Library of Celsus is one of the city’s top attractions |
It’s 250 A.D., and the Roman Emperor Trajan Decius has
come up with a sure-fire way to get rid of those pesky Christians. He orders
everyone in the empire – under pain of death – to make sacrifices to idols of the
Roman gods, figuring the Christians wouldn’t do it. He was right, they
wouldn’t. And so the lions got some unexpectedly tasty treats.
Edict from Rome was a ruse to get
rid of the empire’s Christians.
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Some accounts say the emperor’s edict were particularly
aimed at wiping out the large group of Christians nesting in the mega-city of
Ephesus on the coast of modern-day Turkey. There, in the Roman capital of Asia
Minor, seven Christian lads are said to have escaped the onslaught by ducking
into a mountain cave, where they fell asleep for a long, long time.
(Like most legends, this one
has lots of different versions – from ancient tales by Greek, Roman and Syrian writers
to an account in the Muslim Quran. Following is one of the most popular
versions.)
The youngsters awoke some 180 years later, not knowing
that by 313 A.D. it would be OK to be a Christian, and by 380 A.D. Christianity
would be the official religion of the Roman empire.
According to the legend, around 430 A.D. the guy who
owned the cave came across the seven sleepers and woke them up. Thinking they’d
just slept for a night, when the lads went outside the cave they were shocked
to see crosses on the gates to the city and on churches, and Jesus’ name “on
everyone’s lips.”
The townsfolk were amazed, too. Especially when the
young men tried to buy things with coins dating back to Emperor Decius.
Amphitheater where St. Paul
preached.
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The Golden Legend, a best-seller of the
Middle Ages, takes the story through a few more twists and turns, then tells
how the Roman emperor (Theodosius) at the time compared the seven youngsters’
awakening to Jesus’ resurrection of Lazarus. How and when the sleepers died is
kind of fuzzy – some say their tombs are right in the cave, which was later
bricked in to look like a church -- but they were eventually honored as saints.
Their Catholic feast day is on July 27 and on Aug. 4 and Oct. 22 in the Greek
Orthodox Church.
Visitors to Ephesus can see what’s believed to be the site of the cave in a grotto of catacombs, tombs and graves near the city.
About Ephesus
The city hosts close to a million visitors a year, many from cruise ships docked at the Turkish port of Kusadasi. Tour buses take sightseers on a 20-minute ride to the ruins, during which guides note they’re about to see the partially restored remains of the second largest city in the whole Roman empire, topped only by Rome itself.
Outdoor public potties were
kept warm by slaves.
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On most days the city is alive with tourists scampering around the iconic library of Celsus (where scholars once pored through 12,000 scrolls), a nearby brothel, all kinds of temples, shrines, fountains and gates, a 25,000-seat amphitheater (where St. Paul tried to preach to the Ephesians), public “latriana” potties (kept warm by slaves sitting on them during the winter) and the hillside homes of the Roman silky set.
Out in the boonies of the city
is an odd-looking marble column, patched together from pieces of smaller
columns. The lone column marks the location of Ephesus’ greatest treasure: the
spot where the most wondrous of the Seven Wonders of the World – the immense Temple
of Artemis (the twin sister of the Greek super-god Apollo) – once stood.