Cincara
During the Roman Empire Cincara,[1] was a civitas of Africa Proconsularis.
The town was on the Medjerda river[2] and therefore in the bread basket of Roman North Africa. The Ruins of Cincara can still be seen at Bordj Toumi in Tunisia.
Bishopric
Cincara was a seat of an ancient Christian diocese,[3] of which we know two bishops, one donatist and one catholic indicating the controversy had reached the town. Both bishops attended the Council of Carthage in 411. [4][5]
Today Cincara survives (since 1933)as a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.[6][7]
- Restituto (fl 411)
- Campano (fl 411)(donatista)
- Bishop José Andrés Corral Arredondo (1989 – 1992)
- Bishop Roger Francis Crispian Hollis (1987 – 1988)
- bishop Ricardo Blanco Granda (1969 – 1986)
- Bishop Manuel Castro Ruiz (1965 – 1969)
gollark: I don't think there's more than one big one.
gollark: There was someone on the esoteric programming languages discord server doing that. I don't know how it's going.
gollark: Let's design an alphabet with an arbitrarily large number of letters so all differences can be defined that way!
gollark: UV is hundreds of THz and up. Radio goes up to... I don't know it's defined exactly, but GHz.
gollark: And UV is a very very different frequency.
References
- Cincara, Roman North Africa
- ordj Toumi, at getamap.net.
- J. Ferron, v. Cincari, in Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de Géographie ecclésiastiques, vol. XII, Parigi 1953, coll. 833-834.
- Pius Bonifacius Gams, Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae, (Leipzig, 1931), p. 465.
- Stefano Antonio Morcelli, Africa christiana, Volume I, (Brescia, 1816), p. 140.
- Cincari, at gcatholic.org.
- Cincara, catholicheirachy.org.
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