Vageata

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Vageata, also known as Vageatensis,[1] was a Roman-Berber town in the province of Mauretania Caesariensis.[2] It is also known as Bagatensis,[3] and epigraphical evidence remains attesting to this etymology,[4][5][6] due to the interchange of 'v' for 'b' is a common phenomenon in Latin and Greek place names.

The city has been identified with ruins at El-Haria, located east of Cirta en route to Thibilis.[7] It was mentioned by Optatus of Milevis, in Numidia.[8]

Bishopric

The city was also a seat of an ancient bishopric though only two bishops are known to history. Donatus of Vageaensis was known from the Council of Carthage (411).[9][10]

Fulgentius (Catholic bishop) fl.484 was exiled by Vandal king Huneric in 484AD. Richard Oliver Gerow of Natchez-Jackson was bishop in the 1970s. Long-term bishop Franz Xaver Schwarzenböck(1972-2010) [11] was then succeeded by Wieslaw Szlachetka, who has been bishop since December 21, 2013.[12]

References

  1. ^ Historical-Portable Dictionary of Ancient and Modern Sacred Geography, 1759 p733.
  2. ^ Vageatensis
  3. ^ Leslie Dossey, Peasant and Empire in Christian North Africa (University of California Press, 2010) p205.
  4. ^ Jesper Carlsen, Vilici and Roman Estate Managers Until AD 284, Part 284 (L'ERMA di BRETSCHNEIDER, 1995) p81-82.
  5. ^ Leslie Dossey, Peasant and Empire in Christian North Africa (University of California Press, 2010)p205.
  6. ^ Epigraphic Text Database.
  7. ^ Brent D. Shaw, Sacred Violence: African Christians and Sectarian Hatred in the Age of Augustine. (Cambridge University Press, 2011) page xvi.
  8. ^ Saints Zeno and Optatus, the first at Verona, the works of all the bishops of the other Milevi: Cui accessit - The history of the Donatists, the Bishops of Africa, together with the tombs that belong to it and geography (Vrayet, 1845).
  9. ^ Jean Louis Maier, The Episcopate of Roman, Vandal and Byzantine Africa (Swiss Institute of Rome, 1973)p301.
  10. ^ Antoine-Augustin Bruzen from La Martinière , THE GREAT GEOGRAPHIC AND CRITICAL DICTIONARY, Volume 9 (1739).
  11. ^ Le Petit Episcopologe, Issue 204, Necrology
  12. ^ Le Petit Episcopologe, Issue 217, Number 18,066.