Biblia

Three Taverns

Three Taverns

Three Taverns

( , representing the Lat. Tres Tabernae)

Three Taverns was a station on the Via Appia, and probably a village of some importance on account of the stream of traffic constantly flowing through it. Cicero (ad Att. ii. 11) mentions it as the point where a branch road from Antium joined the Appian Way. Here St. Paul, who had landed at Puteoli and was proceeding to Rome, was met by a company of Christian brethren who had come from the capital to welcome him (Act 28:15). According to the Antonine Itinerary, the station was 10 Roman miles nearer Rome than Appii Forum (where the Apostle had already been met by Roman brethren), and 17 Roman miles from Aricia, which is known to have been 16 Roman miles south of Rome. Tres Tabernae probably stood about 3 miles from the modern Cisterna, on the road to Terracina, and very near the northern end of the Pontine Marshes.

Literature.-C. Baedeker, Southern Italy and Sicily15, London, 1908, p. 12.

James Strahan.

Fuente: Dictionary of the Apostolic Church

Three Taverns

( , Graecized from the Latin Tres Tabernce), a station on the Appian Road, along which Paul traveled from Puteoli to Rome (Act 28:15). The Roman Christians went, in token of respect, to meet Paul at these places, having been probably apprised of his approach by letters or express from Puteoli (Act 28:13-15) one party of them resting at the Three Taverns, and the other going on to Appii Forum. When the apostle saw this unequivocal token of respect and zeal, he took fresh courage. There is no doubt that the Three Taverns was a frequent meeting place of travelers. A good illustration of this kind of intercourse along the Appian Way is supplied by Josephus (Ant. 17:12, 1) in his account of the journey of the pretender Herod Alexander. He landed at Puteoli (Dicaearchia) to gain over the Jews that were there; and when the report went about him that he was coming to Rome, the whole multitude of the Jews that were there went out to meet him, ascribing it to Divine Providence that he had so unexpectedly escaped. SEE PAUL.

The word is plainly the Latin taberna in Greek letters, and denotes a house made with boards or planks; quasi trabena. Wooden houses, huts, etc., are called tabernae. Thus Horace, Pauperum tabernas regumque turres (Carm. 1, 14,13). Hence the word also means shops, as distinguished from dwelling-houses. Horace uses it for a bookseller’s shop (Sat. 1, 4, 71), and for a wine-shop (Ep. 1, 14, 24). The shops at Pompeii are booths, connected in almost every case with dwellings behind, as they were in London three centuries ago. When eatables or drinkables were sold in a Roman shop, it was called taberna, tavern, victualling house. Grotius observes that there were many places in the Roman empire at this time which had the names of Forum and Tabernae, the former from having Markets of all kinds of commodities, the latter from furnishing wine and eatables. The place or village called Three Taverns probably, therefore, derived its name from three large inns, or eating-houses, for the refreshment of travelers passing to and from Rome. Zosimus calls it (2, 10).

Appii Forum appears to have been such another place. Horace mentions the latter, in describing his journey from Rome to Brundusium, as differtum nautis, cauponibus atque malignis stuffed with rank boatmen, and with vintners base (Sat. 1, 5, 3). That the Three Taverns was nearer Rome than Appii Forum appears from the conclusion of one of Cicero’s letters to Atticus (2, 10), which, when he is traveling south- eastwards from Antium to his seat near Formiae, he dates Ab Appii Foro, hora quarta from Appii Forum, at the fourth hour; and adds, Dederam aliam paulo ante, Tribus Tabernis (I wrote you another, a little while ago, from the Three Taverns). Just at this point a road came in from Antium on the coast, as we learn from the same letter of Cicero (Att. 2, 12). The Itinerary of Antoninus places Appii Forum at forty-three Roman miles from Rome, and the Three Taverns at thirty-three; and, comparing this with what is observed still along the line of road, we have no difficulty in coming to’the conclusion that the Three Taverns was near the modern Cisterna (see Smith, Dict. of Greek and Romans Geog. 2, 1226 b, 1291 b). In the 4th century there was a bishop of Three Taverns, named Felix (Optatus, lib. 1). It has been stated by some that the place still remains, and is called Tre Taverne. Thus, in Evelyn’s time (1645), the remains were yet very faite (Diarie, 1, 134). -But recent travelers have been unable to find more. than a few unnamed remains on the spot indicated (Chaupy, Maison d’Horace, 3, 383; D’Anville, Analyse de D’Italie, p. 195; Westphal, Ronm. Kampagne, p. 69; Fleck, Wissenschaft. Reise, I, 1, 375). SEE APPII FORUM.

Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature

Three Taverns

A village or Station where the brethren met Paul on his way to Rome (Act 28:15); so-called from there having been originally there three taverns; 33 miles from Rome according to the Antonine Itinerary. Near the present Cisterna. It must have cheered Paul to greet Christians who had come so far to meet him.

Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary

Three Taverns

See TAVERNS.

Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary

Three Taverns

A town in Italy, Roman Christians meet Paul in.

Act 28:15

Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible

Three Taverns

Three Taverns. A station on the Appian Road, along which St. Paul travelled, from Puteoli to Rome. Act 28:15. The distances, reckoning southward from Rome are given as follows in the Antonine Itinerary: “to Aricia, 16 miles; to Three Taverns, 17 miles; to Appii Forum, 10 miles;” and, comparing this with what is still observed along the line of road, we have no difficulty in coming to the conclusion that “Three Taverns” was near the modern Cisterna. Just at this point, a road came in from Antium, on the coast. There is no doubt that “Three Taverns” was a frequent meeting-place of travellers.

Fuente: Smith’s Bible Dictionary