fbpx
Wikipedia

Traianoupoli

Traianoupoli (Greek: Τραϊανούπολη) or Traianopolis or Trajanopolis was a medieval settlement in the 14th century in the Evros regional unit of East Macedonia and Thrace region, northeastern Greece, nowadays named Loutra Traianopouleos.

Traianoupoli
Τραϊανούπολη
The ruins of four baths of the Roman and Ottoman period
Traianoupoli
Location within the regional unit
Coordinates: 40°52′N 26°02′E / 40.867°N 26.033°E / 40.867; 26.033Coordinates: 40°52′N 26°02′E / 40.867°N 26.033°E / 40.867; 26.033
CountryGreece
Administrative regionEast Macedonia and Thrace
Regional unitEvros
MunicipalityAlexandroupoli
 • Municipal unit163.5 km2 (63.1 sq mi)
Elevation
58 m (190 ft)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Municipal unit
2,706
 • Municipal unit density17/km2 (43/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Vehicle registrationEB

Traianoupoli was also the name of a municipality which existed between 1997 and 2011 following the Kapodistrias Plan.

Modern town

Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Alexandroupoli, of which it is a municipal unit.[2] The municipal unit has an area of 163.549 km2.[3] Population 2,706 (2011).

The seat of the municipality is in Antheia.

Subdivisions

The municipal unit Traianoupoli is subdivided into the following communities (constituent villages given in parenthesis):[2]

  • Antheia (Antheia, Aristino)
  • Doriko (Doriko, Aetochori)
  • Loutros (Loutros, Loutra Traianopouleos, Pefka)
  • Nipsa

History

 
Hana is an impressive baths building of the Roman period, renovated by the Ottoman Gazi Evrenos.

The city was founded by the Roman emperor Trajan (r. 98–117) near the ancient town of Doriscus, and received his name.[4] In the Roman period, the city was famous for its baths.

In the 4th century, it became the capital and metropolitan see of the Thracian Roman province of Rhodope. Under Justinian I (r. 527–565) the city walls were repaired.[4] The city remained the metropolis of the ecclesiastical province of Rhodope until its decline in the 14th century, but ceased being a provincial capital with the rise of the theme system, coming under the Theme of Macedonia, although a single strategos of Traianoupolis is attested in an 11th-century seal.[4] In autumn 1077, the troops of the rebel general Nikephoros Bryennios the Elder proclaimed him emperor at Traianoupolis.[4]

In the Partitio Romaniae of 1204 it is listed as the pertinentia de Macri et Traianopoli. The Crusader Geoffrey of Villehardouin is known to have been assigned fiefs in the area. In 1205 or 1207, the town was destroyed by Tsar Kaloyan of Bulgaria, but in 1210 it is attested as a Latin (Roman Catholic) archbishopric.[4] Following its recovery by the Empire of Nicaea, the Greek Orthodox see was restored; in 1260, John Kondoumnes was named as its bishop.[4] The area was ravaged by Bulgarian raids in 1322 and by Turkish raids in 1329/30. By the time John Kantakouzenos and his ally, Umur Bey, erected their camp on the site in the winter of 1343/44, the city had lain destroyed and abandoned for several years. In 1347, the local metropolitan was therefore allowed to reside in Mosynopolis instead.[4] The area fell to the Ottoman Turks by 1365, and in 1371 the see was supplanted by that of Serres in the ecclesiastical hierarchy.[4]

The sole use of the site after the city's abandonment was as a way-station, and in ca. 1375/85, the Ottoman Gazi Evrenos built an inn (Hana) and a Turkish bath, which still survive.[4] Traces of the medieval buildings and the circuit wall also survive.[4]

The area came under Bulgarian rule after the Balkan Wars of 1912–13 and was ceded to Greece in the Treaty of Neuilly (1919).

Ecclesiastical history

Residential see

Trajanopolis was an episcopal see at least since the time of Constantius II (r. 337–361), when its bishop Theodulus was persecuted by the Arians. By the end of the century, it had become the metropolis of the ecclesiastical province of Rhodope, a position it retained throughout its existence until the 14th century. Its suffragan sees were originally Ainos, Didymoteichon, Makri, Maroneia, Mosynopolis, Perberis, Anastasioupolis-Peritheorion, Polystylon, Poroi, Topeiros and Xantheia.[4]

A bishop Syncletius is attested ca. 400, and several the metropolitans are attested thereafter in various church councils: Peter took part in the Council of Ephesus in 431, Basil in the "Robber Council" of 449 and the Council of Chalcedon in 451, John in the church council of 459, Eleusinius in the Fifth Ecumenical Council of 553, Tiberius in the Quinisext Council of 691/2, Leo in the Second Council of Nicaea in 787, Nicephorus in the Fourth Council of Constantinople in 879, and George in the council of 997.[4] John, Metropolitan of Anastasiopolis, was also administrator (proedros) of Trajanopolis in 1285, but in the early 14th century the see fell vacant. Patriarch Nephon I of Constantinople assumed direct control over its revenues in 1310–14, and in 1315 the vacant see was granted for life to Patriarch John XIII of Constantinople.[4]

The city was largely destroyed and abandoned after the raids of the 1320s, so that in 1347, the metropolitan moved his residence to Mosynopolis. In 1353, the incumbent metropolitan was assigned the Metropolis of Peritheorion as well. Following the Ottoman conquest shortly after, in 1365 the dispossessed Metropolitan was moved to the Metropolis of Lacedaemon. In 1371 the see of Serres replaced Trajanopolis in the ecclesiastical hierarchy of the Patriarchate of Constantinople.[4]

The title of Metropolitan of Trajanopolis remained a titular appointment in the Church of Constantinople until 1885, when it was assigned to the Metropolis of Ainos (full title "Ainos, Trajanopolis, and Dede-Agatch"). From 1922, with the establishment of the Metropolis of Alexandroupolis within the modern Greek state, the title passed to it; the full title of the metropolitans of Alexandroupolis is "Metropolitan of Alexandroupolis, Trajanopolis and Samothrace", with the style of "hypertimos and exarch of Rhodope".[5]

Catholic titular see

The diocese was nominally restored as a Latin Catholic Metropolitan titular archbishopric in the 17th century, simply as Traianopolis (or Trajanopolis), which was changed in 1933 to Trajanopolis in Rhodope (since 1970 spelled Traianopolis in Rhodope), avoiding confusion with a Turkish namesake.

It is vacant since 1968, having had the following incumbents, all except the first (merely episcopal, the lowest rank) of the highest (Metropolitan) rank :

  • Titular Bishop Claudio de Villagómez (1684-04-24 – 1685-11-04?)
  • Titular Archbishop Deodat Bogdan Nersesowicz (1701-07-18 – 1709)
  • Titular Archbishop Nicolò Paolo Andrea Coscia (later Cardinal) (1724-06-26 – 1725-06-11)
  • Titular Archbishop Carlo Pignatelli (1725-07-23 – ?)
  • Titular Archbishop Francesco Scipione Maria Borghese (later Cardinal) (1728-03-08 – 1729-07-06)
  • Titular Archbishop Pietro de Carolis (1729-09-07 – 1744-11-27)
  • Titular Archbishop Francisco de Solís Folch de Cardona (later Cardinal) (1749-01-20 – 1752-09-25)
  • Titular Archbishop Niccolò Oddi, Jesuits (S.J.) (later Cardinal) (1754-01-14 – 1764-02-20)
  • Titular Archbishop Alexandre-Angélique de Talleyrand-Périgord (later Cardinal) (1766-12-01 – 1777-10-27)
  • Titular Archbishop Pierre-François-Martial de Loménie (1788-12-15 – 1794-05-10)
  • Titular Archbishop Giuseppe Carrano (1801-07-20 – 1819?)
  • Titular Archbishop Hyacinthe-Louis de Quélen (1819-12-17 – 1821-10-20)
  • Titular Archbishop Giovan Domenico Stefanelli, Dominican Order (O.P.) (1845-01-20 – 1852-02-05)
  • Titular Archbishop Benedict Planchet, S.J. (1853-06-04 – 1859-09-19)
  • Titular Archbishop Saint Antonio María Claret y Clará, founder of the Claretians (C.M.F.) (1860-07-15 – 1870-10-24)
  • Titular Archbishop Serafino Milani, Franciscans (O.F.M. Obs.) (1874-01-23 – 1874-12-21)
  • Titular Archbishop Augusto Giuseppe Duc (1907-12-19 – 1922-12-14)
  • Titular Archbishop Ismael Perdomo Borrero (1923-02-05 – 1928-01-02)
  • Titular Archbishop Fabio Berdini (1928-03-02 – 1930-03-22)
  • Titular Archbishop Giacinto Gaggia (1930-03-29 – 1933-04-15)
  • Titular Archbishop Mario Zanin (蔡寧) (1933-11-28 – 1958-08-04)
  • Titular Archbishop Albert-Pierre Falière, Paris Foreign Missions Society (M.E.P.) (1959-12-19 – 1968-01-12)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Απογραφή Πληθυσμού - Κατοικιών 2011. ΜΟΝΙΜΟΣ Πληθυσμός" (in Greek). Hellenic Statistical Authority.
  2. ^ a b "ΦΕΚ B 1292/2010, Kallikratis reform municipalities" (in Greek). Government Gazette.
  3. ^ "Population & housing census 2001 (incl. area and average elevation)" (PDF) (in Greek). National Statistical Service of Greece.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Soustal, Peter (1991). Tabula Imperii Byzantini, Band 6: Thrakien (Thrakē, Rodopē und Haimimontos) (in German). Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. pp. 482–484. ISBN 3-7001-1898-8.
  5. ^ ΣΥΝΟΠΤΙΚΗ ΙΣΤΟΡΙΑ ΤΗΣ ΙΕΡΑΣ ΜΗΤΡΟΠΟΛΕΩΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΥΠΟΛΕΩΣ (in Greek). Metropolis of Alexandroupolis. Retrieved 11 December 2015.

Sources and external links

  • GCatholic, with titular incumbent biography links

traianoupoli, places, with, similar, names, trajanopolis, greek, Τραϊανούπολη, traianopolis, trajanopolis, medieval, settlement, 14th, century, evros, regional, unit, east, macedonia, thrace, region, northeastern, greece, nowadays, named, loutra, traianopouleo. For places with similar names see Trajanopolis Traianoupoli Greek Traianoypolh or Traianopolis or Trajanopolis was a medieval settlement in the 14th century in the Evros regional unit of East Macedonia and Thrace region northeastern Greece nowadays named Loutra Traianopouleos Traianoupoli TraianoypolhThe ruins of four baths of the Roman and Ottoman periodTraianoupoliLocation within the regional unitCoordinates 40 52 N 26 02 E 40 867 N 26 033 E 40 867 26 033 Coordinates 40 52 N 26 02 E 40 867 N 26 033 E 40 867 26 033CountryGreeceAdministrative regionEast Macedonia and ThraceRegional unitEvrosMunicipalityAlexandroupoli Municipal unit163 5 km2 63 1 sq mi Elevation58 m 190 ft Population 2011 1 Municipal unit2 706 Municipal unit density17 km2 43 sq mi Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Vehicle registrationEBTraianoupoli was also the name of a municipality which existed between 1997 and 2011 following the Kapodistrias Plan Contents 1 Modern town 1 1 Subdivisions 2 History 3 Ecclesiastical history 3 1 Residential see 3 2 Catholic titular see 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources and external linksModern town EditSince the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Alexandroupoli of which it is a municipal unit 2 The municipal unit has an area of 163 549 km2 3 Population 2 706 2011 The seat of the municipality is in Antheia Subdivisions Edit The municipal unit Traianoupoli is subdivided into the following communities constituent villages given in parenthesis 2 Antheia Antheia Aristino Doriko Doriko Aetochori Loutros Loutros Loutra Traianopouleos Pefka NipsaHistory Edit Hana is an impressive baths building of the Roman period renovated by the Ottoman Gazi Evrenos Wikisource has the text of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia article Trajanopolis 1 The city was founded by the Roman emperor Trajan r 98 117 near the ancient town of Doriscus and received his name 4 In the Roman period the city was famous for its baths In the 4th century it became the capital and metropolitan see of the Thracian Roman province of Rhodope Under Justinian I r 527 565 the city walls were repaired 4 The city remained the metropolis of the ecclesiastical province of Rhodope until its decline in the 14th century but ceased being a provincial capital with the rise of the theme system coming under the Theme of Macedonia although a single strategos of Traianoupolis is attested in an 11th century seal 4 In autumn 1077 the troops of the rebel general Nikephoros Bryennios the Elder proclaimed him emperor at Traianoupolis 4 In the Partitio Romaniae of 1204 it is listed as the pertinentia de Macri et Traianopoli The Crusader Geoffrey of Villehardouin is known to have been assigned fiefs in the area In 1205 or 1207 the town was destroyed by Tsar Kaloyan of Bulgaria but in 1210 it is attested as a Latin Roman Catholic archbishopric 4 Following its recovery by the Empire of Nicaea the Greek Orthodox see was restored in 1260 John Kondoumnes was named as its bishop 4 The area was ravaged by Bulgarian raids in 1322 and by Turkish raids in 1329 30 By the time John Kantakouzenos and his ally Umur Bey erected their camp on the site in the winter of 1343 44 the city had lain destroyed and abandoned for several years In 1347 the local metropolitan was therefore allowed to reside in Mosynopolis instead 4 The area fell to the Ottoman Turks by 1365 and in 1371 the see was supplanted by that of Serres in the ecclesiastical hierarchy 4 The sole use of the site after the city s abandonment was as a way station and in ca 1375 85 the Ottoman Gazi Evrenos built an inn Hana and a Turkish bath which still survive 4 Traces of the medieval buildings and the circuit wall also survive 4 The area came under Bulgarian rule after the Balkan Wars of 1912 13 and was ceded to Greece in the Treaty of Neuilly 1919 Ecclesiastical history EditResidential see Edit Trajanopolis was an episcopal see at least since the time of Constantius II r 337 361 when its bishop Theodulus was persecuted by the Arians By the end of the century it had become the metropolis of the ecclesiastical province of Rhodope a position it retained throughout its existence until the 14th century Its suffragan sees were originally Ainos Didymoteichon Makri Maroneia Mosynopolis Perberis Anastasioupolis Peritheorion Polystylon Poroi Topeiros and Xantheia 4 A bishop Syncletius is attested ca 400 and several the metropolitans are attested thereafter in various church councils Peter took part in the Council of Ephesus in 431 Basil in the Robber Council of 449 and the Council of Chalcedon in 451 John in the church council of 459 Eleusinius in the Fifth Ecumenical Council of 553 Tiberius in the Quinisext Council of 691 2 Leo in the Second Council of Nicaea in 787 Nicephorus in the Fourth Council of Constantinople in 879 and George in the council of 997 4 John Metropolitan of Anastasiopolis was also administrator proedros of Trajanopolis in 1285 but in the early 14th century the see fell vacant Patriarch Nephon I of Constantinople assumed direct control over its revenues in 1310 14 and in 1315 the vacant see was granted for life to Patriarch John XIII of Constantinople 4 The city was largely destroyed and abandoned after the raids of the 1320s so that in 1347 the metropolitan moved his residence to Mosynopolis In 1353 the incumbent metropolitan was assigned the Metropolis of Peritheorion as well Following the Ottoman conquest shortly after in 1365 the dispossessed Metropolitan was moved to the Metropolis of Lacedaemon In 1371 the see of Serres replaced Trajanopolis in the ecclesiastical hierarchy of the Patriarchate of Constantinople 4 The title of Metropolitan of Trajanopolis remained a titular appointment in the Church of Constantinople until 1885 when it was assigned to the Metropolis of Ainos full title Ainos Trajanopolis and Dede Agatch From 1922 with the establishment of the Metropolis of Alexandroupolis within the modern Greek state the title passed to it the full title of the metropolitans of Alexandroupolis is Metropolitan of Alexandroupolis Trajanopolis and Samothrace with the style of hypertimos and exarch of Rhodope 5 Catholic titular see Edit The diocese was nominally restored as a Latin Catholic Metropolitan titular archbishopric in the 17th century simply as Traianopolis or Trajanopolis which was changed in 1933 to Trajanopolis in Rhodope since 1970 spelled Traianopolis in Rhodope avoiding confusion with a Turkish namesake It is vacant since 1968 having had the following incumbents all except the first merely episcopal the lowest rank of the highest Metropolitan rank Titular Bishop Claudio de Villagomez 1684 04 24 1685 11 04 Titular Archbishop Deodat Bogdan Nersesowicz 1701 07 18 1709 Titular Archbishop Nicolo Paolo Andrea Coscia later Cardinal 1724 06 26 1725 06 11 Titular Archbishop Carlo Pignatelli 1725 07 23 Titular Archbishop Francesco Scipione Maria Borghese later Cardinal 1728 03 08 1729 07 06 Titular Archbishop Pietro de Carolis 1729 09 07 1744 11 27 Titular Archbishop Francisco de Solis Folch de Cardona later Cardinal 1749 01 20 1752 09 25 Titular Archbishop Niccolo Oddi Jesuits S J later Cardinal 1754 01 14 1764 02 20 Titular Archbishop Alexandre Angelique de Talleyrand Perigord later Cardinal 1766 12 01 1777 10 27 Titular Archbishop Pierre Francois Martial de Lomenie 1788 12 15 1794 05 10 Titular Archbishop Giuseppe Carrano 1801 07 20 1819 Titular Archbishop Hyacinthe Louis de Quelen 1819 12 17 1821 10 20 Titular Archbishop Giovan Domenico Stefanelli Dominican Order O P 1845 01 20 1852 02 05 Titular Archbishop Benedict Planchet S J 1853 06 04 1859 09 19 Titular Archbishop Saint Antonio Maria Claret y Clara founder of the Claretians C M F 1860 07 15 1870 10 24 Titular Archbishop Serafino Milani Franciscans O F M Obs 1874 01 23 1874 12 21 Titular Archbishop Augusto Giuseppe Duc 1907 12 19 1922 12 14 Titular Archbishop Ismael Perdomo Borrero 1923 02 05 1928 01 02 Titular Archbishop Fabio Berdini 1928 03 02 1930 03 22 Titular Archbishop Giacinto Gaggia 1930 03 29 1933 04 15 Titular Archbishop Mario Zanin 蔡寧 1933 11 28 1958 08 04 Titular Archbishop Albert Pierre Faliere Paris Foreign Missions Society M E P 1959 12 19 1968 01 12 See also EditList of settlements in the Evros regional unit Traianopolis Phrygia namesake see in Asia MinorReferences Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Traianoupoli a b Apografh Plh8ysmoy Katoikiwn 2011 MONIMOS Plh8ysmos in Greek Hellenic Statistical Authority a b FEK B 1292 2010 Kallikratis reform municipalities in Greek Government Gazette Population amp housing census 2001 incl area and average elevation PDF in Greek National Statistical Service of Greece a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Soustal Peter 1991 Tabula Imperii Byzantini Band 6 Thrakien Thrake Rodope und Haimimontos in German Vienna Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften pp 482 484 ISBN 3 7001 1898 8 SYNOPTIKH ISTORIA THS IERAS MHTROPOLEWS ALE3ANDROYPOLEWS in Greek Metropolis of Alexandroupolis Retrieved 11 December 2015 Sources and external links EditGCatholic with titular incumbent biography links Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Traianoupoli amp oldid 1127570471 Ecclesiastical history, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.