Thyatira

E126247

Thyatira was an ancient city in Asia Minor, known from the New Testament as the site of one of the seven churches addressed in the Book of Revelation.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Thyatira canonical 10

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Hellenistic foundation
ancient city
biblical city
biblical figure
addressedIn Revelation 2:18–29
ancientName Thyateira
archaeologicalRemains ruins in central Akhisar
associatedWith Roman province of Asia
surface form: Asia (Roman province)

Thyatira self-linksurface differs
criticizedInRevelationFor tolerating false teaching
foundedBy Seleucus I Nicator
had Christian bishopric
hasNotablePerson Lydia of Thyatira
hasTitleInRevelation church in Thyatira
hasType New Testament location
knownFor dyeing industry
early Christian community
purple cloth production
textile industry
trade guilds
languageUsed Greek
Latin
locatedIn Asia Minor
Lydia
locatedInPresentDay Manisa
surface form: Akhisar

Turkey
mentionedIn Acts 16:14
Acts of the Apostles
Book of Revelation
New Testament
modernName Akhisar
notableEconomicActivity metalworking
pottery
notedInRevelationFor works, love, faith, service, and perseverance
oneOf Seven churches of Asia
partOf Seven Churches of Asia
surface form: Seven Churches of Revelation
regionInRomanPeriod Roman province of Asia
religiousSignificance site of one of the Seven Churches of Asia
religiousTradition Christianity
statusInChristianity early center of Christianity
timePeriod Byzantine Empire
surface form: Byzantine period

Hellenistic period
Roman period
underRuleOf Byzantine Empire
Kingdom of Pergamon
Roman Empire
Seleucid Empire

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (10)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

church in Thyatira locatedIn Thyatira
Lydia placeOfOrigin Thyatira
Lydia associatedWith Thyatira
Lydia importantCity Thyatira
Thyatira associatedWith Thyatira self-linksurface differs
subject surface form: Lydia of Thyatira
John the Divine writesTo Thyatira