Day one of our tour started by stopping at the town of Caesarea. It’s a city by the coast that was built by
King Herod the Great, or Antipas. We got
to see the theater there, and found out that the half circle area in front of
the stage was known as the orchestra in Roman times. This is the shape, not what it was used
for. The half circle is the word
orchestra. This is where the term
orchestra comes from because the orchestra was in the semi-circle which, in
Latin is the orchestra.
Additionally we found out that the word for exit was
vomitorium. Thus the word which we use
for … well, losing our food. We got to
see many of the famous Roman arches with the keystone which is the topmost
stone in the arch where all the other stones res.
Our guide, Irit (pronounced eereet) is a lovely woman and is
a Messianic Jew, which is a Jew who has accepted Christ. Hopefully, I will be able to share a lot of
the information that we receive without forgetting much.
We got to see the Hippodrome where the chariot races
were. Yup, the one you saw in Ben
Hur. The tracking of the laps by the
chariots was done a little differently than shown in the movie. They had rings in colors matching the colors
of the racers. When the chariot would go
by, a ring would be put up on a post to track the racer. The first one to complete the laps was the
winner.
The construction material of the area is sandstone which is
what you get after having sand under high pressure for a great deal of time. Caesarea was built as a port city with a
seawall constructed to protected ships in the area. For the Romans, the connection to Rome was
important so a seaport was important.
King Herod’s palace was quite interesting because it had its
own swimming pool. There was an area
built on the water side of the palace where a pool was put in so the king could
enjoy his time in the water.
King Herod dedicated the town to Caesar which is where the
name of the city came from. Caesarea was
held by several different peoples over the years. Finally the Crusaders held Caesarea when the
Arabs attacked and overtook the town. They
destroyed it totally knocking the walls down.
It was never rebuilt after that.
The seaport was not important to the Arabs because their connection was
to the East, not to Rome in the West.
Other places we saw were bathhouses and how they
worked. They actually had hot steam flow
through pipes to create a room like a sauna.
They used scrapers to scrape off the dirt while their pores were open
then the moved to a cooler pool to transition to finally a cold pool to close
the pores. There are some amazing
mosaics in the bathhouses. It was also
interesting to see the drainage from the bathhouses right to the sea.
We also saw a public restroom. Only the rich had their own restrooms and
they were INDOORS! Were the Romans ahead
of us or what. The public restroom was a
trough affair with water running down the trough and seating areas at intervals. One did their thing.
After Caesarea we went to Mt Carmel. Carmel means Vineyard of God. Hebrew for God is El. Caram is vineyard so Caramel is vineyard of
God. Mt. Carmel was where Elijah won
over the prophets of Ba’al. It was interesting
because Elijah had the water brought up to pour around the altar three
times. It’s a heck of a climb up the
mountain and they had to go down into the valley to get the water. Although where we were may not have been
the exact place but it was the general area.
There is now a monastery on the top of Mt. Carmel.
Please bear with me on the pictures. I cannot edit them on this computer at this time. When I get home there will be many more and they will look much better.
After Mt. Carmel, we went to Megiddo. That is a fascinating place which I will go into detail about in my next post.
WOW, what a day, great story and I love the detail.
ReplyDeletePatiently waiting for the next installment.