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Cesarea... Research of Christianity
http://www.bibleplaces.com/caesarea.htm
Herod the Great built this great seaport city, constructed on the coast of
the Mediterranean, in honor of Caesar and named it "Caesarea Maritima."
[Herod was a client king of Rome, who ruled his province with Rome's approval
and authority and with the consent of his friend and patron, the Emperor
Augustus. It is possible, even likely, that Jesus was born the same year that
Herod the Great died - in 4 BCE.]
Caesarea's strategic location placed it at the juncture of important trade
routes. But the harbor itself offered no natural advantages; the currents were
dangerous and there were problems with silting. Using ingenious technical
advances, Herod's engineers constructed two huge breakwaters, lined with
warehouses. At the end of the southern breakwater stood the lighthouse, whose
fires burned 24 hours a day. Six enormous bronze statues marked treacherous
sandbars. To ships coming in from sea, the sight must have been truly
impressive.
Caesarea was built like a model Greco-Roman city and laid out on a grid. There
was a forum, theatre, temples, public baths, paved streets, and an elaborate
villa that probably belonged to Herod himself. Giant twin aqueducts brought
fresh water from Mt. Carmel, and formed part of an elaborate water and sewer
system. But the focal point was a temple dedicated to Augustus.
After his death, Herod's city became the new capital of the Roman province of
Judea. When Jesus went to Jerusalem to celebrate Passover, the prefect of the
province also traveled there to ensure that order was kept. His name was Pontius
Pilate. Until recently, Pilate's existence was known only through literary
sources, but a recently discovered stone bears the inscription "Pontius Pilatus,
of Judea," clearly demonstrating Pilate's position and administrative authority.
Later events put Caesarea on the map in ways that neither Herod nor Pilate had
intended. A riot in Caesarea incited the outbreak of the First Jewish Revolt
against Rome.
Later Caesarea became an important center of religious study and training. The
great early Christian scholar and apologist, Origen, visited Caesarea in 231 CE
and turned the city into a center of Christian learning. Origen built a huge
library that became a magnet for scholarly study. When the Emperor Diocletian
unleashed the Great Persecution (303-313 CE), Caesarea became the site for the
death of a number of Christian martyrs, whose fates are described in the work of
Eusebius, On the Martyrs of Palestine.