Buleliana

Buleliana was a civitas (town) and bishopric in Roman North Africa and remains a Latin Catholic titular see.

History

The exact location of the town is not known but it was in the Sahel region of northern, Tunisia.

Buleliana was among the municipalities of sufficient importance in the Roman province of Africa proconsularis and latter Byzacena to become a suffragan diocese in the papal sway. The town remained the seat of a Christian bishopric through the Roman, Vandal and Byzantine era [1] but faded like most after the 7th century advent of Islam.

While Mesnage assigns three bishops to the see, other authors dispute two assignations :

  • Pancratius, Donatist (heretical) dissident in (393), alternatively assigned to the diocese of Baliana
  • Flavianus, participant at the synod called in Carthage in 484 by king Huneric of the Vandal Kingdom on the Donatist schism
  • Bonifacius, alternatively assigned to the diocese of Bavagaliana.

Titular see

The diocese was nominally restored in 1989 as titular bishopric of Buleliana (Latin = Curiate Italian) / Bulelianen(sis) (Latin adjective) as a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.

It has had the following incumbents, so far of the fitting Episcopal (lowest) rank:[2]

gollark: Well, they have short descriptions of many of the ideas on the website.
gollark: I have not actually read any of it. I just said it seemed interesting as an idea.
gollark: There's this interesting book (http://radicalmarkets.com/) - I haven't read it, but I have heard lots about it - apparently it has policy proposals for reworking markets to do some stuff more effectively, which is what I'm interested in.
gollark: Perhaps you could solve all those issues, but I think it would be much harder than solving the ones we have *now*.
gollark: I mean, some of the issues I have would be gone without market systems, yes, but you would then introduce new much bigger ones.

See also

  • List of Catholic dioceses in Tunisia

References

Bibliography
  • Pius Bonifacius Gams, Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae, Leipzig 1931, p. 464
  • J. Mesnage, L'Afrique chrétienne, Paris 1912, p. 185
  • Stefano Antonio Morcelli, Africa christiana, Volume I, Brescia 1816, p. 107
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