Vegesela in Byzacena
Appearance
Vegesela in Byzacena was a Roman Era town tentatively identified with ruins at Henchir-Recba in modern Tunisia.[1] The town was in the Roman province of Byzacena.
The ancient town was also the seat of an ancient Christian Bishopric, which survives today as a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.[2] René Coba Galarza is the current Bishop.[3][4] The diocese effectively ceased to function with the Muslim conquest of the Maghreb. Today the diocese of Vegesela in Byzacena (Latin: Dioecesis Vegeselitana in Byzacena) is a suppressed and titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.[5][6]
There are only six documented bishops of Vegesela in Byzacena.
- Privato attended the Carthaginian council called by Grato in 349.
- The Catholic Privaziano intervened at the Carthage conference of 411, which saw together the Catholic and Donatist bishops of Roman Africa; on that occasion the headquarters did not have a Donatist bishop.
- Alfredo Torres Romero (December 30, 1967 - July 26, 1980 appointed Bishop of Toluca)
- Jorge Liberato Urosa Savino (3 July 1982 - 16 March 1990 appointed archbishop of Valencia en Venezuela)
- Segundo René Coba Galarza (June 7, 2006 - June 18, 2014)
- Franz Josef Gebert, from 31 May 2017auxiliary bishop of Trier
References
[edit]- ^ Anna Leone, Changing Townscapes in North Africa from Late Antiquity to the Arab Conquest (Edipuglia srl, 2007) p354.
- ^ Apostolische Nachfolge – Titularsitze
- ^ Vegesela in Byzacena at catholic-hierarchy.org.(english)]
- ^ Vegesela in Byzacena at gcatholic.org
- ^ Pius Bonifacius Gams, Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae, (Leipzig, 1931), p. 469.
- ^ Stefano Antonio Morcelli, Africa christiana, Volume I, (Brescia, 1816), p. 349.
Categories:
- Archaeological sites in Tunisia
- Roman towns and cities in Tunisia
- Ruins in Tunisia
- Catholic titular sees in Africa
- Ancient Berber cities
- Roman towns and cities in Africa (Roman province)
- Cities in Tunisia
- Tunisia geography stubs
- African Roman Catholic diocese stubs
- African archaeology stubs
- Ancient Rome stubs