Arsuz


Arsuz is a municipality and district of Hatay Province, Turkey. Its area is 462 km2, and its population is 101,233. It covers the southwestern part of the agglomeration of İskenderun and the adjacent countryside and coast. In ancient times, it was known as Rhosus and was a former bishopric and titular see.

Geography

The town center of Arsuz is located South of İskenderun and from Antakya. While the town center is relatively small near the end of a coastal road leading south from İskenderun, the entire coastal region between İskenderun and the town center is often simply referred as Arsuz. This area is predominantly small rural farms and small groups of summer homes.

History

Arsuz had many names throughout history, including: Rhosus, Rhossos, Rhossus, Rhopolis, Port Panel/Bonnel, Kabev and Arsous. The earliest documents about it date from the Seleucid Empire, of whose Antioch became the capital.
Malalas writes that the city was founded by Cilix, son of Agenor. Harpalus set up a bronze statue of Glycera at Rhosus. Demetrius I of Macedon moved the statue of the goddess Tyche from Antigonia to Rhosus.
Arsuz was then an important seaport on the Gulf of Issus. In 64 BC, it was annexed by the Roman Empire. Under the name Rhosus, it was a city and bishopric in the late Roman province of Cilicia Secunda, with Anazarbus as its capital. It is mentioned by Strabo, Ptolemy, Pliny the Elder and Stephanus of Byzantium; and later by Hierocles and George of Cyprus.
Some Christians in Rhosus accepted as truth the Docetic Gospel of Peter and for them in around AD 200 Serapion of Antioch composed a treatise condemning the book. Theodoret relates the history of the hermit Theodosius of Antioch, founder of a monastery in the mountain near Rhosus, who was forced by the inroads of barbarians to retire to Antioch, where he died and was succeeded by his disciple Romanus, a native of Rhosus; these two religious are honoured by the Greek Orthodox Church on 5 and 9 February.
In 638 the city was incorporated into the Rashidun Caliphate. In 969 it was taken by the Byzantine Empire, in 1084 by the Seljuk Turks, in 1039 by the Crusades, in 1296 by the Egyptian Mamluks and in 1517 by the Ottoman Turks.
Between 1918 and 1938 the town was under French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon with the rest of Iskenderun district. In 1938, it became part of the independent Hatay Republic, but in June 1939 the Hatay legislature voted to join Turkey. The district Arsuz was created in 2013 from part of the district of İskenderun.

Composition

There are 38 neighbourhoods in Arsuz District:
  • Akçalı
  • Arpaçiftlik
  • Arpaderesi
  • Arpagedik
  • Aşağı Kepirce
  • Avcılarsuyu
  • Beyköyü
  • Çetillik
  • Derekuyu
  • Gökmeydan
  • Gözcüler
  • Gülcihan
  • Hacıahmetli
  • Harlısu
  • Haymaseki
  • Helvalı
  • Hüyük
  • Işıklı
  • Kale
  • Karaağaç Cumhuriyet
  • Karaağaç Konarlı
  • Karaağaç Övündük
  • Karaağaç Şarkkonak
  • Karagöz
  • Karahüseyinli
  • Kışla
  • Konacık
  • Kozaklı
  • Kurtbağı
  • Madenli
  • Nardüzü
  • Nergizlik
  • Pirinçlik
  • Tatarlı
  • Tülek
  • Üçgüllük
  • Uluçınar
  • Yukarıkepirce

    Demographics

German traveler Martin Hartmann listed 31 settlements in the Ottoman nahiyah of Arsuz, 10 being Alawite, 8 being Turkish, and 12 without any information. The town of Arsuz was almost wholly Greek Christian with the exception of three Arab and one Turkish families.

Ecclesiastical history

Rhosus was a diocese in the sway of the Patriarchate of Antioch, originally as a suffragan of its Metropolitan in provincial capital of Cilicia Secunda, the Archdiocese of Anazarba, as mentioned in the Notitiae Episcopatuum in the 6th century and one dating from about 840. In another of the 10th century Rhosus is included among the 'exempt' sees, directly subject to the Patriarch.
Six residential Suffragan bishops of Rhosus are known:
No later than the 15th century the diocese was nominally restored as Latin titular bishopric of Rhosus / Rosea / Roso / Rhosien
It is vacant since decades, having had the following incumbents, so far of the fitting Episcopal rank: