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Summary: Paul's Missionary Journey

Paul's journey was as follows:

Jerusalem to Seleucia (on the Tigris, Hellenistic city founded by Seleucus I Nicator (reigned 312–281 bc) as his eastern capital; it replaced Babylon ) to

Antioch (populous city of ancient Syria and now a major town of south-central Turkey) to Tarsus (south-central Turkey; It is located on the Tarsus River, about 12 miles (20 km) from the Mediterranean Sea coast) to

Derbe to Lystra (modern Lusna) to

Iconium (Lycaonia's capital and principal city since Seleucid times) to Antioch to

Troas (the land of Troy, ancient district formed mainly by the northwestern projection of Asia Minor (modern Turkey) into the Aegean Sea) to Neapolis to

Philippi (In 42 bc Philippi was the site of the decisive Roman battle in which Mark Antony and Octavian (later the emperor Augustus) defeated Brutus and Cassius to Amphipolis (ancient Greek city on the Strymon (Strimón) River about three miles from the Aegean Sea, in Macedonia) to

Apollonia (the port of Cyrene) to Thessalonica (city and dímos (municipality), Central Macedonia (Modern Greek: Kendrikí Makedonía) to

Berea (Greek town where St. Paul found converts of remarkable zeal) to Athens (capital of Greece) to

Corinth (an ancient and a modern city of the Peloponnese, in south-central Greece) to Ephesus (the most important Greek city in Ionian Asia Minor, the ruins of which lie near the modern village of Sel?uk in western Turkey) to

Caesarea (ancient port and administrative city of Palestine, on the Mediterranean coast of present-day Israel south of Haifa) to Jerusalem

see www.ebibleteacher.com and www.brittanica.com

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