Search: in
Notitiae Episcopatuum
Notitiae Episcopatuum in Encyclopedia Encyclopedia
  Tutorials     Encyclopedia     Videos     Books     Software     DVDs  
       
Encyclopedia results for Notitiae Episcopatuum

Notitiae Episcopatuum





Encyclopedia results for Notitiae Episcopatuum

  1. Notitiae Episcopatuum

    The Notitiae Episcopatuum singular Notitia Episcopatuum are official documents that furnish Eastern countries the list and hierarchical rank of the metropolitan bishop metropolitan and suffragan Diocese bishopric s of a church. In the Catholic Church Roman Church the Patriarchate of Rome , archbishop s and bishop s were classed according to the seniority of their consecration, and in Africa according to their age. In the Eastern patriarchates, however, the hierarchical rank of each bishop was determined by the see he occupied. Thus, in the Patriarchate of Constantinople , the first metropolitan was not the longest ordained, but whoever happened to be the incumbent of the See of Caesarea Maritima Caesarea the second was the Archbishop of Ephesus , and so on. In every ecclesiastical province, the rank of each suffragan was thus determined, and remained unchanged unless the list was subsequently ... Patriarchate the Notitiae episcopatuum of Constantine Porphyrogenitus about 940 , of John I Tzimisces ... situation Gelzer, Ungedruckte Texte der Notitiae episcopatuum 613 37 , and on it are based nearly ... Orthodox Church Georgia . catholic Editions J. Darrouz s, Notitiae episcopatuum Ecclesiae ... cathen 11124b.htm Catholic Encyclopedia Notitiae Episcopatuum at New Advent Category Eastern ... , a revision of an earlier Notitia Episcopatuum probably compiled by Patriarch Epiphanius ... II Palaeologus about 1299 , and of Andronicus III Palaeologus about 1330 . All these Notitiae are published in Heinrich Gelzer , Ungedruckte und ungen gend ver ffentlichte Texte der Notitiae episcopatuum Munich, 1900 Gelzer, Georgii Cyprii Descriptio orbis romani Leipzig, 1890 Gelzer, Index .... Church of Antioch We know of only one Notitia episcopatuum for the Church of Antioch , viz ..., 40 66, and Der Patriarchat von Achrida Leipzig, 1902 . Other churches having Notitiae are those ... Roman Catholic Church offices it Notitia Episcopatuum la Notitia Episcopatuum ...   more details



  1. Notitiae

    Unreferenced date March 2010 Notitiae , subtitled Commentarii ad nuntia de re liturgica edenda , is the official monthly journal of the Roman Curia Vatican dicastery Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments Congregatio de Cultu Divino . Beginning in 1965, It has published all of the Holy See s official documents along with commentary, scholarship , new liturgical texts, reports of meetings, responses to dubium dubia , and the speeches of the Pope on all matters having to do with the liturgy of the Roman rite . In 2004, its subtitle was shortened to simply Commentarii . Category Monthly journals ...   more details



  1. Tiberiopolis

    Tiberiopolis Italian Tiberiopoli is a Catholic titular see . The original diocese was in Phrygia Pacatiana , and is mentioned by Ptolemy ref V, 2, 25. ref , Socrates of Constantinople ref Hist. eccl., VII, 46. ref and Hierocles author of Synecdemus Hierocles ref Synecdemus , 668, 9. ref . It struck its own coins at least from the time of Trajan . Also Tiberiopolis is known as the Roman name of Strumica now city in Republic of Macedonia . Its exact site is unknown, but it was situated in the region of Egri Gueuz . Ancient Greek Notitiae episcopatuum mention it among the suffragans of Laodicea Disambiguation needed date June 2011 . In the eighth century it was attached to the metropolitan See of Hierapolis and as such appears in the Notitiae episcopatuum until the thirteenth century. Bishops Le Quien ref Oriens christianus , I, 797. ref mentions five of its bishops known by their presence at councils Eustathius at Constantinople 536 Silas at Constantinople 553 Anastasius at Constantinople 692 Michael at Nicaea 787 Theoctistus at Constantinople 879 . Notes references References Attribution Catholic wstitle Tiberiopolis The entry cites William Smith lexicographer William Smith , Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography , s.v. William Mitchell Ramsay , Asia Minor London, 1890 , 147, 458. External links http www.catholic hierarchy.org diocese d3t05.html Catholic Hierarchy page Category Titular sees ca Tiberi polis de Tiberiopolis Titularbistum it Diocesi di Tiberiopoli ...   more details



  1. Titopolis

    Titopolis Titiopolis, Tina is a Roman Catholic titular see , suffragan of Seleucia Trachaea in Isauria . Le Quien ref Oriens christ. , II, 1023. ref mentions three of its bishops Artemius at the First Council of Constantinople Council of Constantinople in 381 Mompraeus at the Council of Chalcedon in 451 Domitus at the Trullan Council in 692. The see is mentioned in the sixth century Notitia episcopatuum of Antioch ref Echos d Orient, X, 145 ref . About 732 the ecclesiastical Province of Isauria was annexed to the Patriarchate of Constantinople and henceforth Titiopolis figures in the Notitia episcopatuum of that Church, as it does also about 900 in that of Leo the Wise ref Heinrich Gelzer , Ungedruckte . . . Texte der Notitiae episcopatuum , 557. ref , and about 940 in that of Constantine Porphyrogenitus ref Georgii Cyprii Descriptio orbis romani , ed. Gelzer, 76. ref . The town is mentioned by the Hieroclis Synecdemus ref ed. Burckhardt, 37 ref , by George of Cyprus ref 42 ref , and by Constantine Porphyrogenitus ref De them. , 36 ref , as one of the cities of the Isaurian Decapolis. Its exact site is unknown. References W. M. Ramsay , Asia Minor London, 1890 , 370 Notes references External links CathEncy title Titopolis url http www.newadvent.org cathen 14745a.htm Catholic wstitle Titopolis Category Titular sees de Titiopolis Titularbistum it Diocesi di Tiziopoli ...   more details



  1. Pacandus

    Orphan date February 2009 Pacandus is a Roman Catholic Titular bishopric , recorded under the form Pacanden among the titular sees in the official list of the Curia Romana as late as 1884, when it was suppressed as never having existed as a residential see. One titular was Mgr L on Livinhac, superior general of the White Fathers . The name of Pacanden owes it origin, without doubt, to the bishopric of Acanda in Lycia Asia Minor , whose bishop, Panaetius, signed in 458 the letter of the bishops of Lycia to Emperor Leo I , and which is mentioned in the Notitiae Episcopatuum from the seventh to the thirteenth century among the suffragan s of Myra . Its exact site is unknown. Source http www.newadvent.org cathen 11380a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia article Catholic Category Titular sees in Asia ...   more details



  1. Magydus

    Magydus is a Roman Catholic titular bishopric in the former Roman province of Pamphylia Secunda , suffragan of the archbishopric of Perga . History It was a small town with no notable history, on the coast between Attaleia and Perga , occasionally mentioned by ancient geographers, and on numerous coins of the imperial era. Its site was probably at modern Lara in the Ottoman vilayet of Konia , where there are ruins of a small artificial harbour. The See of Magydus figures in the Notitiae episcopatuum until the twelfth or thirteenth century. Five bishops are known Aphrodisius, present at the First Nicene Council in 325 Macedo, at the Council of Chalcedon in 451 Conon, at the Second Council of Constantinople in 553 Platon at the Council of Constantinople Third Council of Constantinople 680 and Quinisext Council 692 Marinus, at the Council of Nicaea in 787. Source http www.newadvent.org cathen 09537c.htm Catholic Encyclopedia article Catholic Category Titular sees in Asia Category Konya Province ...   more details



  1. Caesaropolis

    Caesaropolis is a Byzantine city and a Catholic titular see on the coast of eastern Macedonia region Macedonia . It was founded in 836 by the Caesar title Caesar Alexios Mosele Caesar Alexios Mosele to consolidate Byzantine control over the Slavic tribes of the area. It is mentioned in Heinrich Gelzer s Nova Tactica 1717 and in Parthey s Notitiae episcopatuum , III c. 1170 1179 and X twelfth or thirteenth century , as a suffragan of Philippi in Macedonia. Lequien II, 65 speaks of the see, but mentions no bishop. Manuscript notes give the names of two titulars, Meletius, who was alive in April, 1329, and Gabriel, in November, 1378. References reflist Attribution Catholic wstitle Caesaropolis Category Titular sees in Europe Category Populated places of the Byzantine Empire Category 836 establishments Category Medieval Macedonia Greece Byzantine stub de Caesaropolis hr Cezaropolska biskupija it Diocesi di Cesaropoli ...   more details



  1. Marciane

    Marciane Marciana is a Catholic titular see . The original diocese was in Lycia , a suffragan of Myra titular see Myra . It figures in the Notitiae episcopatuum from the sixth to the twelfth or thirteenth centuries, but it is not mentioned by any author and its situation remains unknown. Bishops Le Quien Oriens christianus , I, 983 cites three bishops Januarius, who attended in 448 the Council of Constantinople against Eutyches Augustine, who signed in 459 the synodal decree of Gennadius of Constantinople against simoniac s Marcian, who signed in 518 the decretal letter of the Council of Constantinople against Severus and other heretics and the report to Pope Hormisdas on the ordination of Epiphanius, Patriarch of Constantinople . References Attribution Catholic wstitle Marciane Category Titular sees de Marciana Titularbistum it Diocesi di Marciana ...   more details



  1. Chariopolis

    Chariopolis is a Catholic titular see . The original diocese was in Thrace . Chariopolis is now Hayrabolu , Turkey . Nothing is known about this city during antiquity. In 1087 it was plundered by Tselgou and Solomon, Kings of the Patzinaces and of the Hungarians . In 1205 Villehardouin passed through there, after the unsuccessful siege of Adrianople . Bishops It figures only in later Notitiae episcopatuum of the twelfth or thirteenth century, as a suffragan of Heracleia in Thrace . An act of Isidorus, Patriarch of Constantinople , dated 13 August 1347, places it again under the jurisdiction of Heracleia. Lequien II, 1133 mentions only four bishops, the first present at Nicaea in 787, the last in 1351. It is not known when the see ceased to be a residential one for the Greek Orthodox Church they frequently use the name for titular bishops. References reflist Attribution Catholic wstitle Chariopolis Category Titular sees de Chariopolis it Diocesi di Cariopoli ...   more details



  1. Juliopolis (titular see)

    Juliopolis Iuliopolis is a Catholic titular see in the province of Bithynia Secunda , suffragan of Nicaea city Nicaea . Its history is unclear. History The city was founded under the Emperor Augustus by a robber chieftain named Cleon of Gordiucome Cleon , who was a native of the region previously it had been called Gordoucome or Gordiucome ref Strabo , XII, viii, 9 Pliny, Hist. Natur., V, xl, 3. ref . The location of the city is unknown, none of its titulars being known, neither does it figure in any Notitiae episcopatuum , unless it may be considered identical with Gordoserboi, as Le Quien thinks ref Oriens Christianus , I, 659. ref . This Juliopolis must not be confounded with another town of the same name situated in Galatia Prima , and which under the name of Gordion was formerly the capital of Phrygia. It was there, in the temple of Zeus, that Alexander cut the famous Gordian knot. Under its own name, or that of Basilaion , Juliopolis of Galatia is noticed in all the Notitiae episcopatuum , and Le Quien ref Oriens Christianus , I, 475 78. ref gives the names of a number of its bishops. Its ruins are about six miles S.S.E. of Nali Khan , and about three miles north of the Sangarius , in the plain of Aimanghir and the vilayet of Angora . References William Smith lexicographer William Smith , Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography , s.v. Gordium W. M. Ramsay , Historical Geography of Asia Minor London, 1890 , 244 Parthey, Hieroclis Synecdemus Berlin, 1866 , I, 141 III, 72 VII, 128 VIII, 152 IX, 59 X, 201 XIII, 61 Perrot, La Galatie de la Bithynie Paris, 1872 , 152 156, 219 Ptolemy, ed. Mueller, II, 805, 820. Notes references External links CathEncy url http www.newadvent.org cathen 08560a.htm title Juliopolis http www.catholic hierarchy.org diocese d2i07.html Catholic Hierarchy page http ancient anatolia.blogspot.com 2009 11 juliopolis of bithynia secunda.html Ancient City of Brigand King Juliopolis Excavation Catholic wstitle Juliopolis Category Titular sees de ...   more details



  1. Temnos

    Temnos also Temnus was a small Greek city state, on the western coast of Anatolia. The name survives as a Catholic titular see . When Temnos was a functioning diocese, its bishop was a suffragan of Ephesus . Temnos was a little town of Aeolia , near the Hermus River , which is shown on its coins. Situated at elevation it commanded the territories of Cyme Aeolis Cyme , Phocaea , and Smyrna . Under Augustus it was already on the decline under Tiberius it was 17 AD Lydia earthquake destroyed by an earthquake ref Tacitus, The Annals s The Annals Tacitus Book 2 47 2.47 ref and in the time of Pliny the Elder Pliny it was no longer inhabited. It was however rebuilt later. Bishops Le Quien Oriens Christianus , I, 707 , mentions three bishops Eustathius, who lived in 451 Theophilus, present at the Council of Nice 787 Ignatius, at Constantinople 869 . This see is not mentioned in the Notitiae Episcopatuum . Ramsay Asia Minor , 108 thought the diocese of Temnus identical with that of Archangelus , which from the tenth to the thirteenth century the Notitiae Episcopatuum assigns to Smyrna . In 1413 the Turks seized the fortress of Archangelus, which they called Kaiadjik, i.e., small rock this fortress was situated on the plains of Maenomenus, now known as Menemen . Doubtless, Temnus and Menemen are the same. However, Texier Asie Mineure, 227 identifies Temnus with the village of Guzel Hissar, to the north of Menemen. References reflist Attribution Catholic wstitle Temnus The entry cites William Smith lexicographer William Smith , Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography , s.v. coord 38 36 N 27 04 E display title region TR type city source GNS enwiki Former settlements in Turkey Category Ancient Greek cities Category Titular sees Category Former populated places in Turkey Category Izmir Province Category History of Izmir Province de Temnus el es Temnos it Diocesi di Temno pl Temnos ...   more details



  1. Lyrba

    Lyrba Lyrbe is a Roman Catholic titular see in the former Roman province of Pamphylia Prima . History It is only known by its coins and the mention made of it by Dionysius Periegetes Dionysius , Perieg. 858, Ptolemy , V, 5, S, and Hierocles author of Synecdemus Hierocles . Its exact situation is not known, nor its history it may be the modern small town of Seidi Shehir , in the vilayet of Konia . The Notitiae episcopatuum mentions Lyrba as an episcopal see, suffragan of the archbishopric of Side up to the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Two of its bishops are known Caius, who attend the First Council of Constantinople in 381, and Taurianus at the First Council of Ephesus in 431 Le Quien , Oriens christianus , I, 1009 Zeuxius was not Bishop of Lyrba, as Le Quien states, but of Syedra . See also Seleucia Pamphylia Source CathEncy title Lyrba url http www.newadvent.org cathen 09478a.htm Catholic wstitle Lyrba Category Titular sees ca Lirbe de Lyrbe Titularbistum it Diocesi di Lirbe ...   more details



  1. Linoë

    Lino is a Roman Catholic titular see in the former Roman province of Bithynia Secunda . History It is known only from the Notitiae Episcopatuum which mention it as late as the twelfth and thirteenth centuries as a suffragan of the archbishopric of Nicaea . The Byzantine Emperor Justinian must have raised it to the rank of a city. It is probably the modern Turkish town of Biledjik , a station on the Hnidar Pasha railway to Konya . It became an important centre for the cultivation of the silk worm . Lequien Oriens christianus , I, 657 mentions four bishops of Linoe Anastasius, who attended a Quinisext Council Council of Constantinople in 692 Leo, at the Second Council of Nicea in 787 Basil and Cyril, the one a partisan of St. Ignatius, the other of Photios I of Constantinople Photius , at the Fourth Council of Constantinople in 879. Source CathEncy title Linoe url http www.newadvent.org cathen 09272a.htm Catholic wstitle Linoe Category Titular sees in Asia de Lino it Diocesi di Linoe ...   more details



  1. Cestra

    Cestra Cestrus is a Catholic titular see . The original diocese was in Asia Minor , but the site has not yet been identified. Hierocles author of Synecdemus Hierocles 709 , Georgius Cyprius ed. Heinrich Gelzer , p.  836 , and Parthey Notitiae episcopatuum , place this city in Isauria , as a suffragan of Seleucia Seleuccia . Lequien supposed that the town was situated near the River Cestros , in Pamphylia , and took its name from that stream. This hypothesis caused an odd mistake in the Gerarchia cattolica Rome, 1895, 302 , according to which Cestra is Ak Sou this is the name of the River Cestros, not a city. Bishops Bishop Epiphanius was present at the Council of Chalcedon in 451, and subscribed the letter to Leo I the Thracian Emperor Leo in 458 Lequien, II, 1025 . Another, Elpidius, was a partisan of Severus Chronique de Michael le Syrien, ed. Chalot, 267 Brooks, The Sixth Book of the Select Letters of Severus, 159, 161 . References reflist Attribution Catholic wstitle Cestra Category Titular sees de Cestrus it Diocesi di Cestro ...   more details



  1. Eucarpia

    Eucarpia is a Catholic titular see . The original diocese was in Phrygia Salutaris , Asia Minor . Eucarpia Eukarpia , mentioned by Strabo XII, 576 and several other geographers, was situated on a road from Dorylaeum to Eumenia , between the Dorylaeum Acmonia and Dorylaeum Synnada roads, probably at the modern Emin Hissar , in the vilayet of Brusa . Imposing ruins, seen by Hamilton in 1837, have almost disappeared. Nothing is known about the history of the city. It struck its own coins from the time of Augustus until the reign of Volusianus . Bishops The bishopric, a suffragan of Synnada , figures in the Notitiae episcopatuum until the twelfth or thirteenth century. Six bishops are known Eugenius, present at the First Council of Nicaea Council of Nicaea 325 , Auxomenus in 381, Cyriacus in 451, Dionysius in 536, Constantine or Constans in 787 not mentioned by Lequien , and Constantine in 879. References CathEncy title Eucarpia url http www.newadvent.org cathen 05572b.htm Attribution Catholic wstitle Eucarpia Category Titular sees ca Euc rpia de Eucarpia Titularbistum it Diocesi di Eucarpia ...   more details



  1. Bodone

    Orphan date February 2009 Bodone is a former Roman Catholic titular see of northwestern Greece near Albania . ref http www.newadvent.org cathen 02609b.htm Bodone Catholic Encyclopedia article ref History The name is a dialectic form of Dodona Dodone , in Epirus region Epirus , near Ioannina at the foot of Mount Tomaros, or Tmaros, the present Olitsika C. Carapanos, Dodone et ses ruines, Paris, 1878 . At an early date a Christian church was built here on the site of the temple of Zeus . Theodorus, a Bishop of Dodona, was present at the First Council of Ephesus in 431 Philotheus appeared at the Council of Chalcedon in 451 Uranius, in 458, signed the letter of the bishops of Epirus Vetus to Emperor Leo I Philippus in 516 subscribed a synodal report of the bishops of Epirus to Pope Hormisdas concerning the election of John to the See of Nicopolis , the metropolis of the province Hierocles, Synecdemos, 651, 5 . When Naupactus was substituted as metropolitan for Nicopolis about the end of the tenth century, Dodona was the first suffragan see the Nova Tactica Georgius Cyprius ed. Heinrich Gelzer , 1661 has Mounditza , but this is an evident mistake for Bounditza , a form derived from Bodone Gustav Parthey , Notitiae episcopatuum ., App. 48 . In fact the later Notitiae wrote only Bounditza ibid., III, 524 , or Bonditza ibid., X, 616 XIII, 467 . John, Bishop of Bonditza signed a synodal act in 1229 P.G., CXIX, 797 . The present name is Bonitza . When the Greek residential bishopric disappeared is unknown the Roman curia used for a long time the forms Bodona and Bodonensis, and a decree of 1894 directed this see to be suppressed at the death of its titular. Source Catholic http www.newadvent.org cathen 02609b.htm References reflist Category Titular sees in Europe de Dodona Titularbistum it Diocesi di Dodona ...   more details



  1. George of Cyprus

    for the 13th century Byzantine scholar Patriarch Gregory II of Constantinople George of Cyprus lang el , List of Latinised names latinized as Georgius Cyprius was a Byzantine geographer of the early seventh century. Nothing is known of his life save that he was born at Lapithos in the island of Cyprus . ref Kazhdan 1991 , p. 837 ref He is known for his Descriptio orbis Romani Description of the Roman world , written in the decade 600 610. ref http 198.62.75.1 www1 ofm mad articles DonnerEgypt.html Article The Representation of Lower Egypt by Herbert Donner Bot generated title ref It is written in Greek, and lists cities, towns, fortresses and administrative divisions of the Eastern Roman Empire . The list begins with Italy and moves counterclockwise along the Mediterranean, from Exarchate of Africa Africa , Diocese of Egypt Late Antiquity Egypt and Diocese of the East Oriens . The surviving list is evidently incomplete, as the Balkans are excluded. ref Kazhdan 1991 , p. 838 ref The Descriptio only survived in a compilation, probably from the 9th century, along with other lists such as Notitiae Episcopatuum ecclesiastical notitiae . It is possible that the compiler, usually thought to be the Armenians Armenian Basil of Ialimbana, altered George s text. ref Kazhdan 1991 , pp. 837 838 ref See also Synecdemus Notes Reflist 2 References Georgii Cyprii Descriptio Orbis Romani 1890 , editor Heinrich Gelzer citation editor first Alexander editor last Kazhdan editor link Alexander Kazhdan title Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium publisher Oxford University Press year 1991 isbn 978 0 19 504652 6 pages 837 838 DEFAULTSORT George of Cyprus Category 7th century Byzantine people Category Cypriot people Category Byzantine geographers Byzantine bio stub Cyprus bio stub ...   more details



  1. Gardiki, Trikala

    Gardiki is a village in the Trikala Prefecture of Greece s Thessaly region. History Cardica is a Latinized medieval form for Gardicium , the true ancient Greek name being Gardikion . Cardica is its name as a Roman Catholic titular see in the former Roman province of Thessaly . It figures only in later Notitiae episcopatuum of the twelfth or thirteenth century as a suffragan of Larissa . Lequien II, 979 mentions five Latin Bishops of Cardica, from 1208 to 1389, the first being Bartholomew, to whom many letters of Pope Innocent III are addressed. Lequien was unacquainted with any Greek bishop of the see. Manuscript lists, however, contain eight names John, 1191 1192 Metrophanes, degraded in 1623 Gregorius or Cyrillus, 1623 Sophronius, 1646 1649 Gregorius, about 1700 Meletius, 1743 Paisius, eighteenth century Gregorius, about 1852. When Thessaly was united with Greece in 1881, the see had been vacant since 1875. It was suppressed in 1899, and Gardikion, commonly Gardiki, became a little village with about 300 inhabitants in the Prefecture of Trikala, in the mountainous region of Aspropotamos. External links http www.newadvent.org cathen 03333a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia article, source http www.gardiki.net Official site Catholic coord 39 32 28 N 21 15 29 E source elwiki region GR type city display title Pyli div Category Populated places in Trikala regional unit el ...   more details



  1. Panemotichus

    Orphan date February 2009 Panemotichus is a Roman Catholic titular bishopric in the former Roman province of Pamphylia Secunda , suffragan of the archbishopric of Perge . History Panemotichus coined money during the Roman epoch Head, Historia numorum , 591 . The city is spoken of by Hierocles author of Synecdemus Hierocles in the sixth century Synecedemus, 681, 3 and in the tenth by Constantine Porphyrogenitus De thematibus , ed. Bonn, III, 38 . Radet Les villes de la Pisidie , 4, reprinted from Revue Archeologique , Paris, 1893 identifies it with the ruins of Badem Aghatch , south of Ghirme , in the Ottoman vilayet of Koniah . Ecclesiastical history A Bishop Faustus assisted at the First Council of Nicaea in 325, when the city belonged to Isauria . Later it was part of Pamphylia Secunda. Another bishop, Cratinus, may have assisted at the Council of Chalcedon in 451. Hierius signed the provincial letter to Byzantine Emperor Leo VI the Wise . Helladius assisted at a minor Council of Constantinople in 536. Le Quien , I, 1031 . There is record of no other bishop and the see is not mentioned in the Notitiae Episcopatuum . The title is presently vacant. Source http www.newadvent.org cathen 11441b.htm Catholic Encyclopedia http www.gcatholic.com dioceses data titP.htm GigaCatholic Catholic coord missing Turkey Category Titular sees in Asia Category Pamphylia Category Roman towns and cities in Turkey Category Populated places of the Byzantine Empire de Panemotichus it Diocesi di Panemotico ...   more details



  1. Euroea in Phoenicia

    This is not Euroea in Epiro titular see Euroea in Phoenicia Italian Eurea di Fenicia is a Catholic titular see , until 1935 called Evaria Euaria, Euroea . ref http www.catholic hierarchy.org diocese d2e52.html Catholic Hierarchy page , http www.gcatholic.com dioceses data titE.htm ref It was originally a diocese in Phoenicia Libani . ref Joseph Bingham, Origines ecclesiastic or, The antiquities of the Christian Church 1834 , p. 307. ref It is today El Haw rin , north of Karyatein and on the road from Damascus to Palmyra . There are ruins of a Roman castellum and of a basilica. Euaria Haw rin is to be distinguished from Hauara or Havara, another titular see in Palaestina Tertia , south of Petra . History The true name of this city seems to have been Haw rin as such it appears in a Syriac inscription of the fourth to the sixth century. According to Ptolemy ref V, xiv. ref it was situated in the Palmyrene province. Georgius Cyprius calls it Euarios or Justinianopolis. The Notitiae episcopatuum of the Patriarchate of Antioch sixth century gives it as a suffragan see of the archdiocese of Damascus . ref See Echos d Orient, X 1907 , 145. ref One of its bishops, Thomas, is known in 451 there is some uncertainty about another, John, who lived a little later. ref Lequien , Oriens christianus , II, 847. ref Notes references External links http www.newadvent.org cathen 05572a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia , Euaria Catholic DEFAULTSORT Euroea In Phoenicia Category Titular sees de Euroea in Phoenicia it Diocesi di Eurea di Fenicia ...   more details



  1. Eudoxias

    Eudoxias is a Catholic titular see . The original diocese was in Galatia Secunda , Asia Minor , a suffragan of Pessinus . Eudoxias is mentioned only by Hierocles author of Synecdemus Hierocles ref Synecdemus , 698, 2. ref and Parthey ref Notitiae episcopatuum , I, VIII, IX. ref The original name of the town is unknown, Eudoxias being the name given to it in honour either of the mother or of the daughter of Theodosius II . It was perhaps Gordion , where Alexander the Great cut the Gordian knot , and stood perhaps at the modern Y rme , in the vilayet of Angora. Others, however, identify Eudoxias with Akkilaion , whose site is unknown, and place Germe at Y rme. Bishops Two bishops are known, Aquilas in 451 and Menas in 536. ref Lequien , Oriens christianus , I, 495. ref Another is spoken of in the life of Theodore of Syc , about the end of the sixth century. References William Mitchell Ramsay , Asia Minor , 224 226 Anderson in Journal of Hellen. Studies , XIX, 88 in Annual of the British School at Athens , IV, 66. Notes references External links http www.newadvent.org cathen 05597b.htm Catholic Encyclopedia article Catholic Category Titular sees de Eudoxias it Diocesi di Eudossiade ...   more details



  1. Zenonopolis

    See also Zenonopolis Lycia Zenonopolis sometimes abbreviated as Zenopolis ref The proper form Zenonopolis is commonly abbreviated Zenopolis. , William Mitchell Ramsay, The Historical Geography of Asia Minor , 1890, p. 366 footnote http books.google.com books?id Y0sZAAAAYAAJ&pg PA492 cited text at Google Books . ref , in particular by the Roman Curia ref Catholic Encyclopedia , 1907, http books.google.com books?id JSIUAAAAYAAJ&pg PA756 p. 756 ref was a city in Isauria , originally called Rusumblada but renamed in honour of Emperor Zeno emperor Zeno 474 491 , who was born there. ref Stephen Mitchell, A history of the later Roman Empire, AD 284 641 the transformation of the ancient world , Wiley Blackwell, 2007, ISBN 1 4051 0856 8, p. 114. ref In the Ottoman Empire , Zenonopolis was known as Isnebol in the kaza of Ermenek and the vilayet of Adana . ref William Mitchell Ramsay , Asia Minor , 365 ref Ecclesiastical history Zenopolis was a episcopal see see of Asia Minor , Suffragan bishop suffragan of Seleucia , Cilicia Trachaea Trachaea in Isauria , at least since the 6th century, when it is recorded as such in the Notitiae Episcopatuum Notitia Episcopatuum of Antioch . ref Echos d Orient, X., 145 ref In 732 circa, the province of Isauria was joined to the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople Patriarchate of Constantinople , and Zenopolis appears about 940 in the Notitia Episcopatuum of Constantine Porphyrogenitus , but is situated in Pamphylia . ref Georgius Cyprius , Descriptio Orbis Romani , ed. Heinrich Gelzer , 1606 ref The city is again mentioned by George of Cyprus in the 7th century. ref op. cit. , 847 ref and by Constantine VII Constantine Porphyrogenitus ref De Themat. , I, 13 ref as a city of the Decapolis do not link , presumably referring to the Isaurian Decapolis . Michel Le Quien Le Quien ref Oriens Christ., II, 1033 ref mentions two bishops Eulalius, present at the Third Council of Constantinople Council of Constantinople 681 Marcus, at that of Second ...   more details



  1. Ceramus

    Ceramus or Keramos lang el was a city on the north coast of the Gulf of G kova Ceramic Gulf &mdash named for this city&mdash in Caria , in southwest Asia Minor its ruins can be found outside the modern village of ren , Mu la Province , Turkey . Ceramus, initially subjected to Stratonicea , afterwards autonomous, was a member of the Athenian Empire Athenian League and was one of the chief cities of the Chrysaorian League Bulletin de corresp. hell n., IX, 468 . In ancient times, it probably had a temple of Zeus Zeus Chrysaoreus . In Roman Empire Roman times, it coined its own money. It is mentioned in the Notitiae Episcopatuum until the twelfth or thirteenth century as a Diocese bishopric suffragan to Aphrodisias , or Stauropolis titular see Stauropolis . Three bishops are known Spudasius, who attended the First Council of Ephesus in 431 Maurianus, who attended the Second Council of Nicaea Council of Nicaea in 787 and Symeon, who attended the council in Constantinople that reinstated Photios I of Constantinople Photius in 879 . Ceramus remains a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church , Ceramensis , the current bishop is H ctor Javier Pizarro Acevedo , appointed on October 23, 2000 ref http www.catholic hierarchy.org diocese d3c09.html Ceramus Titular See Catholic Hierarchy& 93 Bot generated title ref . References references External links http www.ypai.gr atlas thesi uk.asp?idthesis 469 Archaeological Atlas of the Aegean http www.newadvent.org cathen 03537c.htm Catholic Encyclopedia, Ceramus at New Advent http www.ancientlibrary.com gazetteer 0104.html Hazlitt, Classical Gazetteer Catholic Former settlements in Turkey coord missing Turkey Category Archaeological sites in Turkey Category Caria Category Titular sees Category Ancient Greek sites in Turkey Category Former populated places in Turkey Category Mu la Province Category History of Mu la Province Turkey archaeology stub RC stub de Ceramus it Diocesi di Ceramo ...   more details



  1. Trocmades

    Trocmade s or Trocmada was a city of the Byzantine Empire Eastern Roman Empire in the Roman Province province of Galatia Secunda . It appears to have been on the site of the modern Turkish village of Kaymaz , about twenty four miles east of Eski ehir , Turkey . History The city is known from ecclesiastical records no geographer or historian mentions a city of this name Hierocles author of Synecdemus Hierocles Synecemus 698, 1 gives regio Trocnades , instead of Regetnoknada , referring, doubtless, to the Galatian language Galatian name of some tribe on the left bank of the Sakarya River Sangarius . Ecclesiastical history All the Notitiae episcopatuum up to the thirteenth century mention the see Trokmadon among the suffragan s of Pessinus the two most recent thirteenth century call it Lotinou perhaps it should be Plotinou , from St. Plotinus , venerated there. The official lists of the Roman Curia give Trocmadae. Le Quien Oriens christianus , I, 493 , gives Trocmada. From these erroneous forms arises a confusion of the name with the Galatian tribe of Trocmi . Le Quien gives a list of the known bishops Cyriacus, who represented his Metropolitan bishop metropolitan at the Second Council of Ephesus 449 , and was represented by a priest at the Council of Chalcedon 451 Theodore, present at the Third Council of Constantinople Council of Constantinople 681 Leo, at the Second Council of Nicaea 787 Constantine at the Photian Council of Constantinople 879 . Cyriacus, said to have assisted at the First Council of Nicaea 325 , is not mentioned in the authentic lists of bishops present at that council. Trocmades remains a Roman Catholic titular see . Source CathEncy title Trocmades url http www.newadvent.org cathen 15063d.htm Catholic wstitle Trocmades coord missing Turkey Category Archaeological sites in Turkey Category Titular sees in Asia Category Galatia AncientGreece stub Turkey stub RC stub de Trocmades it Diocesi di Trocmade ...   more details



  1. Berissa

    Berissa also spelled Berisa or Verissa is a Roman Catholic titular see in the former Roman province of Pontus Polemoniacus , in Asia Minor, which Kiepert and W. M. Ramsay have identified with the modern village of Baulus also known as Bolus , south west of Tokat . ref http www.newadvent.org cathen 02491c.htm Berissa Catholic Encyclopedia article ref Ecclesiastical History In the time of St. Basil it was included in the diocese of Ibora , as appears from letters LXXXVI and LXXXVII of the great bishop, but soon after became an independent bishopric in Armenia Prima , with Sebasteia as metropolis. This important change took place before 458, when its bishop, Maxentius written wrongly Ausentius , subscribed with his colleagues of Armenia Prima the synodal letter to the Emperor Leo I Mansi, XII, 587 589 . Hierocles author of Synecdemus Hierocles , at the beginning of the sixth century, does not treat it as an independent city but it is mentioned as such by Justinian in a Novella of 536, among the cities of Armenia Secunda . It must be remembered that this emperor, when creating the province of Armenia Quarta in 536, gave to Armenia Prima the name of Armenia Secunda, without altering the established ecclesiastical organization, so that Berissa remained a suffragan see of Sebasteia. Among its later bishops may be mentioned Thomas, who was present at the fifth ecumenical council at Constantinople, in 553 Mansi, IX, 175 , and another at the sixth in 680 ibid., XI, 66 . It appears still later in the Notitiae Episcopatuum as suffragan to Sebasteia, and its name is written sometimes Berisse or Berisse Merisse and Kerisse are merely palaeographical mistakes. Berissa was a Latin bishopric as late as the fifteenth century, when Paul II appointed the Franciscan Libertus de Broehun to succeed the deceased bishop, John Wadding, Annales Minorum, VI, 708 . References Reflist Category Titular sees de Berissa it Diocesi di Berissa ...   more details




Articles 1 - 25 of 157          Next


Search   in  
Search for Notitiae Episcopatuum in Tutorials
Search for Notitiae Episcopatuum in Encyclopedia
Search for Notitiae Episcopatuum in Videos
Search for Notitiae Episcopatuum in Books
Search for Notitiae Episcopatuum in Software
Search for Notitiae Episcopatuum in DVDs
Search for Notitiae Episcopatuum in Store


Advertisement




Notitiae Episcopatuum in Encyclopedia
Notitiae Episcopatuum top Notitiae Episcopatuum

Home - Add TutorGig to Your Site - Disclaimer

©2011-2013 TutorGig.info All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement