on a pole in a public place, where it remained for a quarter of a century; his right hand was given to his slayer, who preserved it in rum and won many pennies by exhibiting it in the New England towns. The struggle was now over in southern New England, but it continued along the north-eastern frontier till the spring of 1678, and nearly every settlement beyond the Piscataqua was destroyed. In the colonies of Plymouth, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut six hundred men (or about 9% of the fighting population), besides many women and children, had been killed, thirteen settlements had been completely destroyed, and about forty others were partly burned. Plymouth had incurred a debt greater than the value of the personal property of her people. The Indians suffered even worse: in addition to the large number of men, women and children slain, great numbers, among them the wife and son of Philip, were sold into slavery in the Spanish Indies and the Bermudas. Many others migrated from New England to New York; and the few remaining Indians, feeble and dispirited, were no longer a power to be reckoned with. Philip was an Indian patriot and statesman, not a warrior, he united the tribes in their resistance to the colonists, but was not a great leader in battle.
See George M. Bodges, Soldiers in King Philip’s War (Leominster, Mass., 1896); John Gorham Palfrey, History of New England, vol. iii. (Boston, 1864); and especially George W. Ellis and John E. Morris, King Philip’s War (New York, 1906). See also Entertaining Passages Relating to King Philip’s War (Boston, 1716; new edition, edited with notes by H. M. Dexter, Boston, 1865), the account by Colonel Benjamin Church (1639–1718), one of the principal leaders of the English, of the warfare in south-eastern New England, in which he took part; it is one of the most famous and realistic accounts of early Indian warfare.
PHILIPPA OF HAINAUT (c. 1314–1369), queen of the English
king Edward III., was the daughter of William the Good, count
of Holland and Hainaut, and his wife Jeanne de Valois, granddaughter
of Philip III. of France. Edward visited the court of
Count William in 1326 with his mother Isabella, who immediately
arranged a marriage between him and Philippa. After a dispensation
had been obtained for the marriage of the cousins (they
were both descendants of Philip III.) Philippa was married by
proxy at Valenciennes in October 1327, and landed in England
in December. She joined Edward at York, where she was
married on the 30th of January 1328. Her marriage dower had
been seized by the queen dowager Isabella to pay a body of
Hainauters, with whose help she had compassed her husband’s
deposition. The alliance ensured for Edward in his French wars
the support of Philippa’s influential kindred; and before starting
on his French campaign he secured troops from William the
Good, as well as from the count of Gelderland, the count of
Julick, and the emperor Louis the Bavarian. Her mother
Jeanne de Valois, visited her in 1331 and further cemented the
community of interests between England and Flanders. Before
1335 Philippa had established a small colony of Flemish weavers
at Norwich, and she showed an active interest in the weaving
trade by repeated visits to the town. She also encouraged coal-mining
on her estates in Tynedale. Her eldest son, Edward the
Black Prince, was born in 1330, and she subsequently bore six
sons and five daughters. In November 1342 she became guardian
of John of Gaunt and her younger children, with their lands.
Her agents are said to have shown great harshness in collecting
the feudal dues with which to supply her large household. The
anecdotes of her piety and generosity which have been preserved
are proof, however, of her popularity. She interceded in 1331
with the king for some carpenters whose careless work on a
platform resulted in an accident to herself and her ladies, and on
a more famous occasion her prayers saved the citizens of Calais
from Edward’s vengeance. There is a generally accepted story,
based on the chronicles of Jehan le Bel and Froissart, that she
summoned the English forces to meet the Scottish invasion of
1346, and harangued the troops before the battle of Neville’s
Cross. She certainly exercised considerable influence over her
husband, whom she constantly accompanied on his campaigns;
and her death on the 15th of August 1369 was a misfortune for
the kingdom at large, since Edward from that time came under
the domination of the rapacious Alice Perrers. Philippa was the
patron and friend of Froissart, who was her secretary from 1361
to 1366. Queen’s College, Oxford, was not, as is stated in
Skelton’s version of her epitaph, founded by her but by her
chaplain, Robert of Eglesfield. Her chief benefactions were
made to the hospital of St Katharine’s by the Tower, London.
See Agnes Strickland, Lives of the Queens of England, vol i. In addition to the account given in his Chroniques, Froissart wrote a formal eulogy of her, which has been lost.
PHILIPPEVILLE, a seaport of Algeria, chief town of an arrondissement in the department of Constantine, and 54 m. N. by E. of that city, on the Bay of Stora, in 36° 53′ N. 6° 54′ E. It is connected by railway with Constantine, Batna and Biskra. The town derives its importance from being the port of Constantine. The harbour works, with every vessel in port, having been destroyed by a storm in 1878, a more commodious harbour was built, at a cost of about £1,200,000. From Cape Skikda, on the east a mole or breakwater projects 4592 ft. to the W.N.W., while from Château Vert on the west another mole runs out 1312 ft. to the north, leaving an entrance to the port about 656 ft. wide. The protected area comprises an outer and an inner basin. The depth of water at the entrance is about 33 ft., alongside the quays about 20 ft. The quays are faced with blocks of white marble brought from the quarries at Filfila, 16 m. distant. Pop. (1906), of the town 16,539, of the commune 26,050, of the arrondissement, which includes 12 communes, 147,607.
Philippeville occupies the site of successive Phoenician and Roman cities. By the Romans, under whom it attained a high state of prosperity, it was named Rusicada. In the middle ages the town ceased to be inhabited. The site was purchased from the Arabs by Marshal Valée in 1838 for £6. Some parts of the Roman theatre remain, but the stones of the amphitheatre, which stood without the walls of the modern town, and which the French found in an almost perfect state of preservation, were used by them for building purposes, and the railway was cut through the site. On a hill above the town are the Roman reservoirs, which have been restored and still supply the town with water. They are fed by a canal from the Wadi Beni Meleh. The Roman baths, in the centre of the modern town, serve as cellars for military stores.
PHILIPPI (Turk. Filibejik), a city of ancient Macedonia, on a steep hill near the river Gangites (mod. Angista), overlooking an extensive plain and at no great distance from the coast of the Aegean, on the highway between Neapolis (Kavalla) and Thessalonica.
Originally called Crenides (Fountains), it took its
later name from Philip II. of Macedon, who made himself master of the neighbouring gold mines of the Hill of Dionysus, and fortified the city as one of his frontier-towns. In 42 B.C., after the victory gained over the senatorial party by Octavius and Antony, it became a Roman colony, Colonia Julia Philippensis,
which was probably increased after the battle of Actium (Col. Aug. Julia Phil.). The inhabitants received the Jus Italicum, and Philippi was one of the specially designated “first cities” (Acts xvi. 12, see Marquardt, Röm. Staatsverwaltung i. 187). The city was twice visited by St Paul, whose Epistle to the Philippians was addressed to his converts here. The site, now uninhabited, is marked by ruins—the substructions of an
amphitheatre, parts of a great temple—which have furnished interesting inscriptions. A little to the east is the huge stone monument of C. Vibius, known to the Turks as Dikelitashlar and to the Greeks as the Manger of Bucephalus.
See Heuzey and Daumet, Mission arch. en Macédoine, Paris (1865), and other authorities in bibliography of Macedonia; Corp. Inscr. Lat. iii. 1. (J. D. B.)
PHILIPPIANS, EPISTLE TO THE, a book of the New Testament. Communications had already passed between the Christians of Philippi and Paul, not only when he was at Thessalonica. (iv. 15–16), but at some subsequent period (iv. 18), when Epaphroditus had brought him a present of money from them. It is possible that this gift was accompanied by a letter. At any rate the extant epistle is the answer to one received from the Philippian Christians, who had evidently desired information about the