Tyana
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Tyana is a Roman Catholic titular archbishopric in the former Roman province of Cappadocia Prima, with as see an ancient city of Anatolia, in modern south-central Turkey, capital of a Hittite kingdom in the 2d millennium B.C..
[edit] History
Xenophon mentions it in his book Anabasis, under the name of Dana, as a large and prosperous city. The ruins of Tyana are at , three miles south of Nigde in the vilayet of Koniah; there are remains of a Roman aqueduct and of sepulchral grottoes. The ruins of Tyana are at modern Kilisse-Hissar, three miles south of Niğde; there are remains of a Roman aqueduct and of cave cemetries. The surrounding plain was known after it as Tyanitis. It was in a strategic position on the road to Syria via the Cilician Gates. It is the reputed birthplace of the celebrated magician Apollonius of Tyana in the first century A.D.
Tyana is probably the city referred to in Hittite archives as Tuwanuwa. In Greek legend the city was first called Thoana, because Thoas, a Thracian king, was its founder (Arrian, Periplus Ponti Euxini, vi); it was in Cappadocia, at the foot of Taurus Mountains and near the Cilician Gates (Strabo, XII, 537; XIII, 587).
Under Roman Emperor Caracalla the city became Antoniana colonia Tyana. After having sided with Queen Zenobia of Palmyra it was captured by Aurelian in 272, who would not allow his soldiers to sack it, allegedly because Apollonius appeared to him, pleading for its safety. In 371, Emperor Valens created a second province of Cappadocia, of which Tyana became the metropolis.
[edit] Ecclesiastical history
When in 371 Valens created the province of Cappadocia Secunda, of which Tyana became the metropolis, which aroused a violent controversy between Anthimus, Bishop of Tyana, and St. Basil, Bishop of Caesarea, each of whom wished to have as many suffragan sees as possible. About 640 Tyana had three, and it was the same in the tenth century (Gelzer, "Ungedruckte ... Texte der Notitiae episcopatum", 538, 554).
Le Quien (Oriens christ., I, 395-402) mentions 28 bishops of Tyana, among whom were Eutychius, at Nice in 325; Anthimus, the rival of St. Basil; Aetherius, at Constantinople in 381; Theodore, the friend of St. John Chrysostom; Eutherius, the partisan of Nestorius, deposed and exiled in 431; Cyriacus, a Severian Monophysite.
In May, 1359, Tyana still had a metropolitan (Mikelosich and Müller, "Acta patriarchatus Constantinopolitani", I, 505); in 1360 the metropolitan of Caesarea secured the administration of it (op. cit., 537). Thenceforth the see was titular.
[edit] Sources and references
(incomplete)
- This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913. [1]
Tyana in Turkey. Nigde city. Tyana and apollonuis data and a lot of knowledge