Rusippisir was a Phoenician, Carthaginian, and Roman town on Algeria's Mediterranean coast at the site of present-day Taksebt.
Location | Taksebt, Tizi Ouzou Province, Algeria |
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Coordinates | 36°54′03.4″N 4°09′34.5″E / 36.900944°N 4.159583°E |
Name
editRusippisir is the latinization of the town's Punic name, which probably meant "Cape Rosemary".[1]
Geography
editRusippisir was located at Cape Tedless (French: Cap Tedles), Algeria,[1] the site of present-day Taksebt in Tizi Ouzou.
History
editRusippisir was established as a colony on the trade route between Phoenicia and the Strait of Gibraltar. Its port was nearby Iomnium (present-day Tigzirt). It later fell under Carthaginian and then, after the Punic Wars, Roman hegemony. Punic steles in Rusippisir continued to be produced well into the imperial period and there was tophet in the town.[1]
Religion
editIn antiquity, Rusippisir was the site of a Christian bishopric. This was revived in the 20th century as a Catholic titular see (Latin: Dioecesis Rusubisiritana; Italian: Rusibisir).[2][3]
List of bishops
edit- Léon-Théobald Delaere, OFM Cap (1967.08.03 – 1976.09.14)
- Theodore Edgar McCarrick (1977.05.24 – 1981.11.19)
- Ivan Dias (1982.05.08 – 1996.11.08)
- Daniel Caro Borda (2000.07.21 – 2003.08.06)
- Martin David Holley (2004.05.18 – 2016.10.19)
- Mark E. Brennan (2017.01.19 - present)
References
editCitations
edit- ^ a b c Lipiński (2004), p. 397–9.
- ^ "Rusibisir", GigaCatholic.
- ^ "Rusibisir", Catholic Hierarchy.
Bibliography
edit- Lipiński, Edward (2004), Itineraria Phoenicia, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta, No. 127, Studia Phoenicia, Vol. XVIII, Leuven: Uitgeverij Peeters, ISBN 9789042913448.