Antakya / Antioch
Antiochia – wo die Jünger erstmals Christen genannt wurden (Apg 11,26)
Warum dieses Ziel wichtig ist
In Antiochia, dem heutigen Antakya, wurden die Anhänger Jesu zum ersten Mal "Christen" genannt (Apg 11,26). Diese Stadt war die Ausgangsbasis für alle drei Missionsreisen des Paulus und das erste Zentrum des heidenchristlichen Missionswerks.
Die Apostelgrotte (Senlurlu Mağarası / Grotte des Petrus) gilt als eine der ältesten Kirchen der Welt – eine Höhle, in der die erste Christengemeinde Antiochias Gottesdienste abhielt.
HINWEIS: Antakya wurde durch das schwere Erdbeben vom Februar 2023 verwüstet. Weite Teile des historischen Stadtgebietes sind noch im Wiederaufbau. Erkundigen Sie sich vor Ihrer Reise über den aktuellen Zustand der Stätten.
Wichtigste Sehenswürdigkeiten
Saint Peter's Cave Church (Senpiyer Kilisesi)
Hillside cave traditionally identified as the meeting place of the earliest Christians. Pope Paul VI declared it an official pilgrimage site in 1963; annual Mass on 29 June. Verify current accessibility after the earthquake.
Hatay Archaeology Museum
One of the world's greatest Roman mosaic collections. Earthquake-affected; check reopening status.
Charonion
Carved rock face on Mount Staurin, possibly carved during a 2nd-century BC plague.
Daphne / Harbiye waterfalls
Ancient suburb of Antioch famed in Roman times; pleasant walking and tea-gardens.
Seleucia Pieria / Cevlik
Acts 13:4 - the port from which Paul and Barnabas sailed on the first missionary journey. Roman Vespasian Tunnel still walkable.
Monastery of Saint Symeon Stylites the Younger
Ruined 6th-century pillar-monastery on the Samandag road, where Saint Symeon spent decades atop a column.
Beste Reisezeit
Oktober bis April (mild, 15–22°C). Juli–August sehr heiß (über 38°C). Aktuellen Wiederaufbaustand prüfen.
Wichtige Feiertage
- 29 June - Saints Peter and Paul, annual Mass at the Cave Church
Anreise
Flughafen Hatay (HTY) oder Adana (ADA, 190 km). Basis in İskenderun oder Adana empfohlen, da Unterkünfte in Antakya nach dem Erdbeben begrenzt sind.
Unterkunft
Unterkünfte in Antakya sind nach dem Erdbeben eingeschränkt. İskenderun (50 km westlich) und Adana (190 km nördlich) als alternative Basis empfohlen.
Touren und Erlebnisse
Tagesausflüge von İskenderun oder Adana zu den Stätten in Antakya. Spezialisierte Paulinische Reiseführer bieten Touren der Missionsreisestätten an.
Practical information
- Hours
- Saint Peter's Cave Church typically 08:30-17:00 - verify currently with the local Catholic vicariate.
- Fees
- Approximate 2026 - verify on muze.gov.tr. Cave Church ~5-10 EUR; Hatay Archaeology Museum (when reopened) ~10 EUR.
- Dress code
- Modest dress inside the church.
- Accessibility
- The Cave Church is reached by a short steep climb from the road. Limited wheelchair access.
- Notes
- Critical: check current safety, accommodation and museum status before booking - reconstruction continues through 2027.
Pilgertipps
💡 Pilgertipps
- As of mid-2026, base yourself in Iskenderun (35 km north) or Adana (200 km) rather than Antakya itself — most accommodation in central Antakya is gone since the February 2023 earthquake.
- The Saint Peter's Cave Church (Senpiyer Kilisesi) is open year-round; the only Catholic Mass of the year there is on 29 June (feast of Saints Peter and Paul) — bookable through the Latin Catholic Vicariate of Anatolia.
- Visit the new Hatay Archaeology Museum (the world's largest collection of Roman mosaics) in a single morning, then drive to the Saint Peter's Cave for an afternoon visit. The two together require 4-5 hours.
- Check current UK FCDO and US State Department advisories the week of travel — the regional security picture is still fluid because of the Syrian border 60 km south.
- Petrol stations and supermarkets along the Iskenderun-Antakya highway are well-stocked; do not rely on Antakya itself for fuel, ATMs or food beyond a single restaurant block.
- Hatay was historically the most religiously diverse city in modern Turkey (Sunni, Alawite, Greek Orthodox, Armenian, Syriac, Catholic, Jewish). Speak to local Christians at Saint Peter's Cave guardhouse — they are eager to share the community's post-earthquake situation.
Wussten Sie schon?
ℹ️ Wussten Sie schon?
- Antioch is mentioned by name 19 times in the New Testament — more than any city outside Jerusalem. It was the launchpad of all three of Paul's missionary journeys (Acts 13:1-3; 15:35; 18:22-23).
- The five Patriarchs of the Pentarchy (Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem) all trace their authority to apostolic foundation. The Patriarch of Antioch traces succession to Saint Peter (Galatians 2:11) — making it, alongside Rome, one of Peter's two patriarchal Sees.
- Antioch's school of biblical interpretation (Theodore of Mopsuestia, John Chrysostom) emphasised historical-grammatical reading of Scripture, in contrast to Alexandria's allegorical method. Modern Protestant biblical exegesis owes its method partly to Antiochene literalism.
- The 526 and 588 earthquakes destroyed ancient Antioch; the city never recovered its position as the third city of the Roman Empire (after Rome and Alexandria). The February 2023 earthquake was the worst since the 6th century.
Biblical references
- Acts 11:19-26 — “The disciples were first called Christians in Antioch.”
- Acts 13:1-3 — “Now there were in the church that was at Antioch certain prophets and teachers... So, being sent out by the Holy Spirit, they went down to Seleucia.”
- Galatians 2:11-14 — “When Peter was come to Antioch, I withstood him to the face.”
Empfohlene Lektüre
| Title / Reference | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Antioch: A History (Andrea De Giorgi) | The standard modern academic history of Antioch from foundation to the medieval period. Strong on the city's role as the cradle of Gentile Christianity. |
| Saint John Chrysostom (J. N. D. Kelly) | The classic biography of the great Antiochene preacher who became Patriarch of Constantinople. Foundational for understanding Antioch's intellectual contribution to Christianity. |
| The Lost History of Christianity (Philip Jenkins) | Strong chapters on Antioch and the Syriac Christian world that flourished from Antioch eastwards — a Christianity that was already a millennium old before European missionaries reached the Americas. |
Nearby destinations to combine
Tarsus
Birthplace of Saint Paul the Apostle
Cappadocia
Rock-hewn churches of the Cappadocian Fathers
Ephesus
House of the Virgin Mary, Basilica of St John and the First Church of Revelation
Teil dieser Routen
- Footsteps of Saint Paul — Tarsus to Rome - the missionary journeys of the Apostle
- Cradle of Christianity — Antakya - Tarsus - Cappadocia
Frequently asked questions
Names in other languages
| Turkish | Antakya / Hatay |
|---|---|
| Greek | Antiocheia |
| German | Antiochia |
| Russian | Antiokhiya |
| French | Antioche |
| Italian | Antiochia |
| Arabic | Antakiya |