Decoriana

Decoriana (Decoriensisor Dicensis) was an ancient Roman–Berber city and former bishopric in Tunisia. It is now a Latin Catholic titular see.[1][2][3][4][5]

Roman Africa

History

Decoriana, in today's Tunisia, was important enough in the Roman province of Byzacena to become one of the many suffragans of its capital Hadrumetum's Metropolitan Archbishop, [6] yet it was to fade.

Residential bishops

There are only two known ancient bishops of this diocese.

  • Among the Catholic bishops summoned to Carthage in 484 by the Vandal King, Huneric was the Bishop Leander (or Lenzio), who was exiled to Corsica.
  • Paschasios (Pascasio), as bishop of Decorianensis in Byzacena, signed the acts of the African council antimonothelite in 646 and subscribed in 645/646 the letter sent from the bishops of Byzacena to the Byzantine emperor Constans II, asking him to persuade the Patriarch of Constantinople, Paul II, to abandon the monothelite heresy; the letter was read out at the Lateran Council in October 649; in the list of signatures his name appears twenty-first: Conc. Lat., p. 77, line 37 [7]

Titular see

The diocese was nominally restored in 1933, as a Latin Catholic titular bishopric Decoriana.

It has had the following incumbents, all of the lowest (episcopal) rank:

See also

References

  1. ^ Louis de Mas Latrie, Migne, Dictionnaire de statistique religieuse et de l'art de vérifier les dates... (J.-P. Migne, 1831 - France)p 653.
  2. ^ Stefano Antonio Morcelli, Bettoni, Steph. Antonii Morcelli,... Africa Christiana: in tres partes tributa (ex officina Bettoniana, 1816) p 150.
  3. ^ Pius Bonifacius Gams, Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae, Leipzig 1931, p. 465.
  4. ^ Copertina anteriore Stefano Antonio Morcelli , Africa Christiana: in tres partes pays, Volume 1 (Betton, 1816)p150.
  5. ^ J. Ferron, v. Decorianensis in Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de Géographie ecclésiastiques, vol. IX,(1937), col. 155
  6. ^ Decoriana. at GCatholic.org.
  7. ^ "Pascasius misericordia dei episcopus sanctae ecclesiae Decorianensis"
  8. ^ Decori also known as Decoriana at Catholic-hierarchy.org.

External links

  • GCatholic
Portals:
  • icon Catholicism
  • map Africa