Darnis
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Darnis is a metropolitan titular archbishopric in the former Roman province of Libya, in the diocese of Egypt.
[edit] History
Ptolemy (IV, 4, 2; 5; 6) and Ammianus Marcellinus, (XXII, 16, 4) locate it in the Libyan Pentapolis. It became a civil and later the religious metropolis of Libya Secunda, or Libya Inferior, i.e. Marmarica region (Hierocles, "Synecdemus" 734,3; Lequien, "Orens. Christ.", II, 631; Gelzer, "Georgii Cyprii descripto orbis Romani", 142). Darne is another form of the name; Dardanis is due to an eror.
Only three, perhaps four, bishops are known, from the fourth or sixth century to about 600. The city is known in Islamic times as Derneh or Dernah, Terneh or Ternah, and became a port at the end of a bay formed by the Mediterranean, where the French admiral Gantheaume landed in 1700.
Under Ottoman rule is was situated east of Benhasi in the vilayet of that name (Tripolitana), and had 2000 inhabitants, who lived by fishing and the coasting trade.
[edit] Source
- This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia, so may be out of date, or reflect the point of view of the Catholic Church as of 1913. It should be edited to reflect broader and more recent perspectives. [1]