Home1810 Edition

APAMEA

Volume 2 · 468 words · 1810 Edition

or APAMIA, the name of several ancient cities.

1. One of Bithynia, formerly called Myrlea, from Myrlius, general of the Colophonians: destroyed by Philip, father of Perseus; and given to his ally Prusias, who rebuilt it, and called it Apamea, from the name of his queen Apama (Strabo). Stephanus says, that Nicomedes Epiphanes, son of Prusias, called it after his mother; and that it had its ancient name from Myrlea, an Amazon. The Romans led a colony thither (Strabo); Apamea bo); called Colonia Apamena (Pliny, Appian). The gentilic name is Apamaeus and Apamenus (Trajan in a letter to Pliny).

2. Another Apamea, called Cibotus, of Phrygia, at some distance from the Meander (Agathodemon); but by a coin of Tiberius, on the Meander. The name is from Apame, mother of Antiochus Soter, the founder, and the daughter of Artabazus (Strabo). The rise, or at least the increase, of Apamea, was owing to the ruins of Celene. The inhabitants were called Apamenses; and, though inland, were worshippers of Neptune. The reason, it has been conjectured, was, that they had suffered often from earthquakes, of which he was supposed the author. Mithridates gave a hundred talents towards the restoration of the city; which, it is said, had likewise been overthrown in the time of Alexander. Their tribute money was remitted to them for five years on the same account under the emperor Tiberius. The subterraneous passage of the Lycus and other streams showed that the ground had many cavities; and these, it has been furnished, rendered the region very liable to be shaken.

3. A third, on the confines of Parthia and Media, named Raphene (Strabo, Pliny).

4. A fourth Apamea, a town of Mesene, an island in the Tigris (Pliny, Ammianus); where a branch of the Euphrates, called the Royal River, falls into the Tigris (Ptolemy).

5. A fifth in Mesopotamia, on the other side the Euphrates, opposite to Zeugma on this side, both founded by Seleucus, and joined by a bridge, from which the latter takes its name (Pliny, Isidor, Characenus).

6. A sixth Apamea, now Famia, also in Syria, below the confluence of the Orontes and Mariyas; a strong city, and situated in a peninsula, formed by the Orontes and a lake. "It is here (says Strabo) that the Seleucidae had established the school and nursery of their cavalry." The soil of the neighbourhood, abounding in pasturage, fed no less than 30,000 mares, 300 stallions, and 500 elephants; instead of which, the marshes of Famia at present scarcely afford a few buffaloes and sheep. To the veteran soldiers of Alexander, who here repented after their victories, have succeeded wretched peasants, who live in perpetual dread of the oppressions of the Turks and the inroads of the Arabs.

Apamea was also the ancient name of Pella, in the Decapolis.