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Comama

Coordinates: 37°20′N 30°27′E / 37.333°N 30.450°E / 37.333; 30.450
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

37°20′N 30°27′E / 37.333°N 30.450°E / 37.333; 30.450 Comama was a town in the late Roman province of Pamphylia Secunda. It has been called Pisidian, not as being in `Pisidia, but as founded on what was the Pisidian frontier of the Roman Empire.[1]

History

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The full title of the town was Colonia Iulia Augusta Prima Fida Comama. The first term in this title indicates that it was founded as a colonia, an outpost established in conquered territory to secure it. The presence of the term Augusta indicates that it was founded after 27 BC, when the Roman senate granted that title to the victorious Octavian. Comama was one of a group of such settlements established in the area, which were linked by an imperial road called the Via Sebaste, one milestone of which (XLV) has been found at Comama. The milestones were set up in about 6 BC, an indication of the date of foundation of Comama.[1]

The site was at Şerefönü in present-day Turkey.[2]

Comama minted coins, including some in the reigns of Marcus Aurelius and Antoninus Pius, whose heads figure on the coins.[3]

Bishopric

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The bishopric of Comama was a suffragan of the metropolitan see of Perge, the capital of Pamphylia Secunda.[4][5]

The acts of the First Council of Constantinople (381) were signed by a bishop of Comama of the province of Pamphylia named Hesychius.[6] The bishop Hephaestus (Ephesius according to some manuscripts) who was one of the signatories of the joint letter that in 458 the bishops of the province of Pamphylia Secunda sent to Byzantine Emperor Leo I the Thracian regarding the murder of Proterius of Alexandria and the adjectival form of whose see appears as Comaneus[7] was probably bishop of Comama.[4] There is no mention of Comama in the Notitiae Episcopatuum of the 7th and 10th centuries.[8]

No longer a residential bishopric, Comama is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see.[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b W.M. Ramsay. "Colonia Caesarea (Pisidian Antioch) in the Augustan Age" in Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 6 (1916), pp. 83–134
  2. ^ Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites
  3. ^ "RPC â€" Search: Quick". Rpc.ashmus.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 2022-03-13.
  4. ^ a b Raymond Janin, v. Comama, in Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de Géographie ecclésiastiques, vol. XIII, Paris 1956, col. 353
  5. ^ a b Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 ISBN 978-88-209-9070-1), p. 873
  6. ^ Mansi, Sacrorum conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, vol. III, col. 570
  7. ^ Mansi, Sacrorum conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, vol. VII, col. 576
  8. ^ Heinrich Gelzer, "Ungedruckte und ungenügend veröffentlichte Texte der Notitiae episcopatuum", in: Abhandlungen der philosophisch-historische Classe der bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1901, pp. 541 and 556.

Further reading

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  • Tim Cornell and John Frederick Matthews (1991). The Roman World. p. 232.