English
Noun
hippos
- Plural of hippo
Hippos is an
archaeological site located
in
Israel on
a hill overlooking the
Sea of
Galilee. Between the third century BC and the seventh century
AD, Hippos was the site of a Greco-Roman city. Besides the
fortified city itself, Hippos controlled a small port facility on
the lake and an area of the surrounding countryside. Hippos was
part of the
Decapolis, or Ten
Cities, a group of cities in
Roman
Palestine that were culturally tied more closely to
Greece and Rome than
to the Middle East.
From above, the plateau on which Hippos is built
very vaguely resembles the head and neck of a horse. This is why
early Greek settlers named it after the
Greek word
for horse, Hippos. The local
Aramaic and
Hebrew
name, Sussita, also means horse, and the
Arabic
name, Qal'at el-Husn, means "Fortress of the Horse." Other names
include the alternate spelling Hippus and the
Latinized version of
the Greek name: Hippum.
Location
Hippos was built on a flat-topped foothill of the
Golan
Plateau 350 meters above sea level and 2 kilometers east of the
Sea of Galilee, near modern
Kibbutz Ein
Gev. The site is just on the Israeli side of the 1949
UN-demarcated border between
Syria and
Israel. The
surrounding
Golan
Heights have been under Israeli control since 1967. Today
Hippos is part of a
demilitarized
zone between the Golan Heights and Israel proper. (See this
CIA map
of the region.)
History
Hellenistic period
It is possible that Mount Sussita was occupied
before
Hellenistic
times, but the city of Hippos itself was built by Greek colonists,
most likely in the mid-200s BC. During this time,
Coele-Syria
served as the battleground between two dynasties descending from
Captains of
Alexander
the Great, the
Ptolemies and the
Seleucids. It is
likely that Hippos, on a very defensible site in the north of
Coele-Syria, was founded as a border fortress for the Seleucids.
Its full name, Antiochia Hippos (Greek: Αντιόχεια του Ίππου; Latin:
Antiocheia ad Hippum), reflects a Seleucid founding.
As the Seleucids took possession of all of
Coele-Syria, Hippos grew into a full-fledged
polis, a
city-state with
control over the surrounding countryside. Antiochia Hippos was
improved with all the makings of a Greek polis: a temple, a central
market area, and other public structures. The availability of water
limited the size of Hellenistic Hippos. The citizens relied on
rain-collecting
cisterns
for all their water; this kept the city from supporting a very
large population.
Hasmonean Period
The
Maccabean
revolt resulted in an independent
Jewish kingdom under
the
Hasmonean family
in
142 BC.
In c. 83-80 BC,
Alexander
Jannaeus led a Hasmonean campaign to conquer Hippos. According
to the Jewish historian
Josephus,
Alexander forced the entire population to convert to
Judaism and be
circumcised.
Roman period
right|thumb|200px|Map
of the Decapolis showing the location of Hippos (here spelled
''Hippuspussy In [[63 BC the Roman general
Pompey conquered
Coele-Syria
including
Judea, and ended
Hasmonean rule. Pompey granted self-rule to roughly ten Greek
cities on Coele-Syria's eastern frontier; this group came to be
called the
Decapolis. Hippos
was one of these cities. Under Roman rule, Hippos was granted a
certain degree of autonomy. The city minted its own coins, stamped
with the image of a horse in honor of the city's name.
Hippos was given to
Herod the
Great in
37
BC and to the Province of
Syria in
4 BC. According to
Josephus, during this time Hippos, a
pagan
city, was the "sworn enemy" of the new Jewish city across the
lake,
Tiberias. However,
Hippos must have had some Jewish residents in the city. Josephus
reports that during the
Great
Jewish Revolt of AD
66-
70, Hippos persecuted
its Jewish population. Other Jews from Sussita participated in
attacks on
Magdala and
elsewhere. Hippos itself fell under attack by rebels at least
once.
After the Romans put down the Bar Kokhba revolt,
they created the province of Palaestina in 135, and Hippos was part
of it. This is the beginning of Hippos' greatest period of
prosperity and growth. It was rebuilt on a grid pattern, centered
around a long
Decumanus
Maximus street running east-west through the city. The streets
were lined with hundreds of red
granite columns imported from
Egypt. The
great expense required to haul these columns to Palestine and up
the hill is proof of the city's wealth. Other improvements included
a
shrine to the Emperor, a
theatre,
and new city walls. The most important improvement, however, was
the
aqueduct, which
piped water into Hippos from springs in the
Golan
Heights, 50 km away. The water, collected in a large,
vaulted
cistern, allowed a large population to live in the city.
Byzantine period
The imperial restructuring under the
emperor
Diocletian put
Hippos into the province of
Palestina
Secunda, encompassing
Galilee and the
Golan. When
Christianity
became officially tolerated in the Roman Empire, Palestine became
the target of Imperial subsidies for churches and monasteries, and
Christian
pilgrims
brought additional revenue. So industry expanded and more luxury
goods became available to common people.
Christianity came slowly to Hippos. There is no
evidence of any Christian presence before the 300s. A Byzantine-era
pagan tomb to a man named Hermes has been found just outside the
city walls, attesting to the relatively late presence of paganism
here.
But gradually, the city was Christianized,
becoming the seat of a
bishop by at least 359. One
Bishop Peter of Hippos is listed in surviving records of church
councils in 359 and 362.
Umayyad period
The
Umayyad Caliphate
invaded Palestine in the 600s, completing their conquest by 641.
Hippos' new Arab rulers allowed the citizens to keep practicing
Christianity. However, the population and economy continued to
decline. An
earthquake in January
748 flattened
Hippos. The city was abandoned permanently.
Excavations
The German explorer
Gottlieb
Schumacher first surveyed Hippos in 1885, although he
incorrectly identified the ruins as those of the town of
Gamala.
The first excavations were carried out by Israeli
archaeologist
Claire
Epstein in 1951-1955. She unearthed the main Byzantine church
that had probably been the seat of Hippos' bishop. After her
excavations, the
Israel
Defense Forces used Mount Sussita for the same purpose as the
ancient Greeks: as a fSuperscript textortress. It was used as a
border defense against
Syria until the Golan
Heights were captured by Israel in the
Six Day
War.
Further excavations began in 2000 under Prof.
Arthur Segal of the
University
of Haifa. The excavations, expected to continue until 2009,
have focused on six sites in the city: the city's
forum, the
small
imperial cult temple, a large Hellenistic temple compound, the
Roman city gates, and two Byzantine churches. The Hellenistic
temple and one of the churches are revealing fascinating cultural
interplay. The temple, though Greek, may have been for the worship
of the
Nabataean god
Dushara. In
Byzantine times, the temple was demolished and a Christian church
built on the same site.
Biblical connection
In the
New
Testament, when
Jesus mentions a
"city set upon a hill" that "cannot be hidden" (one of the
metaphors of
Salt and
Light in the
Sermon
on the Mount) he may have been referring to Hippos. In
addition, a miracle of Jesus recounted in
Mark 5
and
Luke 8
may also be related to Hippos. See
Gergesa for a
discussion of the location of this miracle.
References
- Bagatti, Bellarmino. "Hippos-Susita, an Ancient Episcopal See."
Ancient Christian Villages of Galilee. Jerusalem: Franciscan
Printing Press, 2001. pp. 59-66.
- Chancey, Mark A. and Adam Porter. "The Archaeology of Roman
Palestine." Near Eastern Archaeology, Vol. 64, No. 4. December
2001. pp. 164-198.
- Epstein, Claire. "Hippos (Sussita)." The New Encyclopedia of
Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land. Vol. 2. Ed. Ephraim
Stern. Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society & Carta, 1993.
- Parker, S. Thomas. "The Byzantine Period: An Empire’s New Holy
Land." Near Eastern Archaeology, balls and dick.
- Russell, Kenneth W. "The Earthquake Chronology of Palestine and
Northwest Arabia from the 2nd through the Mid-8th Century A.D."
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, No. 260.
1982. pp. 37-53.
- Segal, Arthur. "Hippos (Sussita) Excavation Project: First
Season – July 2000." The Bible and Interpretation, 2000.
Online. http://www.bibleinterp.com/excavations/Hippos.htm
- Segal, Arthur. "Hippos-Sussita Excavation Project: The Second
Season – July 2001." The Bible and Interpretation, 2001.
Online. http://www.bibleinterp.com/excavations/Hippos_2001.htm
- Segal, Arthur and Michael Eisenberg. "Hippos-Sussita Excavation
Project: The Third Season." The Bible and Interpretation, 2002.
Online. http://www.bibleinterp.com/excavations/Hippos_2002.htm
- Segal, Arthur and Michael Eisenberg. "Hippos-Sussita Excavation
Project: The Fourth Season." The Bible and Interpretation, 2003.
Online. http://www.bibleinterp.com/excavations/Hippos_2003.htm
- Tzaferis, Vassilios. "Sussita Awaits the Spade." Biblical
Archaeology Review, Vol. 16, Issue 5. Sep/Oct 1990. Online.http://www.basarchive.org/bswbBrowse.asp?PublD=BSBA&Volume=16&Issue=5&ArticleID=4
Accessed 26 August 2004.
- Report from the
excavations by Haifa university
hippos in German: Hippos
hippos in Modern Greek (1453-): Αντιόχεια (της
Δεκάπολης)
hippos in Hebrew: סוסיתא (אתר ארכיאולוגי)
hippos in Polish: Hippos
hippos in Swedish: Sussita