- Hebron (titular see)
Hebron is a Catholic
titular see ; it was a medievalepiscopal see during the Crusader period.History
Eusebius [Onomast., s. v. ’Arbó.] (fourth century) callsHebron merely as a large hamlet. It contains thetomb of the patriarchs , mentioned byJosephus ["Ant.", I, 14.] , by Eusebius [Onomasticon, loc. cit.] , and by thePilgrim of Bordeaux in 333. At the time of the Arab conquest in 637, Hebron was chosen as one of thefour holy cities of Islam .Crusaders took the town in 1100, and the sanctuary became the church of Saint Abraham, also called the church of the Holy Cave (Sancta Caverna or Spelunca, ’ágion spelaîon). The town itself is often styled by the chroniclers of that period Castel Saint-Abraham, Præsidium or Castellum ad Sanctum Abraham. A priory of
Canons Regular of St. Augustine was installed to take charge of the basilica [de Rozière, "Cartulaire du Saint-Sépulchre", 120, 142, etc., 171.] .In 1167 Hebron became a Latin see; its first titular was
Rainaldus (1167-1170), nephew of the patriarchFoucher [Du Cange , "Families d'outremer", 794.] .A letter of
Pope Clement IV , dated 1 June, 1267, orders thePatriarch of Jerusalem to supply the church of Hebron with a priest [Eubel , "Hierarchia Catholica", I, 283.] . After Geoffrey (Gaufridus), O.P., 1273-1283, the bishops of Hebron were merely titulars, and a great confusion existed in their list [Lequien , "Oriens Christianus", III, 639-642, 1269-1270;Gams , "Series episc.", 435; Eubel, op. cit., I, 283, II, 180.] .As a residential see, Hebron enjoyed a very brief existence. However it survived the triumph of
Saladin in 1187, and the march of theKharesmian s in 1244. Saladin, after the victory at Hattin (15 July, 1187), and that at Ascalon (5 September), hastened, before marching on Jerusalem, to occupy Hebron, and to associate the sanctuary of Abraham with the worship of Islam. The Kharesmians destroyed the town, but did not touch the sanctuary [Riant, "Archives", II, 420-421.] .The Greeks, after the departure of the Latins, retained for a time a residing bishop in Hebron. Lequien [III, 641-642.] mentions one of these bishops, Joannikios, whose name appears with that of Christodoulos of Gaza in the Acts of the Council of Jerusalem in 1672 [
Mansi , XXXIV B, 1771.] under the title of Ioannikíou toû theophilestátou ’archiepiskópou toû ‘agíon spelaíon (Joannikios, most holy Archbishop of the holy Cave). In modern timesCardinal Mermillod andMichele Petkoff , Vicar Apostolic of the Uniat Bulgarians in Thrace, were titular bishops. [ [http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/d2h13.html "Catholic Hierarchy" page] ]Notes
External link
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07184a.htm "Catholic Encyclopedia" article]
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