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Edessa

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Edessa

Ancient city between the Euphrates and Tigris rivers. It was founded as a military settlement by Seleucus I, one of Alexander the Great's generals.

In the 2nd century BC the city broke away from Seleucid rule and became the capital of the kingdom of Osroëne, which in turn became part of the Roman empire. Roman rule gave way to Byzantine rule, under which Edessa became a Christian archbishopric. Conquered by the Arabs AD 638, it again became Christian in 1098, when Baldwin of Boulogne captured it during the First Crusade and founded the first crusader state, the principality of Edessa. The city was retaken by Muslims 1144.

Edessa

Town in Greece, capital of the department of Pella, west Macedonia, 77 km/48 mi northwest of Thessaloniki; population (2001 est) 19,300. Industries are linked to nearby hydroelectric schemes; there are cotton and silk factories, and carpet manufacture. It is at the centre of a fertile agricultural area and there is food processing.



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82 BT587 The image of the face of Jesus kept at Edessa was considered a major relic by the Eastern Church.
Wild grain ancestral to modern wheat grows nearby, and the site itself is just outside the city of Sanliurfa, known as Edessa to the Crusaders, and which locals say is the Biblical city of Ur, birthplace of Abraham.
Now Urfa in Turkey, Edessa was a major center of Syriac-language Mesopotamian Christianity.
 
 
 
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