Danaba

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Danaba is a Roman Catholic titular see in the former Roman province of Phoenicia Secunda.

[edit] History

Danaba is mentioned by Ptolemy (V, xv, 24) as a town in the territory of Palmyra. According to the Roman road guide known as Peutinger's table (where it is called Danova) it was a Roman military station between Damascus and Palmyra, twenty miles from Nezala.

Danaba figures in an Antiochene Notitia episcopatuum of the sixth century as a suffragan of Damascus, and remained so till perhaps the tenth century. Only two bishops are known: Theodore, who attended the Council of Chalcedon in 451, and subscribed the letter of the bishops of the province to Emperor Leo I in 458, and Eulogius, present at the Second Council of Constantinople in 553 (Lequien, Oriens Christianus, III, 847).

Today Danaba is probably represented by Hafer, a village five miles southeast of Sadad, formerly in the Ottoman vilayet of Damascus; about 300 Jacobite Syrians lived there, most of whom had been converted to Catholicism.

[edit] Source

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.