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GREEK: 98 Adramutthnov Adramuttenos
NAVE: Adramyttium
EBD: Adramyttium
SMITH: ADRAMYTTIUM
ISBE: ADRAMYTTIUM
Adore | Adorn | Adornment | Adra | Adrammelech | Adramyttium | Adriatic | Adriatic Sea | Adriel | Aduel | Adullam

Adramyttium

In Bible versions:

Adramyttium: NET AVS NIV NRSV TEV
Adramyttian: NASB
a town and seaport of Mysia in Asia Minor

the court of death
Google Maps: Adramyttium (39° 34´, 26° 56´)

Greek

Strongs #98: Adramutthnov Adramuttenos

Adramyttium = "I shall abide in death"

1) Adramyttium, a seaport of Mysia

98 Adramuttenos ad-ram-oot-tay-nos'

from Adramutteion (a place in Asia Minor); Adramyttene or belonging to
Adramyttium:-of Adramyttium.

Adramyttium [EBD]

a city of Asia Minor on the coast of Mysia, which in early times was called AEolis. The ship in which Paul embarked at Caesarea belonged to this city (Acts 27:2). He was conveyed in it only to Myra, in Lycia, whence he sailed in an Alexandrian ship to Italy. It was a rare thing for a ship to sail from any port of Palestine direct for Italy. It still bears the name Adramyti, and is a place of some traffic.

Adramyttium [NAVE]

ADRAMYTTIUM, a city of Mysia, Acts 27:2.

ADRAMYTTIUM [SMITH]

named form Adramys , brother of Croesus king of Lydia, a seaport in the province of Asia [ASIA], situated on a bay of the Aegean Sea, about 70 miles north of Smyrna, in the district anciently called Aeolis, and also Mysia. See (Acts 16:7) [MITYLENE] (Acts 27:2) The modern Adramyti is a poor village.

ADRAMYTTIUM [ISBE]

ADRAMYTTIUM - ad-ra-mit'-i-um (Adramuttion; for other forms see Thayer's lexicon): An ancient city of Mysia in the Roman Province of Asia. The only reference in the New Testament to it is in Acts 27:2 which says that Paul, while being taken a prisoner from Caesarea to Rome, embarked upon a ship belonging to Adramyttium.

The city, with a good harbor, stood at the head of the Gulf of Adramyttium facing the island of Lesbos, and at the base of Mt. Ida. Its early history is obscure. While some authors fancy that it was the Pedasus of Homer, others suppose that it was founded by Adramys, the brother of the wealthy Croesus; probably a small Athenian colony existed there long before the time of Adramys. When Pergamus became the capital of Asia, Adramyttium grew to be a city of considerable importance, and the metropolis of the Northwest part of the province. There the assizes were held. The coins which the peasants pick up in the surrounding fields, and which are frequently aids in determining the location and history of the cities of Asia Minor, were struck at Adramyttium as late as the 3rd century AD, and sometimes in connection with Ephesus. Upon them the effigies of Castor and Pollux appear, showing that Adramyttium was the seat of worship of these deities.

The ancient city with its harbor has entirely disappeared, but on a hill, somewhat farther inland, is a village of about one thousand houses bearing the name Edremid, a corruption of the ancient name Adramys. The miserable wooden huts occupied by Greek fishermen and by Turks are surrounded by vineyards and olive trees, hence the chief trade is in olive oil, raisins and timber. In ancient times Adramyttium was noted for a special ointment which was prepared there (Pliny, NH, xiii.2.5).

E. J. Banks




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