CAESAREA BY THE SEA
Caesarea by the Sea (to be distinguished from Caesarea
Philippi) is located about 23 miles south of Mt. Carmel and 64 miles northwest
of Jerusalem. The city was built by Herod the Great in honor of Caesar Augustus.
It was said that the beauty of Caesarea rivaled that of Rome, so Herod named the
city in honor of the Emperor in order to appease him. The ingenuity of Herod the
Great is seen in the ruins of this city. He skillfully engineered a man-made
harbor and made the city into the capital of Palestine in the Roman period. The
ruins of Herod’s palace have been excavated recently. There is a magnificent
theater and an amazing aqueduct standing as testimony to a once thriving city of
80,000 to 100,000 people. Pontius Pilate ruled the land from the governor’s
palace in Caesarea. Peter preached to Cornelius and the Gentiles there. It was
here that Paul appeared before Felix, Festus, and Agrippa (Acts 23-26). Paul was
imprisoned here for two years and sailed in chains to Rome for trial. In 1961 a
stone was found in the theater with the name of "Pontius Pilate"
inscribed upon it. Eusebius, a Christian historian was born here in 260 A.D.
Incredible discoveries are still being made by the spade of the archaeologists
in this fascinating Biblical site. Philip the deacon lived and evangelized here.
(Acts 8:40)