Pisidian Antioch

Later in the life of Seleucus Nicator I, the successor of Alexander the Great that organized Asia Minor, the city of Antioch of Pisidia was founded.
guard like position it held at 3500 feet above sea level in the Taurus Mountains. The position guarded the road access from the south, as well as the so called high road from Ephesus to Syria. It was settled and maintained as the military command center of southern Galatia, and was located in the proximity of the border of Pisidia and Phrygia. Because it was near the border, the historian Strabo referred to the place as near Pisidia. The city was set atop a precipice described by Sir William Ramsey on his visit at the beginning of the twentieth century as an oblong plateau varying from 50 feet to 200 feet above the plain nearly two miles in circumference.
peace and prosperity in the generation leading up to St. Paul and St. Barnabas� visit. The frequent host of Roman governors on travels from west to east, the city hosted festivals and games, and the money attracted greater investment in this, a center of Galatian activity. On the First Journey, St. Paul and St. Barnabas left the area of Perga without John Mark and proceeded to Antioch, where they entered the synagogue on the Sabbath.
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