Biblia

Achaia

Achaia

ACHAIA

Is used in the New Testament for the whole region of Greece south of Macedonia, including the Peloponnesus, or Morea, and some territory north of the gulf of Corinth, Mal 18:12 ; 19:21; 1Co 11:10. Achaia Proper, however, was a province of Greece, of which Corinth was the capital, and embraced the northwestern part of the Pelopennesus. See GREECE.

Fuente: American Tract Society Bible Dictionary

Achaia

Achaia () was, in the classical period, merely a strip of fertile coast-land stretching along the south of the Gulf of Corinth, from the river Larisus, which separated it from Elis, to the Sythas, which divided it from Sicyonia, while the higher mountains of Arcadia bounded it on the south. Its whole length was about 65 miles, its breadth from 12 to 20 miles, and its area about 650 sq. miles.

The Achaeans were probably the remnant of a Pelasgian race ones distributed over the whole Peloponnesus. Though they were celebrated in the heroic age, they rarely figured in the great Hellenic period, keeping themselves as far as possible aloof from the conflicts between the Ionian and Doric States, happy in their own almost uninterrupted prosperity. It is not till the last struggle for Hellenic independence that they appear on the stage of history.

The cities which formed the famous Achaean League became the most powerful political body in Greece; and, when the Romans subdued the country (146 b.c.), they at once honoured the brave confederation and spared the feelings of all the Hellenes by culling the new province not Greece but Achaia. As constituted by Augustus in 27 b.c., the province included Thessaly, aetolia, Acharnania, and part of Epirus (Strabo, XVII. iii. 25), being thus almost co-extensive with the modern kingdom of Greece. As a senatorial province Achaia was governed by a proconsul, who was an ex-praetor. In a.d. 15 Tiberius took it from the Senate, adding it to Macedonia to form an Imperial province under the government of a legatus; but in 44 Claudius restored it to the Senate. Proconsul (, Act 18:12) was therefore the governors correct official title at the time of St. Pauls residence in Corinth. Nero, as a born Philhellene, wished to make Greece absolutely free.

In gratitude for the recognition which his artistic contributions had met with in the native land of the Muses [he] declared the Greeks collectively to be rid of Roman government, free from tribute, and, like the Italians, subject to no governor. At once there arose throughout Greece movements, which would have been civil wars, if these people could have achieved anything more than brawling; and after a few months Vespasian re-established the provincial constitution, so far as it went, with the dry remark that the Greeks had unlearned the art of being free (Mommsen, Provinces, i. 262).

To the end of the empire Achaia remained a senatorial province. The administrative centre was Corinth (q.v. [Note: quod vide, which see.] ), where the governor had his official residence. During a prolonged mission in that city, St. Paul was brought into contact with the proconsul Gallio (q.v. [Note: quod vide, which see.] ), the brother of Seneca. The rapid progress of the gospel in Achaia is partly explained by the fact that Judaism had already for centuries been working as a leaven in many of the cities of Greece. Sparta and Sicyon are named among the numerous free States to which the Romans sent letters on behalf of the Jews about 139 b.c. (1Ma 15:23), and Philos Legatio ad Gaium ( 36) testifies to the presence of Jews in Botia, aetolia, Attica, Argos, and Corinth. Only three Achaean cities are mentioned in the NT-Athens, Corinth, and Cenchreae-but the address of 2 Cor. to all the saints who are in the whole of Achaia, and the liberality of the regions of Achaia (2Co 9:2; 2Co 11:10), prove that there must have been many other unnamed centres of Christian faith and life in the province. While 1Co 16:15 refers to the house of Stephanas as the firstfruits of Achaia, Act 17:34 rather indicates that the Apostles brief visit to Athens had already borne some fruit, Dionysius, Damaris, and others with them being Achaean believers. Athens (q.v. [Note: quod vide, which see.] ) was either reckoned by itself or else entirely overlooked.

Literature.-The Histories of Polybius and Livy; A. Holm, History of Greece, Eng. translation London, 1894-98, vol. iv.; T. Mommsen, The Provinces of the Roman Empire2, Eng. translation , London, 1909, i. 290 ff.; J. Marquardt, Rm. Staatsverwaltung, new ed., Leipzig, 1885, i. 321f.; C. v. Weizscker, Apostolic Age, Eng. translation i.2 [London, 1897] p. 303ff.; A. C. McGiffert, Apostolic Age, Edinburgh, 1897, p. 256 ff.

James Strahan.

Fuente: Dictionary of the Apostolic Church

Achaia

Roman province corresponding approximately to modern Greece . Saint Paul was very active here (2 Corinthians 1:9), and founded a flourishing church in Corinth (Acts 18).

Fuente: New Catholic Dictionary

Achaia

(Ægialeia).

The name, before the Roman conquest in 146 B.C., of a strip of land between the gulf of Corinth in the north and Elis and Arcadia in the south, embracing twelve cities leagued together. The Achaean League was prominent in the struggle of the Greeks against Roman domination. It is probably due to this fact that the name was afterwards extended to the whole country south of Macedonia and Illyricum, corresponding approximately to modern Greece. During the Roman period Achaia was usually governed as a senatorial province. The Governor was an ex-Praetor of Rome, and bore the title of Proconsul. Corinth was the capital. When St. Paul came into Achaia (Acts 18), Gallio, a brother of Seneca, was proconsul. His refusal to interfere in the religious affairs of the Jews and the tolerance of his administration favoured the spread of Christianity. In Corinth the Apostle founded a flourishing church. In his Second Epistle to the Corinthians, he salutes Christians “in all Achaia” (i, 1) and commends their charity (ix, 2).

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RAMSAY in HASTINGS, Dict. of the Bible; MOMMSEN, Provinces of the Roman Empire (Rom. Gesch.), V, vii.

W.S. REILLY

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume ICopyright © 1907 by Robert Appleton CompanyOnline Edition Copyright © 2003 by K. KnightNihil Obstat, March 1, 1907. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., CensorImprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York

Fuente: Catholic Encyclopedia

Achaia

(v, derivation uncertain), a region of Greece, which in the restricted sense occupied the north-western portion of the Peloponnesus, including Corinth and its isthmus (Strabo, 7, p. 438 sq.). By the poets it was often put for the whole of Greece, whence , Acheans, i.e. Greeks. The cities of the narrow slip of country, originally called Achaia, were confederated in an ancient league, which was renewed in B.C. 280 for the purpose of resisting the Macedonians. This league subsequently included several of the other Grecian states, and became the most powerful political body in Greece; and hence it was natural for the Romans to apply the name of Achaia to the Peloponnesus and the south of Greece when they took Corinth and destroyed the league in B. C. 146 (Pausan. 7:16, 10). Under the Romans Greece was divided into two provinces, Macedonia and Achaia, the former of which included Macedonia proper, with Illyricum, Epirus, and Thessaly; and the latter, all that lay southward of the former (Cellar. 1, p. 1170, 1022). It is in this latter acceptation that the name of Achaia is always employed in the New Testament (Act 18:12; Act 18:16; Act 19:21; Rom 15:26; Rom 16:25; 1Co 16:15; 2Co 1:1; 2Co 9:2; 2Co 11:10; 1Th 1:7-8). In the division of the provinces by Augustus between the emperor and the senate in B.C. 27, Achaia was made a senatorial province (Strabo, 17, p. 840), and, as such, was governed by proconsuls (Dion. Cass. 53, p. 704). In A.D. 16 Tiberius changed the two into one imperial province under procurators (Tacit. Annal. 1, 76); but Claudius restored them to the senate and to the proconsular form of government (Suet. I Claud. 25). Hence the exact and minute propriety with which Luke expresses himself in giving the title of proconsul (, deputy) to Gallio (q.v.), who was appointed to the province (see Smith’s Dict. of Class, Ant. s.v.) in the time of Claudius

(Act 18:12). (See generally Smith’s Dict. of Class. Geog. s.v.)

Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature

Achaia

the name originally of a narrow strip of territory in Greece, on the north-west of the Peloponnesus. Subsequently it was applied by the Romans to the whole Peloponnesus, now called the Morea, and the south of Greece. It was then one of the two provinces (Macedonia being the other) into which they divided the country when it fell under their dominion. It is in this latter enlarged meaning that the name is always used in the New Testament (Acts 18:12, 27; 19:21; Rom. 15: 26; 16:5, etc.). It was at the time when Luke wrote the Acts of the Apostles under the proconsular form of government; hence the appropriate title given to Gallio as the “deputy,” i.e., proconsul, of Achaia (Acts 18:12).

Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary

Achaia

In New Testament, a Roman province, including the whole Peloponnese, and most of Hellas proper, with the islands. This province, with Macedonia, comprehended all Greece (Act 18:12; Act 19:21). The name was given by the Romans, when they took Corinth and destroyed the Achaian League (146 D.C.), which, beginning with the narrow northern region of the Peloponnese called Achaia, afterward included several Grecian states. In Act 18:12 Gallio, with the minute propriety that marks historical truth, called “deputy” (proconsul). Achaia had only just been restored under Claudius to the senate, whose representatives in the provinces were proconsuls, from having been an imperial province under Tiberius, whose representatives were procurators.

Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary

ACHAIA

In the days of the Roman Empire, Achaia was the southern of two Greek provinces, the other being Macedonia (Act 19:21; Rom 15:26; 2Co 9:2; 1Th 1:8). Formerly, in the days of the Greek Empire, Macedonia was the centre of Greek power, but under the Romans the political situation had changed and the name Achaia was usually identified with Greece (Act 18:27; Act 20:2; see GREECE). The administrative centre of Achaia was Corinth, and the educational centre, Athens (Act 17:21; Act 18:1; Act 18:12; 2Co 1:1).

A church was founded in Corinth during Pauls second missionary journey, and another at the port of Cenchreae nearby (Act 18:1-18; Rom 16:1; 1Co 16:15; see CORINTH). There were also Christians in Athens (Act 17:34; see ATHENS). Paul revisited the area during his third missionary journey (Act 19:21; Act 20:1-3), when he collected money that the churches of Achaia, like other churches, had put aside to help the poor Christians in Judea (Rom 15:26; 2Co 9:1-2). Some years later, Paul planned to spend a winter at Nicopolis, on Achaias west coast, but the Bible does not record whether he was able to fulfil his plans (Tit 3:12).

Fuente: Bridgeway Bible Dictionary

Achaia

ACHAIA.This name was originally applied to a strip of land on the N. coast of the Peloponnese. On annexing Greece and Macedonia as a province in b.c. 146, the Romans applied the name Achaia to the whole of that country. In b.c. 27 two provinces were formed, Macedonia and Achaia; and the latter included Thessaly, tolia, Acarnania, and some part of Epirus, with Euba and most of the Cyclades. It was governed in St. Pauls time by a proconsul of the second grade, with headquarters at Corinth (Act 18:12). Hellas (Act 20:2) is the native Greek name corresponding to the Roman Achaia. There were Jewish settlements in this province, at Corinth, Athens, etc. (Act 17:17; Act 18:4; Act 18:7), and the work of St. Paul began amongst them and was carried on by Apollos (1 and 2 Cor. passim, Act 17:16 ff., Act 17:18; Act 19:1).

A. Souter.

Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible

Achaia

a-kaya (, Achaia): The smallest country in the Peloponnesus lying along the southern shore of the Corinthian Gulf, north of Arcadia and east of Elis. The original inhabitants were Ionians, but these were crowded out later by the Acheans, who came from the East. According to Herodotus, the former founded twelve cities, many of which retain their original names to this day. These cities were on the coast and formed a confederation of smaller communities, which in the last century of the independent history of Greece attained to great importance (Achaean League). In Roman times the term Achaia was used to include the whole of Greece, exclusive of Thessaly. Today Achaia forms with Elis one district, and contains a population of nearly a quarter of a million. The old Achean League was renewed in 280 bc, but became more important in 251, when Aratus of Sicyon was chosen commander-in-chief. This great man increased the power of the League and gave it an excellent constitution, which our own great practical politicians, Hamilton and Madison, consulted, adopting many of its prominent devices, when they set about framing the Constitution of the United States. In 146 bc Corinth was destroyed and the League broken up (see 1 Macc 15:23); and the whole of Greece, under the name of Achaia, was transformed into a Roman province, which was divided into two separate provinces, Macedonia and Achaia, in 27 bc.

In Act 18:12 we are told that the Jews in Corinth made insurrection against Paul when Gallio was deputy of Achaia, and in Act 18:27 that Apollos was making preparations to set out for Achaia In Rom 16:5, Achaia should read ASIA as in the Revised Version (British and American). In Act 20:2 Greece means Achaia, but the oft-mentioned Macedonia and Achaia generally means the whole of Greece (Act 19:21; Rom 15:26; 1Th 1:8). Paul commends the churches of Achaia for their liberality (2Co 9:13).

Literature

See Gerhard, Ueber den Volksstamm der A. (Berlin, 1854); Klatt, Forschungen zur Geschichte des achaischen Bundes (Berlin, 1877); M. Dubois, Les ligues tolienne et achenne (Paris, 1855); Capes, History of the Achean League (London, 1888); Mahaffy, Problems, 177-86; Busolt, Greek Staatsalter, 2nd edition (1892), 347ff; Toeppfer, in Pauly’s Realencyclopaedie.

For Aratus see Hermann, Staatsalter, 1885; Krakauer, Abhandlung ueber Aratus (Breslau, 1874); Neumeyer, Aratus aus Sikyon (Leipzig, 1886); Holm, History of Greece.

Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia

Achaia

Achaia, a region of Greece, which in the restricted sense occupied the north-western portion of the Peloponnesus, including Corinth and its isthmus. By the poets it was often put for the whole of Greece, whence Achaioi, the Greeks. Under the Romans, Greece was divided into two provinces, Macedonia and Achaia, the former of which included Macedonia proper, with Illyricum, Epirus, and Thessaly; and the latter, all that lay southward of the former. It is in this latter acceptation that the name of Achaia is always employed in the New Testament (Act 18:12; Act 18:27; Act 19:21; Rom 15:26; Rom 16:5; 1Co 16:15; 2Co 1:1; 2Co 9:2; 2Co 11:10; 1Th 1:7-8). Achaia was at first a senatorial province, and, as such, was governed by proconsuls. Tiberius changed the two into one imperial province under procurators; but Claudius restored them to the senate and to the proconsular form of government. Hence the exact and minute propriety with which St. Luke expresses himself in giving the title of proconsul to Gallio, who was appointed to the province in the time of Claudius (Act 18:12).

Fuente: Popular Cyclopedia Biblical Literature

Achaia

[Acha’ia]

This with Macedonia embraced the whole of Greece in the N.T.; but with the poets Achaia often referred to the whole of Greece. Under the Romans it was divided into two districts, Achaia being a senatorial province. Tiberias united the two districts into an imperial province under procurators; but Claudius again restored it to the senate under a proconsul, so that Luke was correct in calling Gallio a proconsul () or deputy. Act 18:12; Act 19:21; Rom 15:26; 1Co 16:15, etc.

Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary

Achaia

G882

A region of Greece.

Paul visits

Act 18; Act 19:21; Rom 16:5; 1Co 16:15; 2Co 1:1

Benevolence of the Christians in

Rom 15:26; 2Co 9:2; 2Co 11:10

Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible

Achaia

Achaia (a-k’ yah or a-k’yah). This was the original name of a district in the northwest of the Peloponnesus: in New Testament times it had a wider signification; for the Roman provinces of Achaia and Macedonia comprehended the whole of Greece. It is in this larger sense that Achaia must be understood. Act 18:12; Act 18:27; Act 19:21; Rom 15:26; Rom 16:5; 1Co 16:15; 2Co 1:1; 2Co 9:2; 2Co 11:10; 1Th 1:7-8. Achaia was first a senatorial province, and had proconsuls. Tiberius changed it into a province imperial under procurators; and Claudius restored it to the senate. Hence Gallio, before whom Paul appeared, was proconsul. Corinth was the capital city.

Fuente: People’s Dictionary of the Bible

Achaia

Acha’ia. (trouble). Signifies in the New Testament, a Roman province which included the whole of the Peloponnesus and the greater part of Hellas proper, with the adjacent islands. This province, with that of Macedonia, comprehended the while of Greece; hence Achaia and Macedonia are frequently mentioned together in the New Testament to indicate all Greece. Act 18:12; Act 19:21; Rom 15:26; Rom 16:5; 1Co 16:15; 2Co 7:5; 2Co 9:2; 2Co 11:10; 1Th 1:7-8. In the time of the emperor Claudius, it was governed by a proconsul, translated in the Authorized Version “deputy,” of Achaia. Act 18:12.

Fuente: Smith’s Bible Dictionary

ACHAIA

a region of Greece

Act 18:27; Act 19:21; Rom 15:26; Rom 16:5; 1Co 16:15; 2Co 1:1; 2Co 9:2; 2Co 11:10

Fuente: Thompson Chain-Reference Bible

Achaia

This name is used to denote the whole of Greece, as it existed as a Roman province; or Achaia Proper, a district in the northern part of the Peloponnesus, on the bay of Corinth, and in which the city of that name stood. It appears to have been used in the former sense in 2Co 11:10; and in the latter, in Act 19:21.

Fuente: Biblical and Theological Dictionary