- Hypæpa
Hypæpa or Hypaepa (Ύπαιπα or Ύπηπα) was a city in
Lydia , on the southern slope of theTmolus , looking towards the plain ofCaystrus . The goddessArtemis Persica was worshipped there, and its women were noted for their beauty and their skill in dancing. It coined its own money until the time ofEmperor Gordianus . Pausanias mentions a Persian rite practiced in Hypaepa. [Paus. V 27:5-6 [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0160:book=5:chapter=27:section=1 text at Perseus] ]Demostene Baltazzi excavated Hypaepa in 1885. [ [http://www.levantine.plus.com/testi44.htm Leventine Heritage] ]Under the
Roman Empire , it lay in theRoman province ofAsia Minor .It is now a little village in
Turkey called Günlüce (or Tapu?), 4 km northwest ofÖdemiş ,İzmir Province . [ [http://www2.egiklopedia.gr/asiaminor/forms/fLemma.aspx?lemmaId=6582 Ύπαιπα (Αρχαιότητα)] ] Under theOttoman Empire , it was located in thevilayet ofİzmir ; local Christians retained the ancient name. It has ruins dating from classical and medieval times.Church history
Hypaepa was an
episcopal see until the thirteenth century; underIsaac II Angelus Comnenus (1185-1195 and 1203-1204) it became ametropolitan see .Lequien ("Oriens Christianus" I, 695) mentions six bishops: Mithres, present at theFirst Council of Nicaea in 325; Euporus, at theCouncil of Ephesus in 431; Julian, at Ephesus, 449, and at theCouncil of Chalcedon in 451; Anthony, who abjuredMonothelism at theThird Council of Constantinople in 680; Theophylactus, at theSecond Council of Nicaea in 787; Gregory, at the Council of Constantinople in 879. To these may be added Michael, who in 1230 signed a document issued by thePatriarch Germanus II (Revue des études grecques, 1894, VII).Hypaepa remains a Roman Catholic
titular bishopric ,suffragan of thearchbishop ofEphesus . [CathEncy|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07604a.htm|title=Hypæpa]References
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