Pertusa (Africa)
Pertusa was an ancient city and diocese in Tunisia. It is now a Catholic titular bishopric.
History
The Bishopric of Ad Pertusa was centered on the ancient Roman civitas of Pertvsa, which has been identified with ruins at modern El-Haraïria, an outer suburb of Tunis. During the Roman Empire Pertusa was located in the Roman province of Africa Proconsularis and was important enough to become a bishopric, which was suffragan to the nearby Metropolitan, of Carthage.
The town is mentioned[1] in the Antonini Itinerarium.[2]
Titular see
It was nominally revived in 1933 as a Latin titular see of the lowest (episcopal) in 1933, and has almost constantly been awarded. Its incumbents were mostly secular priests :
- Giorgio Giuseppe Haezaert, Spiritans (C.S.Sp.) (1935.06.18 – 1957.09.29), as first Apostolic Vicar of Northern Katanga (in then Belgian Congo)
- Leonard Philip Cowley (1957.11.28 – 1973.08.18)
- George Kinzie Fitzsimons (1975.05.20 – 1984.03.28)
- Kazimierz Górny (1984.10.26 – 1992.03.25)
- Roberto Rodríguez (1992.11.12 – 1998.06.23)
- Liborius Ndumbukuti Nashenda, Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate (O.M.I.) (1998.11.05 – 2004.09.21), as Auxiliary Bishop of Windhoek (capital of Namibia) (1998.11.05 – 2004.09.21), next Metropolitan Archbishop of Windhoek (2004.09.21 – ...) and President of Namibian Catholic Bishop’s Conference (September 2007 – ...)
- Philippe Jean-Charles Jourdan, (2005.04.01 – ...), Apostolic Administrator of Estonia
References
- Barrington Atlas, 2000, pl. 32 F3.
- Bernd Löhberg, Das "Itinerarium provinciarum Antonini Augusti": (Frank & Timme GmbH, 2006) p80.
External links
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