Porphyreon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Porphyreon is a Catholic titular see. The original diocese was a suffragan of the archdiocese of Tyre, in Phoenicia Prima. The location is now Jieh, Lebanon.
[edit] History
It is described in the Notitia Episcopatuum of Antioch as belonging to the sixth century[1], but does not appear in that of the tenth century[2]. Lequien [3] mentions five of its bishops:
- Thomas, 451;
- Alexander, at the end of the fifth century;
- Theodore, 518;
- Christophorus, 536;
- and Paul (contemporary of Justinian II), 565-78.
There were two Porphyreons in this province. One, described by Scylax[4] north of Sidon and also by Palerin of Bordeaux[5] eight miles from Sidon, is now Jieh. A second Porphyreon, according to the Pseudo-Antoninus[6], may be located six or seven miles north of Carmel. Historians of the Crusades (William of Tyre and James of Vitry) confound this town with Caipha; the latter corresponds to the see. In fact Saint Simeon Stylite the Young, contemporary of Paul, Bishop of Porphyreon, affirms[7] that the episcopal town may be found near Castra, a place inhabited by the Samaritans. Now, in the same epoch the Pseudo-Antoninus [8] locates the Castra Samaritanorum a Sucamina (Caipha) milliario subtus monte Carmelo south of Porphyreon.
The church of Porphyreon, dedicated to the Blessed Virgin, was built by Justinian I.[9] The ruins of Porphyreon should be found near Belus, the Nahr Namein, in the sands of which may still be seen the murex brandaris and the murex trunculus (thorny shell fish), from which is extracted the famous purple dye of Tyre, and which gave its name to Porphyreon.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Echos d'Orient, X, 1907, 145.
- ^ op. cit., 97.
- ^ Oriens christianus, II, 829-32.
- ^ civ, ed. Muller.
- ^ Itinera hierosolymitana, ed. Geyer, 18.
- ^ Itinera hierosolymitana, 161.
- ^ Mansi, Conciliorum collectio, XIII, p. 160.
- ^ op. cit., 160.
- ^ Procopius, "De Aedificiis", V, ix; "Historia arcana", xxx.
[edit] External link
This article incorporates text from the entry Porphyreon in the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.