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Rhesaina





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Rhesaina (Rhesaena) (Ancient Greek: Ρέσαινα and Ρεσαίνα)[1]orResina (Ῥέσινα)[2] was a city in the late Roman provinceofMesopotamia Secunda and a bishopric that was a suffraganofDara.[3]

Rhesaina
Rhesaina is located in Syria
Rhesaina

Shown within Syria

LocationSyria
RegionAl-Hasakah Governorate
Coordinates36°51′01N 40°04′14E / 36.8503°N 40.0706°E / 36.8503; 40.0706
History
CulturesRoman
Site notes
ConditionRuins
Public accessYes

Rhesaina (Rhesaena, Resaena – numerous variations of the name appear in ancient authors) was an important town at the northern extremity of Mesopotamia, near the sources of the Chaboras (now the Khabur River. It was on the way from CarrhaetoNicephorium, about eighty miles from Nisibis and forty from Dara. Nearby, Gordian III fought the Persians in 243, at the battle of Resaena. It is now Ra's al-'Ayn, Syria.

Its coins show that it was a Roman colony from the time of Septimius Severus. The Notitia Dignitatum (ed. Boecking, I, 400) represents it as under the jurisdiction of the governor or Dux of Osrhoene. Hierocles (Synecdemus, 714, 3) also locates it in this province but under the name of Theodosiopolis (Θεοδοσιούπολις); it had in fact obtained the favour of Theodosius the Great and taken his name. It was fortified by Justinian. In 1393 it was nearly destroyed by Tamerlane's troops.

Bishops

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Rhesaina was also the site of a Bishopric. The Diocese of Rhesaina is today a suppressed and titular see of the Roman Catholic Church in the episcopal provinceofMesopotamia

Le Quien[4] mentions nine bishops of Rhesaena:

Roman bishops

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Middle Ages

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The see is again mentioned in the 10th century in a Greek Notitia episcopatuum of the Patriarchate of Antioch (Vailhé, in "Échos d'Orient", X, 94). Le Quien (ibid., 1329 and 1513) mentions two Jacobite bishops: Scalita, author of a hymn and of homilies, and Theodosius (1035). About a dozen others are known.

Titular bishops

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References

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  • ^ Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Resaina
  • ^ Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2013, ISBN 978-88-209-9070-1), p. 958]
  • ^ Oriens christianus, II, 979.
  • ^ Rhesaina at catholic-hierarchy.org.
  • Attribution

    36°51′1.08″N 40°4′14.16″E / 36.8503000°N 40.0706000°E / 36.8503000; 40.0706000


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rhesaina&oldid=1179545127"
     



    Last edited on 10 October 2023, at 20:45  





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    This page was last edited on 10 October 2023, at 20:45 (UTC).

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