Tarsus
Ciudad natal del apóstol Pablo — «ciudadano de una ciudad no sin importancia» (Hch 21,39)
Por qué importa este destino
Tarso, hoy una modesta ciudad provincial turca, fue en su día capital de Cilicia y una importante ciudad universitaria del mundo helenístico. Aquí nació Saulo de Tarso, el apóstol Pablo, quien se enorgullecía de su ciudadanía (Hch 21,39).
El Pozo de Pablo, venerado por la tradición como lugar del bautismo del apóstol, y la supuesta casa natal de Pablo son los principales lugares de peregrinación.
Principales lugares para visitar
Saint Paul's Well
30-metre-deep Roman well preserved on the traditional site of Paul's family home. Free entry; small donation appreciated.
Saint Paul's Memorial Church / Museum
1862 Catholic-built church (formerly Armenian), reopened as a museum-cum-occasional-pilgrim-church in 2001. Mass occasionally celebrated with permission.
Preserved Roman Road
Excavated section of the original basalt-paved Roman road that Paul would have walked.
Cleopatra's Gate
Triple-arched Roman gate where Antony and Cleopatra are said to have met in 41 BC.
Eski Cami
Former cathedral church of Tarsus, now a mosque; structurally largely Byzantine.
Tarsus Archaeology Museum
Compact museum with Roman and Byzantine finds.
Mejor época para visitar
Marzo-mayo y octubre-noviembre. El verano es muy caluroso y húmedo.
Días festivos principales
- 29 June - Saints Peter and Paul
Cómo llegar
Aeropuerto de Adana (ADA), 40 km. Autobuses directos y trenes desde Adana.
Dónde alojarse
Hoteles sencillos en Tarso. Adana (40 km) ofrece más opciones y mejor conectividad.
Tours y experiencias
Tarso se visita frecuentemente en el marco de la ruta paulina combinada con Antakya y Capadocia. Los operadores especializados en viajes bíblicos ofrecen tours de varios días por Turquía.
Practical information
- Hours
- Saint Paul's Well 08:30-17:30; Memorial Church 08:30-17:30; Roman Road open access.
- Fees
- Approximate 2026 - verify on muze.gov.tr. Saint Paul's Well ~3 EUR; Memorial Church ~5 EUR; museum ~3 EUR. Museum Pass Turkiye usually valid.
- Dress code
- Modest dress at the church and at the Eski Cami mosque.
- Accessibility
- Mostly flat city-centre walking; the Roman Road and Cleopatra's Gate are within 1 km of each other.
Consejos para peregrinos
💡 Consejos para peregrinos
- Tarsus is comfortably visited as a half-day excursion from Adana (40 km, 50 minutes by highway). Most pilgrim groups combine Tarsus with the Adana Roman Bridge and the Sabanci Central Mosque visits.
- The Saint Paul's Well (Saint Paul Kuyusu) is the principal focal point — a 1st-century Roman well in the courtyard of the family home traditionally identified as Paul's birthplace. Pilgrims drink from the well and fill bottles to carry home.
- The Saint Paul Memorial Church (a converted Armenian church, now a museum and Catholic Mass venue by appointment) is the only church building in Tarsus where Catholic and Protestant pilgrims can hold a service — arrange via the Latin Catholic Vicariate of Anatolia.
- Avoid mid-July to mid-August: Tarsus reaches 38°C and is sweltering and humid. April-May and October are by far the best months.
- Tarsus has limited tourist infrastructure — eat lunch in Adana or Mersin rather than relying on Tarsus restaurants. The town's main income is agricultural, not tourism.
- The Cleopatra's Gate (Kleopatra Kapisi) commemorates Mark Antony and Cleopatra's 41 BC meeting at Tarsus. Paul, born around 5 AD, would have walked through this gate as a child.
¿Sabías que?
ℹ️ ¿Sabías que?
- Tarsus was the capital of the Roman province of Cilicia and home to a celebrated school of philosophy that rivalled Athens and Alexandria. Paul's claim 'I am a citizen of no mean city' (Acts 21:39) was justified — Tarsus had a university tradition centuries old.
- Paul learned tent-making here (Acts 18:3) — the local industry was 'cilicium', a goat-hair cloth used for tents and military equipment. The technical skill provided his self-financing during the missionary journeys.
- Three Roman figures of note visited Tarsus: Julius Caesar in 47 BC, Cicero as proconsul in 51 BC, and Mark Antony with Cleopatra in 41 BC. Paul's Tarsus was at the centre of late-republican imperial geopolitics.
- Saint Paul's Well water has been continuously consumed by Christian pilgrims since the late Roman period. Modern water-quality testing (Çukurova University, 2018) confirmed the well is drinkable.
Biblical references
- Acts 9:11 — “And the Lord said unto him, 'Arise, and go into the street which is called Straight, and enquire in the house of Judas for one called Saul, of Tarsus.'”
- Acts 9:30 — “When the brethren knew this, they brought him down to Caesarea, and sent him forth to Tarsus.”
- Acts 11:25 — “Then departed Barnabas to Tarsus, for to seek Saul.”
- Acts 21:39 — “I am a man which am a Jew of Tarsus, a city in Cilicia, a citizen of no mean city.”
- Acts 22:3 — “I am verily a man which am a Jew, born in Tarsus, a city in Cilicia.”
- Philippians 3:5 — “Circumcised the eighth day, of the stock of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin.”
Lectura sugerida antes de partir
| Title / Reference | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Paul: A Biography (N. T. Wright) | The most readable modern biography. Wright opens with Tarsus and Paul's Greco-Roman education — essential context for visiting his birthplace. |
| Acts of the Apostles 9:11-30, 21:39, 22:3 | The Lucan references to Paul's Tarsian origin. Read these passages at the Saint Paul's Well. |
| Paul and the Stoics (Troels Engberg-Pedersen) | The standard scholarly study of how Paul's Tarsian education in Stoic philosophy shaped his Christian theology. Demanding but rewarding. |
Nearby destinations to combine
Antakya / Antioch
Where the disciples were first called Christians (Acts 11:26)
Cappadocia
Rock-hewn churches of the Cappadocian Fathers
Demre / Myra
Tomb of Saint Nicholas in 5th-century Byzantine Myra
Incluido en estas rutas
- 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 | Tarsus |
|---|---|
| Greek | Tarsos |
| German | Tarsus |
| Russian | Tars |
| French | Tarse |
| Italian | Tarso |
| Arabic | Tarsus |