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Colosse
In the Greek the word is KOLOSSAI, and is
defined as "punishment." The city was situated on the Lycus River in Phrygia.
From its inception, the city was important according to Herodotus and Xenophon.
Xerxes halted at Colossae in 481 BC. And Cyrus the Younger passed through it in
401 BC.
It is apparent that the Apostle Paul never visited Colossae
in person. The church's place there was due to Epaphras and Timothy, according
to Colossians 1:17, and the church in Colossae was located in the home of
Philemon, and Epaphras was the Pastor. Documentation that a church was
established in Colossae is found in Colossians 4:12,13; Revelation 1:11; 3:14.
Colossae was the home of many Jews, and the major industry
in Colossae revolved around collossinus, a type of wool which was purple in
color. The religious trend in the city was Gnosticism, and it was this problem
that prompted the writing of the Colossians Epistle by the Apostle Paul.
In the 7th and 8th centuries Colossae was occupied by the
Saracens, who were a North Arabian Muslim tribe. In the 12th century, the Turks
destroyed the city. The ruins of the city have been excavated. During the Middle
Ages the city was known as Chonae and is presently called Chonas.
Phrygia was called Asia Minor by the Romans. For purposes
of administration the Romans divided Phrygia into two parts: the northeastern
portion to the Galatian Province, the western part to the Province of Asia.
Under the Romans, grapes were cultivated extensively in the area, and Phrygian
marble was quarried. And from this area originated the 'Phrygian Cap,' which was
a cloth head-covering adopted by freed-slaves during Roman rule; it was a symbol
of emancipation.