Roman and Byzantine-era town in southern Turkey
Location of Isauria in Asia Minor
Isauropolis (Ancient Greek : Ἰσαυρόπολις )[ 1] was a Roman and Byzantine -era town in southern Turkey.[ 2]
Possibly also known as Isaura Vetus , the city was in the Anatolian countryside of what was Lycaonia in today's southern Turkey and may have been the chief town of Isauria (Ἰσαυρία) district.[ 3] The town was mentioned by Sozomen ,[ 4] Ptolemy ,[ 5] and Heirocles .[ 6]
About 450 Maximinus entered the town in his war with Zeno .[ 7]
Its location is not known, but suggestions include Siristat or Tris Maden , about 13 mi (21 km) west of Isaura , or Isaura Vetus . It must have been near Isaura Nova with which it was joined.
Bishopric
The city was also the site of an ancient bishopric [ 8] which dates from the early Christian era.
Bishops from here attended both Council of Nicea and Chalcedon . There is no mention of Isauropolis in any Notitiae episcopatuum , so Ramsay supposes that the Diocese was joined with that of Leontopolis which is mentioned in all the "Notitiae".[ 9] The see was resurrected in 1925[ 10] as a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church .[ 11]
Known bishops
Ancient bishopric
Titular see
Bernard Gozdzki Auxiliary Bishop in Poznań (Poland-Lithuania) July 6, 1722 – March 16, 1725.
Gregorio de Molleda y Clerque September 26, 1725 – August 3, 1729
Louis-Mathias-Joseph de Barral Coadjutor Bishop of Troyes (France) September 15, 1788 – December 22, 1790
Michele Di Pietro (February 21, 1794 – August 9, 1802)
Jean-Louis Taberd MEP Vicar Apostolic of Cochin (Vietnam) September 18, 1827 – July 31, 1840[ 13] [ 14]
Dominique Lefebvre (Vicar Apostolic of Western Cochin) (Vietnam) December 10, 1839 – April 30, 1865.
Tomás Badía January 19, 1842 – September 10, 1844
Stanislas-Gabriel-Henri Baudry Apostolic Vicar of Ningyüan (Republic of China) March 18, 1927 – April 11, 1946.
Jean-Baptiste Urrutia MEP Apostolic Vicar of Hue (Vietnam) February 21, 1948 – November 24, 1960.
Philip Francis Pocock (February 18, 1961 – March 30, 1971)[ 15]
References
^ Hierocles . Synecdemus . Vol. p. 675.
^ Rogers, Clifford (June 2010). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology , Volume 1. Oxford University Press. p. 42.
^ W. M. Ramsay, The Historical Geography of Asia Minor (2010) p395 .
^ W. M. Ramsay, The Historical Geography of Asia Minor (Cambridge University Press, 2010)p18 .
^ W. M.
Ramsay, The Historical Geography of Asia Minor (Cambridge University Press, 2010)31.
^ Hierocles's "Synecdemus ".
^ Priscus
Embassi to Attila Archived 2022-10-26 at the Wayback Machine .
^ Michel Le Quien , Oriens christian , I, 1085.
^ W. M. Ramsay, The Historical Geography of Asia Minor (2010) p429.
^ Isauropolis at GCatholic.org.
^ Annuario pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 p819.)
^ C.H. Turner, ECCLESIAE OCCIDENTALIS MONUMENTA IURIS ANTIQUISSIMA (Oxford, 1899–1939).
^ Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal , Volume 11, Part 2 .
^ The late bishop of Isauropolis, Sydney Gazette Tuesday 23 March 1841 p3.
^ David M. Cheney,Isauroplis at catholic-hierarchy.org. (2016).