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GREEK: 99 Adriav Adrias
NAVE: Adria
EBD: Adria
SMITH: ADRIA
ISBE: ADRIA
Adorn | Adornment | Adra | Adrammelech | Adramyttium | Adriatic | Adriatic Sea | Adriel | Aduel | Adullam | Adultery

Adriatic

In Bible versions:

Adriatic: NET NIV NASB
Adria: AVS NRSV TEV
a region of the sea on the east side of Italy and Sicily

Greek

Strongs #99: Adriav Adrias

Adriatic = "without wood"

1) Adriatic Sea, Adrias, the sea between Greece and Italy

99 Adrias ad-ree'-as

from Adria (a place near its shore); the Adriatic sea (including the
Ionian):-Adria.

Adria [EBD]

(Acts 27:27; R.V., "the sea of Adria"), the Adriatic Sea, including in Paul's time the whole of the Mediterranean lying between Crete and Sicily. It is the modern Gulf of Venice, the Mare Superum_ of the Romans, as distinguished from the Mare Inferum_ or Tyrrhenian Sea.

Adria [NAVE]

ADRIA, sea of, Acts 27:27.

ADRIA [SMITH]

more properly A?drias, the Adriatic Sea. (Acts 27:27) The word seems to have been derived from the town of Adria, near the Po. In Paul?s time it included the whole sea between Greece and Italy, reaching south from Crete to Sicily. [MELITA]

ADRIA [ISBE]

ADRIA - a'-dri-a (Westcott-Hort: ho Hadrias or ho Adrias): In Greek Adrias (Polybios i.2.4), Adriatike Thalassa (Strabo iv.204), and Adriatikon Pelagos (Ptolemy iii.15.2), and in Latin Adriaticum mare (Livy xl.57.7), Adrianum mare (Cicero in Pisonem 38), Adriaticus sinus (Livy x.2.4), and Mare superurn (Cicero ad Att. 9.5.1). The Adriatic Sea is a name derived from the old Etruscan city Atria, situated near the mouth of the Po (Livy v.33.7; Strabo v.214). At first the name Adria was only applied to the most northern part of the sea. But after the development of the Syracusan colonies on the Italian and Illyrian coasts the application of the term was gradually extended southward, so as to reach Mons Garganus (the Abruzzi), and later the Strait of Hydruntum (Ptolemy iii.1.1; Polybios vii.19.2). But finally the name embraced the Ionian Sea as well, and we find it employed to denote the Gulf of Tarentum (Servius Aen xi.540), the Sicilian Sea (Pausanias v. 25), and even the waters between Crete and Malta (Orosius i.2.90). Procopius considers Malta as lying at the western extremity of the Adriatic Sea (i.14). After leaving Crete the vessel in which the apostle Paul was sailing under military escort was "driven to and fro in the sea of Adria" fourteen days (Acts 27:27) before it approached the shore of Malta. We may compare this with the shipwreck of Josephus in "the middle of the Adria" where he was picked up by a ship sailing from Cyrene to Puteoli (Josephus, Vita, 3).

George H. Allen


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