecapolis - Wikipedia

    Jordan. Syria. The Decapolis (Greek: Δεκάπολις, Dekápolis, 'Ten Cities') was a group of ten Greek Hellenistic cities on the eastern frontier of the Roman Empire in the Southern Levant in the first centuries BC and AD. They formed a group because of their language, culture, religion, location, and political status, with each ...

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  3. Decapolis, league of 10 ancient Greek cities in eastern Palestine that was formed after the Roman conquest of Palestine in 63 bce, when Pompey the Great reorganized the Middle East to Rome’s advantage and to his own.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Who lived in the Decapolis? The Decapolis was primarily inhabited by people of Semitic origin . The widespread usage of Greek names amongst the population contributes to the enigma surrounding their precise ethnic diversity .

  5. May 8, 2018 · Among the famous residents of the cities were: Theodorus (teacher of the emperor Tiberius), Menippus the cynic, Oenomaus the stoic (who is perhaps identical with Avnimus the Gardi mentioned in the Talmud), and Meleager the poet, all from Gadara; Stephanus the historian, Plato the rhetorician, and Nikomachos the philosopher, from Gerasa; Aristotl...

  6. The Decapolis, as its name implies (Gr. deka: “ten,” polis: “city”), was, in NT times, the area of the ten towns. In such significance the term occurs in Matthew ( 4:25 ), Mark ( 5:20 ; 7:31 ), Pliny ( Natural History V. 16, 17) and Josephus (War III. ix. 7).

  7. The Decapolis (Greek: "Ten Cities") was a region including 10 originally independent Greek city states, all of which lay east of the Jordan river except for Scythopolis [ancient Beth Shean ]. Each city was the center of its own administrative district. Several were brought under Judean control by Aristobulus I and Alexander Jannai but were ...

  8. Pliny (l.c. xv. 4) speaks highly of the small olives of the Decapolis. Jesus had several persons from the Decapolis among his followers (Matt. iv. 25; Mark v. 20), showing that many Jews were living there. When the Jewish war broke out, the pagans fell upon the Jews, an uprising for which Justus Of Tiberias took bloody revenge. The Talmud ...

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