- Diocese of Pontus
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Dioecesis Pontica
Διοίκησις Πόντου
Diocese of PontusDiocese of the Roman Empire 314–535
548–7th centuryThe Diocese of Pontus ca. 400 AD. Capital Amaseia Historical era Late Antiquity - Established 314 - replaced by the theme system 660s The Diocese of Pontus (Latin: Dioecesis Pontica, Greek: Διοίκησις Πόντου/Ποντικής) was a diocese of the later Roman Empire, incorporating the provinces of northern and northeastern Asia Minor up to the border with the Sassanid Empire in Armenia.[1] The diocese was established after the reforms of Diocletian, and its vicarius, headquartered at Amaseia, was subordinate to the Praetorian prefecture of the East. Its military forces, facing the Sassanid threat, were commanded by the dux Ponti et Armeniae until the middle of the 5th century, and by two separate duces afterwards, until Justinian I instituted a new magister militum per Armeniam for the Armenian frontier.[1] Justinian's reforms also abolished the diocese in 535, and its vicar was made into the governor of Galatia I. The results however were not satisfactory, and the diocese was reestablished in 548, continuing to function until replaced by the themata of Armeniakon and Opsikion in the later 7th century.[1] On the north east shore of the Black Sea, the cities Nitike, Pitiyus, and Dioscurias were part of the diocese until the 7th century. The diocese included 12 provinces: Bithynia, Honorias, Paphlagonia, Helenopontus, Pontus Polemoniacus, Galatia I and Galatia II (Salutaris), Cappadocia I and Cappadocia II, Armenia I, Armenia II, Armenia Maior and the autonomous Armenian principalities (Satrapiae) in the area of Sophene.
References
- ^ a b c Kazhdan, Alexander, ed (1991). Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford University Press. p. 1697. ISBN 978-0-19-504652-6.
Categories:- States and territories established in 314
- Ancient Rome stubs
- Byzantine Empire stubs
- Civil dioceses of the Roman Empire
- Roman provinces in Anatolia
- Roman Pontus
- Civil dioceses of the Byzantine Empire
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