Marcianopolis
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Marcianopolis, or Marcianople, is a Roman Catholic titular see in the former Roman province of Lower Moesia, on the right bank of the Danube.
[edit] History
It was so renamed by Emperor Trajan after his sister Marciana (Amm. Marcellinus, XXVII, 2) and previously known as Parthenopolis. Emperor Claudius II repeatedly repulsed the Goths near this town (Trebellius Pollio, "Claudius", 9; Zosimus, I, 42); Valens made it his winter quarters in 368 and succeeding years (Amm. Marcell., XXVII, 5; Theophanis "Chronographia", A. M. 5859, 5860, 5861). In 587 it was sacked by the king of the Avars but at once retaken by the Romans (Theophanis, "Chronographia" A. M. 6079). The Roman army quartered there in 596 before crossing the Danube to assault the Avars (op. cit., A. M. 6088).
[edit] Ecclesiastical history
Marcianopolis was the home of many saints or martyrs, e.g. St. Meletina, whose liturgical feast is kept on 15 September and whose remains were carried to Lemnos; St. Alexander, martyred under Maximianus, and whose feast is kept on 2 February; Saints Maximus, Theodotus and Asclepiodotus, martyred at Adrianople under Maximianus, and whose feast is kept on 15 September, were born at Marcianopolis.
The "Ecthesis" of the pseudo-Epiphalius (c. 640) gives the Metropolitical See of Marcianopolis in the Balkans five suffragans (Gelzer, "Ungedruckte ... Texte der Notitiae Episcopatuum" 542). The "Notitia Episcopatuum" of the Armenian cleric, Basil (c. 840) confirms this (Gelzer, "Georgii Cyprii descriptio orbis romani", 25).
On the other hand Marcianopolis is not mentioned in the "Notitia" of Leo the Wise (c. 900) nor in that of Constantine Porphyrogenitus (c. 940), because the region had at that time been overrun by the Bulgarians. Le Quien (Oriens Christ., I, 1217-1220) mentions many bishops of Marcianopolis and Preslau, erroneously identifying these two towns. The Preslau of the Middle Ages remains Preslau to this day, and his Marcianopolis is the village of Devna, a little to the west of Varna in Bulgaria. This name under the form Bulgaria is mentioned by Pachymeros on account of something that took place there in 1280 (De Michaele Palaeologo, VI, 49).
[edit] Source
- This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia. [1]