Misplaced Pages

Tyre Hippodrome

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Tyre Hippodrome , located in the city of Tyre in southern Lebanon , is an ancient sporting arena and UNESCO World Heritage site dating back to the second century AD . Built during the Roman era , the hippodrome was primarily used for chariot racing. It is considered the second-largest hippodrome in the ancient world.

#524475

9-566: The Expositio , a geographical account from the latter half of the fourth century by an anonymous author, lists the Tyre Hippodrome as one of the top five racetracks in the Levant during the Roman empire. The 480 meter long and 90 meter wide horseshoe-shaped structure seated twenty thousand spectators who gathered to watch the sport of chariot racing. The place is considered to be one of

18-598: A Benedictine monastery in Cava , near Naples , was published in 1831 by Angelo Mai and bears the title Descriptio totius mundi . The Descriptio , while more abridged than the Expositio , is nonetheless the only manuscript to contain the beginning of the work. "Descriptio totius mundi" and the "vetus versio" of "Expositio Totius Mundi & Gentium" were printed in the second volumen of Karl Otfried Müller's Minor Greek Geographers (1861). In these series of books, his name

27-597: Is notable. He mentions 61 cities, only 16 of which are in the western portion of the Empire. It is usually assumed he was a native of Syria . The author's religion is likewise a mystery. While he mentions numerous Greek writers ( Berossus , Manetho , a mysterious Apollonius, Menander of Ephesus , Herodotus and Thucydides ), he shows little sign of any real influence by them, or indeed of any meaningful education, possibly only being aware of them through his familiarity with Against Apion by Josephus , whom he refers to as

36-542: The Roman Empire living during the reign of Constantius II . The Greek original, composed between AD 350 and 362, is now lost. The text comes to us through two Latin translations made during the sixth century. The work is composed of three parts. The first (§ 1-21) describes lands east of the Roman Empire and contains the most legendary and least accurate geographical information. The second part (§ 22–62),

45-504: The "teacher of the Jews". On the one hand, Josephus is more likely to have been known to a Christian. The text also contains "Biblical allusions" and "Christian phrases". However, the text shows no interest in the churches or holy sites documented by the later Christian itineraria , and is more likely to note a city's "gripping games, good wines and pretty women", while displaying an "obvious affinity" for pagan cults and rituals. One of

54-408: The largest and best preserved Roman hippodromes of its type in the Roman world. Its seating section ( cavea ) is surmounting a gallery. The start boxes and parts of the median strip (spina) with an obelisk on it are visible. Each end of the course is marked by stone turning posts ( metae ). Charioteers had to make this circuit seven times. Although primarily meant for chariot races, the hippodrome

63-411: The longest, describes the mainland provinces of the Empire, while the third (§ 63–68) describes island provinces. Little is known about the anonymous author of the work, though clues from the text are often used to garner information. While "it has been suggested that he was a rhetor, sophist, merchant, entrepreneur [sic] or a vir rusticus ", the work's preoccupation with trade and port cities

72-401: The surviving translations, from which the more well known title of Expositio Totius Mundi & Gentium is derived, is now also lost but was preserved by Jacques Godefroy's 1628 printing of his book "Vetus Orbis Descriptio". Godefroy's work contains three versions of "Expositio". It has a Greek version and two Latin ones: "nova versio" and "vetus versio". The other, from a manuscript held in

81-596: Was also used for other types of sport, and it is likely that at least some of the events of the Tyrian Games were celebrated at this place. It may have been the place where, during the Diocletianic Persecution , Christians were tortured to death. Expositio totius mundi et gentium Expositio totius mundi et gentium ("A description of the world and its people") is a brief "commercial-geographical" survey written by an anonymous citizen of

#524475