*)akh/: po/lis e)n *foini/kh|, h(\n oi( me\n th\n nu=n *ptolemai/+da kaloume/nhn ou(/tw pa/lai fhsi\n o)noma/zesqai, *dhmh/trios de\ ou) th\n po/lin, a)lla\ th\n tau/ths a)kro/polin.
Abridged from Harpocration s.v. See below, n.1.
[1] Manuscript variants have this "say" in both singular and plural; Adler oddly chose to print the singular. Harpocration not only has the plural but names a plurality of authorities -- Nicanor and
Callimachus -- who said this. [Harpocration's entry itself gives
Demosthenes 52 as the principal citation for Ake. The toponym does not appear in the transmitted text of the speech, but Valesius (Henri de Valois, 1603-1676) recognised that 52.20 could/should be emended from
ei)s *Qra/|khn to
ei)s *)/Akhn (see web address 1). For another emendation which provides a mention of Ake in one of the Attic orators see
Isaeus 4.7, with Valckenaer's
e)c *)Akh=s for
e(ca/kis; and for the same in another genre
Philo Mechanicus,
Poliorketika B53 Diels-Schramm [90.16 Th.], with Buecheler's
*)/Akhs for
a)kti/s.]
[2] The hellenistic antiquarian
Demetrius of Scepsis (on whom see generally OCD(4) p.433, s.v. "
Demetrius(12)"). Here he probably implies that only the headland fortress was still called Ake in later times, while the residential city became
Ptolemais.
This ancient Phoenician headland city 'Akka (Akkadian Akk?Akka) was visited by Assyrian conquerors about 700 B.C., was the Persian staging-point for their invasion of Egypt, and became part of Alexander's empire in 332 and of Ptolemaic Egypt, being renamed
Ptolemais (RE XXIII 2.1883-6,
Ptolemais [9], cf. I 1.162 Ake), to be distinguished from the
Ptolemais in Egypt. The crusaders knew it as St. Jean d'Acre, or simply Acre. Today as
Akko (
Septuagint *)akxw/) it is a multicultural city of about 50,000 in Israel, on the northern promontory of the Bay of Haifa.
Ptolemais was an important hellenistic city, visited by Paul (
Acts 21.7). The Roman emperor Claudius founded a colony of Roman veterans there; always hostile to Hasmonean Judaism the Greeks massacred many Jews in 66, and in 67 Vespasian mustered his troops there for the invasion of Galilee (see OCD). By 190 A.D. it was the seat of a suffragan Christian bishop. It fell to the Arabs in 638, was captured by Baudouin I in 1104 and renamed St.Jean d'Acre. In 1187 Saladin captured it, but it was retaken by Richard the Lionheart in 1191. The Mamelouks gained control from 1291 to their fall to the Turks in 1517. It resisted Napoleon in 1799. Captured by the British in 1918, it remained in British Palestine until 1948, when it was captured by the Israeli army, to be incorporated in Israel.
Demosthenes (52.20),
Strabo (16.2.25-26),
Stephanus of
Byzantium (
Ethnica 59.11, 538.7) and Harpocration s.v. all accentuate the name on the first syllable,
*)/akh, but this may be a confusion with the Arcadian city of that name mentioned by
Pausanias in the wanderings of Orestes (8.34.2) and clearly in the neuter plural.
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