Rhodes
(rosy), a celebrated island in the Mediterranean Sea. (It is triangular in form, 60 miles long from north to south, and about
18 wide. It is noted now, as in ancient times, for its delightful climate and the fertility of its soil. The city of Rhodes,
its capital, was famous for its huge brazen statue of Apollo called the Colossus of Rhodes. It stood at the entrance of the
harbor, and was so large that ships in full sail could pass between its legs. ED.) Rhodes is immediately opposite the high
Carian and Lycian headlands at the southwest extremity of the peninsula of Asia Minor. Its position had much to do with its
history. Its real eminence began about 400 B.C. with the founding of the city of Rhodes, at the northeast extremity of the
island, which still continues to be the capital. After Alexander’s death it entered on a glorious period, its material prosperity
being largely developed, and its institutions deserving and obtaining general esteem. We have notice of the Jewish residents
in Rhodes in 1 Macc. 15:23. The Romans, after the defeat of Antiochus, assigned, during some time, to Rhodes certain districts on the mainland. Its
Byzantine, history is again eminent. Under Constantine If was the metropolis of the “Province of the Islands,” It was the
last place where the Christians of the East held out against the advancing Seracens; and subsequently it was once more famous
as the home and fortress of the Knights of St. John. (It is now reduced to abject poverty. There are two cities—Rhodes the
capital and Lindus—and forty or fifty villages. The population, according to Turner is 20,000, of whom 6000 are Turks and
the rest Greeks, together with a few Jews.)