Dhorbania
Dhorbania, slso known as Henchir Oued Nebhana,[1] is a village and locality in Tunisia. It's also the site of Ancient city and former bishopric Bahanna, now a Latin Catholic titular see.
Location
Dhorbania is in the Kairouan Governorate of Tunisia, North Africa. It is located at latitude 36.19392n and Longitude 10.02064e, in the hinterland of the Gulf of Hammamet, and south of Tunis. It is on the Oued Nebhana Stream,[2][3] and it has a post code of 1160 in the Tunisian postal service.[4]
History
Ruins of the city include a Christian basilica, baptistry, an Olive press[5] and a bridge over the stream. [6]
The Arab general Uqba ibn Nafi lead Arab forces into the region in 670AD.
Ecclesiastical History
Bahanna was important enough in the late Roman province of Byzacena to become one of the suffragan bishoprics of its capital Hadrumetum (modern Sousse)'s Metropolitan Archbishopric, but like most faded, presumably under Islam.[7]
Titular see
The diocese was nominally restored in 1933 as Latin Catholic titular bishopric (Curiate Italian Baanna).
It had had the following incumbents, all of the fitting episcopal (lowest) rank :
- Noël Boucheix, Society of African Missions (S.M.A.) (1969.01.01 – 1976.08.06)
- James Odongo (1964.11.25 – 1968.08.19) (later Archbishop)
- Philip James Benedict Harvey (1977.03.28 – 2003.02.02)
- Christopher Charles Prowse (2003.04.04 – 2009.06.18) as Auxiliary Bishop of Melbourne (Australia) (2003.04.04 – 2009.06.18); later Bishop of Sale (Australia) (2009.06.18 – 2013.09.12), Archbishop of Canberra and Goulburn (Australia) (2013.09.12 – ...)
- Thomas Vũ Đình Hiệu (2009.07.25 – 2012.12.24)
- Titus Joseph Mdoe (2013.02.16 – 2015.10.15)
References
- ↑ AFRICA, XXIII, 2013 (INP-Tunis) .
- ↑ Oued Nebhana.
- ↑ Oued Nebhana (stream).
- ↑ .
- ↑ Anna Leone, Changing Townscapes in North Africa from Late Antiquity to the Arab Conquest(Edipuglia srl, 2007) p 260.
- ↑ L'AFRIQUE CHRÉTIENNE ÉVÈCHÉS & RUINES ANTIQUES 182.
- ↑ GCatholic - Titular Episcopal See of Bahanna.