Sicca Veneria (titular see)
The Diocese of Sicca Veneria is a titular see of Africa Proconsularis, and was a suffragan of the bishops of Carthage.[1] The cathedra of the bishopric was in the Roman colonia (highest ranking city) of Colonia Julia Veneria Cirta Nova Iulia.[2][3] The bishopric was founded in early Christianity, becoming at some point an archbishopric and passed through the Catholic Roman, Arian Vandal, and Orthodox Byzantine empires until it ceased to function sometime after the Muslim conquest of the Maghreb. It survives today as a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church. The current bishop is Lajos Varga of Hungary.
Remains of the bishopric included ruins at El Kef of a cathedral, baptistry, Christian burials, and numerous Christian inscriptions.[4]
Known bishops
- Castus, at the Council of Carthage (255), at which he addressed the meeting[5]
- Patritius mentioned in 349;
- Fortunatianus mentioned in 407, present at the Council of Carthage (411) and spoken of by St. Augustine,[6]
- Urbanus in 418, mentioned in 429 by Augustine,[7]
- Paul towards 480;
- Candidus in 646.[8]
- Gustave Marie Blanche Vicar Apostolic Golfe St-Laurent (Canada) 1905–1916 [9]
- Stanislaw Kostka Łukomski auxiliary bishop of Gniezno and Poznań 1920–1926
- Kazimierz Tomczak Auxiliary Bishop of Łódź 1927–1967
- Joseph Augustin Hagendorens (Zaire) 1968–1976
- Felix Eugenio Mkhori (Malawi) 1977–1979
- Kazimierz Romaniuk 1982–1992
- Lajos Varga (Hungary) since May 27, 2006
References
- ↑ Hitchner, R., (Sicca Veneria) |accessdate=January 18, 2017 4:23 am.
- ↑ Sicca Veneria, at New Advent.org.
- ↑ Trudy Ring, Middle East and Africa: International Dictionary of Historic Places (Routledge, 2014) p456.
- ↑ Sicca Veneria, at New Advent.org.
- ↑ The Epistles of S. Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage and Martyr (John Henry Parker, 1844) p 294.
- ↑ Augustine Retractationes XLI
- ↑ Augustine, "Epist." ccxxix
- ↑ Sicca Veneria, at New Advent.org.
- ↑ Titular Episcopal See of Sicca Veneria at GCatholic.org.
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