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Pergamum - 'Politics & Parchment'

City Biographies

August 25, 2021 • Christopher Alton • Revelation

Being found fifteen miles inland, and not on one of the great trade routes, like Ephesus or Smyrna, Pergamum was nonetheless an important city, exceeding them as a city of culture. In fact, it was the capital city of Asia for hundreds of years before losing its crown to Ephesus. It had a unique status as a political city, from which rulings were made which affected the whole of Asia. So, it became one of the most influential cities in the Roman Empire.

Pergamum was built on a steep hill, making it an ideal fortress site, but also lending itself to construction of a ten-thousand-seater outdoor theatre. It was said that the acoustics were so good, that a whisper on stage could be heard all the way up in the top row. It also had a library which was second only to the great library of Alexandria in the ancient world. Its collection of two hundred thousand books, was so great that the Roman general Marc Antony presented it as a wedding gift to his bride Cleopatra.

Pergamum was also a well-known centre for healing and medicine, with the world’s first psychiatric hospital being established there. Even some of the Roman Emperors came for medical treatment from time to time.

During a time of shortage of papyrus from Egypt in the second century BC, parchment is thought to have been invented in Pergamum, deriving its name from the city. Although animal skins had been used before, they came up with a way of preparing them, so both sides could be used, which eventually led to the replacement of rolled manuscripts, with bound books.

In His letter to the church, Jesus describes Pergamum as “the place where Satan's throne is”. It’s a curious phrase, and over the years lots of people have wondered what it means. There was a famous altar there, and it has quite a story. It was known as the altar of Zeus, and this was where Antipas, the bishop of Pergamum, was sacrificed for refusing to worship the emperor. John had appointed Antipas, and Jesus described him as “My faithful witness”.

This altar is still intact today. It was excavated in the late nineteenth century, and moved to the Pergamum Museum in Berlin in 1910. It was from this altar that Hitler’s chief of propaganda, Albert Speer, drew inspiration in designing the architectural monuments to the third Reich in Nazi Germany.