- Larissa (titular see)
The Catholic
titular see of Larissa is the seat of a titular archbishopric ofThessaly , now in Greece.History
The city, one of the oldest and richest in Greece, is said in
Greek mythology to have been founded byAcrisius , who was killed accidentally by his son,Perseus [Stephanus Byzantius , s.v.] . There livedPeleus , the hero beloved by the gods, and his sonAchilles ; however, the city is not mentioned byHomer , unless it should be identified withArgissa of the "Iliad " [II, 738.] .The constitution of the town was
democratic , which explains why it sided withAthens in thePeloponnesian War . In the neighbourhood of Larissa was celebrated a festival which recalled the RomanSaturnalia , and at which the slaves were waited on by their masters. It was taken by theThebans and afterwards by the Macedonian kings, andDemetrius Poliorcestes gained possession of it for a time,302 BC . It was there thatPhilip V of Macedon ia signed in197 BC a treaty with the Romans after his defeat atCynoscephalae , and it was there also thatAntiochus III , the Great, won a great victory,192 BC .Larissa is frequently mentioned in connection with the Roman civil wars which preceded the establishment of the empire and
Pompey sought refuge there after the defeat of Pharsalus. First Roman, then Greek until the thirteenth century, and afterwards Frankish until 1400, the city fell into the hands of the Turks, who kept it until 1882, when it was ceded to Greece; it suffered greatly from the conflicts between the Greeks and the Turks between 1820 and 1830, and from the Turkish occupation in 1897. It was very prosperous under the Turkish sovereignty. On 6 March, 1770,Aya Pasha massacred there 3000 Christians fromTrikala .Christianity penetrated early to Larissa, though its first bishop is recorded only in 325 at the Council of
Nicaea .St. Achilius of the fourth century, is celebrated for his miracles.Lequien ["Oriens Christianus" II, 103-112.] cites twenty-nine bishops from the fourth to the eighteenth centuries; the most famous is Jermias II, who occupied thePatriarch of the West until 733, when the EmperorLeo III the Isaurian annexed it to thePatriarchate of Constantinople . In the first years of the tenth century it had ten suffragan sees [Heinrich Gelzer , "Ungedruckte. . .Texte der Notitiae episcopatuum", Munich, 1900, 557.] ; subsequently the number increased and about the year 1175 under the EmperorManuel Commenus , it reached twenty-eight [Parthey , "Hieroclis Synecdemus ", Berlin, 1866, 120.] . At the close of the fifteenth century, under the Turkish domination, there were only ten suffragan sees [Gelzer, op. cit., 635.] , which gradually grew less and finally disappeared.Notes
External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09004b.htm Source]
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