465:
501:
489:
477:
34:
57:
50:
665:
607:
Kiel, Machiel (1971). "Observations on the
History of Northern Greece during the Turkish Rule: Historical and Architectural Description of the Turkish Monuments of Komotini and Serres, their place in the Development of Ottoman Turkish Architecture and their Present Condition".
301:
The fate of the town thereafter is somewhat obscure: it re-appears in 1317 as part of the theme of "Boleron and
Mosynopolis", and its bishopric was still active, but the historian Catherine Asdracha, in her 1972 survey of the
306:
area in the late Middle Ages, suggests that it never recovered from
Kaloyan's sack and remained in ruins, proposing that it is to be identified with the town of Mesene, which the emperor and historian
464:
816:
372:
796:
500:
488:
476:
371:
In all these instances, the see appears under the name
Maximianopolis, but in 879 it is under the name Mosynopolis that it is represented by a bishop called Paul at the
635:
811:
430:
both as an archiepiscopal see under the name
Maximianopolis in Rhodope and as a suffragan diocese of Mosynopolis subject to Trajanopolis in Rhodope.
675:
806:
754:
644:
576:
33:
567:
291:
542:
801:
354:
108:
517:
283:
445:
407:
240:
49:
670:
257:
228:
The city of
Maximianopolis appears in written sources from the 4th century on. Its fortifications were renewed by
252:
209:
303:
287:
244:
395:
307:
350:
295:
278:
living in
Mosynopolis in the late 11th/early 12th centuries. The town was captured in 1185 by the
659:
346:
342:
294:, took place nearby in 1207, and was speedily followed by the destruction of Mosynopolis by Tsar
750:
640:
593:
572:
562:
229:
440:
It is vacant, having had a single incumbent of the intermediary (archiepiscopal) rank :
168:
689:
630:
423:
433:
The diocese was nominally restored in 1933 as the Latin
Catholic titular archbishopric
205:
193:
790:
781:
365:
361:
414:
to exercise jurisdiction in what had been the see of
Maximianopolis or Mosynopolis.
411:
400:
387:
380:
265:
164:
427:
232:
403:, about 900; in that for 940; in that for 1170 under the name of Misinoupolis.
216:(Μαξιμιανούπολις) or, to distinguish it from other cities of the same name, as
375:. From the following century to the 12th, it appears with reduced status as a
275:
731:
341:
Bishops of
Maximianopolis in Rhodope were present at the 5th and 6th-century
123:
110:
639:. Princeton University Press. p. 51, and directory notes accompanying.
376:
449:
236:
85:
279:
270:
261:
444:
Adam Hefter (5 December 1939 – 9 January 1970), previously Bishop of
201:
96:
571:. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 1418–1419.
282:, while the monk Ephrem says that the city was captured in 1190 by
448:(Austria) (26 December 1914 – 4 May 1939) and Titular Bishop of
16:
Ancient settlement and archaeological site near Komotini, Greece
393:
The see is mentioned under the name Mosynopolis also in the
250:
In the 11th century, the city was the center of a district (
235:, and it was later a base for operations by Emperor
782:
GigaCatholic, with titular incumbent biography link
179:
174:
160:
152:
147:
139:
102:
92:
80:
72:
313:The town at some point had other names including
817:Byzantine sites in Eastern Macedonia and Thrace
543:Aikaterini Balla, "Mosynopolis-Maximianoupolis"
561:Gregory, Timothy E. (1991). "Mosynopolis". In
410:in August 1347 authorized the Metropolitan of
636:Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World
8:
625:
623:
364:is referred to as archiepiscopal, giving it
212:, which was known until the 9th century as
19:
200:), of which only ruins now remain in Greek
32:
18:
470:Fortress: a little south from the church.
797:Populated places of the Byzantine Empire
310:reported as "destroyed many years ago".
676:Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography
538:
536:
534:
532:
528:
460:
406:After the destruction of the city, the
360:From the 7th to the 9th centuries, the
707:Georgii Cyprii Descriptio orbis Romani
357:(553) and in another council of 459.
673:, ed. (1854–1857). "Maximianopolis".
556:
554:
552:
550:
7:
694:Ungedruckte ... Notitiæ episcopatuum
38:A central plan church in Mosynopolis
749:(Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2013,
290:, in which the Bulgarians defeated
56:
568:The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium
292:Boniface I, Marquess of Montferrat
14:
812:Former populated places in Greece
732:Siméon Vailhé, "Mosynoupolis" in
422:The bishopric is included in the
663:
499:
487:
475:
463:
386:In the 13th century it became a
373:Fourth Council of Constantinople
55:
48:
518:Maximianopolis (disambiguation)
284:Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor
452:(4 May 1939 – 5 December 1939)
408:Patriarchate of Constantinople
1:
807:Geography of medieval Thrace
833:
435:Massimianopolis in Rhodope
776:Source and External links
218:Maximianopolis in Rhodope
197:
43:
31:
24:
767:Annuario Pontificio 2013
747:Annuario Pontificio 2013
802:Rhodope (regional unit)
381:Trajanopolis in Rhodope
679:. London: John Murray.
506:A central plan church.
494:A central plan church.
482:A central plan church.
337:Ecclesiastical history
288:Battle of Messinopolis
734:Catholic Encyclopedia
591:Cæsares, V. 5695, in
396:Notitiae Episcopatuum
308:John VI Kantakouzenos
274:that there were many
124:41.12861°N 25.32528°E
73:Alternative name
720:Hierocles Synecdemus
204:, was a city in the
343:ecumenical councils
296:Kaloyan of Bulgaria
120: /
64:Shown within Greece
21:
660:Antonine Itinerary
563:Kazhdan, Alexander
129:41.12861; 25.32528
755:978-88-209-9070-1
646:978-0-691-03169-9
594:Patrologia Graeca
578:978-0-19-504652-6
355:Constantinople II
230:Byzantine emperor
187:
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824:
770:
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736:(New York 1911)
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690:Heinrich Gelzer
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631:Richard Talbert
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424:Catholic Church
420:
339:
268:reports in her
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128:
126:
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68:
67:
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62:
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39:
27:
17:
12:
11:
5:
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759:
739:
724:
711:
698:
682:
671:Smith, William
652:
645:
633:, ed. (2000).
619:
610:Balkan Studies
599:
597:, CXLIII, 216.
584:
577:
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458:
455:
454:
453:
419:
416:
338:
335:
225:
222:
214:Maximianopolis
206:Roman province
185:
184:
181:
177:
176:
172:
171:
162:
158:
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150:
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145:
144:
141:
137:
136:
104:
100:
99:
94:
90:
89:
82:
78:
77:
76:Maximianopolis
74:
70:
69:
63:
54:
53:
47:
46:
45:
44:
41:
40:
37:
29:
28:
25:
15:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
829:
818:
815:
813:
810:
808:
805:
803:
800:
798:
795:
794:
792:
783:
780:
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752:
748:
743:
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728:
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721:
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409:
404:
402:
398:
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391:
389:
384:
382:
378:
374:
369:
367:
366:autocephalous
363:
358:
356:
352:
348:
344:
336:
334:
332:
328:
324:
320:
316:
311:
309:
305:
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105:
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51:
42:
35:
30:
23:
766:
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746:
742:
733:
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719:
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701:
693:
685:
674:
655:
634:
613:
609:
602:
592:
587:
566:
439:
434:
432:
428:titular sees
421:
412:Trajanopolis
405:
401:Leo the Wise
394:
392:
385:
370:
359:
340:
330:
326:
322:
318:
314:
312:
300:
269:
266:Anna Komnene
251:
249:
243:against the
227:
217:
213:
189:
188:
156:13th century
457:Photographs
426:'s list of
418:Titular see
390:bishopric.
353:(451), and
276:Manichaeans
233:Justinian I
198:Μοσυνόπολις
190:Mosynopolis
127: /
103:Coordinates
26:Μοσυνόπολις
20:Mosynopolis
791:Categories
524:References
245:Bulgarians
175:Site notes
143:Settlement
115:25°19′31″E
112:41°07′43″N
757:), p. 925
718:Parthey,
377:suffragan
351:Chalcedon
331:Pyrsoalis
256:) in the
180:Condition
169:Byzantine
153:Abandoned
769:, p. 934
705:Gelzer,
512:See also
450:Marciana
368:status.
323:Corsulae
319:Porsulae
237:Basil II
183:In ruins
161:Cultures
88:, Greece
86:Komotini
81:Location
565:(ed.).
349:(431),
347:Ephesus
315:Porsula
304:Rhodope
280:Normans
271:Alexiad
262:Boleron
239:in his
224:History
210:Rhodope
148:History
753:
722:, 122.
696:, 558.
668:
643:
616:: 417.
575:
327:Impara
286:. The
264:, and
253:bandon
202:Thrace
97:Thrace
93:Region
709:, 79.
388:Latin
258:theme
194:Greek
165:Roman
84:Near
751:ISBN
641:ISBN
573:ISBN
446:Gurk
329:and
241:wars
140:Type
399:of
379:of
362:see
345:of
317:or
260:of
208:of
793::
692:,
662:,
622:^
614:12
612:.
549:^
531:^
437:.
383:.
333:,
325:,
321:,
298:.
247:.
220:.
196::
167:,
649:.
581:.
192:(
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