Digression: a description of Antioch

[10.32.1]  Status Urbis. Haec urbs Antiochia scīlicet valdē est pulchra et honōrābilis, quia īnfrā mūrōs ēius sunt quattuor montaneae maximae et nimis altae. In altiōrī quoque est castellum aedificātum mīrābile, et nimis forte. Dē deorsum est cīvitās honōrābilis et conveniēns, omnibusque ōrnāta honōribus, quoniam multae ecclēsiae sunt in eā aedificātae. Trecenta et sexāgintā monastēria in sē continet. Sub suō iugō continet patriarcha centum quīnquāgintā trēs epīscopōs.

[10.32.2]  Clauditur cīvitās duōbus mūrīs. Māior quoque valdē est altus et mīrābiliter lātus, magnīsque lapidibus compositus; in quō sunt ōrdinātae quater centum et quīnquāgintā turrēs.  Modīsque omnibus est cīvitās fōrmōsa. Ab oriente, clauditur quātuor magnīs montaneīs. Ab occidente, secus mūrōs urbis, fluit quoddam flūmen, cui nōmen Farfar. Quae cīvitās magnae auctōritātis est. Nam eam prius septuāgintā quīnque rēgēs cōnstituērunt, quōrum fuit caput Antiochus rēx, ā quō dīcitur Antiochia. Istam cīvitātem tenuērunt Francī obsessam, per octo mēnsēs et ūnum diem. Posteā fuērunt intus inclūsī per trēs hebdomadās ā Turcīs et ab aliīs pāgānīs, quōrum numerō numquam fuit māior congregātiō hominum, vel Chrīstiānōrum vel pāgānōrum. Tamen, adiūtōriō Deī et Sānctī Sepulchrī, dēvictīs illīs ā Chrīstiānīs Deī, requiēvimus cum gaudiō et laetitiā magnā in Antiochiā, per quīnque mēnsēs et octo diēs.

    A brief description of Antioch.

    10.32.1

    quāttuor montaneae maximae et nimis altae: Mount Stauris, Mount Cassius, and the two peaks of Mount Silpius.

    In altiōrī = in altiōre (montaneā).

    castellum: the citadel, built high on Mount Silpius.

    Dē deorsum: below the castellum and the highest mountain.

    Trecenta et sexāgintā monastēria: the number is absurdly high, unless it refers to all the monasteries in Syria more generally.  At some level the figure of 360 is probably, since the "prophetic year" in the Hebrew Bible / Old Testament had 360 days (12 x 30).

    Sub suō iugō ...  epīscopōs: = patriarcha continet sub suō iugō centum quīnquāgintā trēs epīscopōs. This number too seems too large, and may be symbolic: "Simon Peter went up, and drew the net to land full of great fishes, an hundred and fifty and three" (John 21.11). The patriarch of Antioch at this time was John the Oxite. From the 6th century on the bishops of Rome, Jerusalem, Alexandria, Constantinople, and Antioch were designated “patriarchs,” and could ordain and had authority over the bishops under them.

     

    10.32.2

    duōbus mūrīs: these walls had been built by the Byzantines in the 6th century.

    quater centum et quīnquāgintā turrēs: 450 towers seems like a lot; the number might be symbolic, as with the monasteries and bishops in 10.32.1 above, but there seems to be nothing special about 450.

    Ab oriente, clauditur quātuor magnīs montaneīs: the mountains are actually SE.

    Ab occidente ... flūmen, cui nōmen Farfar: known to the Greeks and Romans as the Orontes; it runs roughly north-south to the west of the city.

    Nam eam prius septuāgintā quīnque rēgēs cōnstituērunt: this story is apocryphal.

    Antiochus rēx: the founder of Antioch was actually Seleucus I, who named the city after his father Antiochus.

    per octo mēnsēs et ūnum diem: the siege actually lasted 7.5 months, from 21 October 1097 to 3 June 1098.

    dēvictīs illīs ā Chrīstiānīs Deī: “when they (the Turks and other pagans) had been defeated by God’s Christians.”

    10.32.1

    deorsum: downwards

    iugum –ī, n.: yoke, collar; control

     

    10.32.2

    lātus –a –um: wide

    quater: four times

    secus: (as adverb) otherwise, on the contrary; (as prep. + acc.) by, beside, along

    hebdomas –adis, f.: a period of seven days; (ML) a week

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