أبرشية مصر

أبرشية مصر
Dioecesis Aegypti
Διοίκησις Αἰγύπτου
أبرشية الإمبراطورية البيزنطية
ح. 381 – 539
Dioecesis Aegypti 400 AD.png
أبرشية مصر ح. 400.
العاصمةالإسكندرية
التاريخ
العصر التاريخيالقِدم المتأخر
• الانفصال عن أبرشية الشرق
ح. 381
• الأبرشية ألغاها الامبراطور جستنيان الأول
539
سبقها
مصر الرومانية
اليوم جزء من مصر
 ليبيا

أبرشية مصر (لاتينية: Dioecesis Aegypti, باليونانية: Διοίκησις Αἰγύπτου)، هي أبرشية في الإمبراطورية الرومانية المتأخرة، وتضمنت مقاطعات مصر وبرقة. كانت عاصمتها الإسكندرية. كانت في البداية جزءا من أبرشية الشرق، لكن حوالي 371، أصبت ذات كيان مستقل، والتي استمرت حتى الفتح الإسلامي لمصر حوالي عام 642م.

التاريخ الإداري

Egypt was formed into a separate diocese in about 381.[1] According to the Notitia Dignitatum, which for the Eastern part of the Empire dates to ca. 401, the diocese came under a vicarius of the praetorian prefecture of the East, with the title of praefectus augustalis, and included six provinces:[2][3]

  • Aegyptus (western Nile delta), originally established in the early 4th century as Aegyptus Iovia, under a praeses
  • Augustamnica (eastern Nile delta), originally established in the early 4th century as Aegyptus Herculia, under a corrector
  • Arcadia (central), established ca. 397 and having previously briefly listed in the 320s as Aegyptus Mercuria, under a praeses
  • Thebais (southern), under a praeses
  • Libya Inferior or Libya Sicca, under a praeses
  • Libya Superior or Pentapolis, under a praeses

Parallel to the civil administration, the Roman army in Egypt had been placed under a single general and military governor styled dux (dux Aegypti et Thebaidos utrarumque Libyarum) in the Tetrarchy. Shortly after the creation of Egypt as a separate diocese (between 384 and 391), the post evolved into the comes limitis Aegypti, who was directly responsible for Lower Egypt, while the subordinate dux Thebaidis was in charge of Upper Egypt (Thebais). In the middle of the 5th century, however, the latter was also promoted to the rank of comes (comes Thebaici limitis).[4] The two officers were responsible for the limitanei (border garrison) troops stationed in the province, while until the time of Anastasius I the comitatenses field army came under the command of the magister militum per Orientem, and the palatini (guards) under the two magistri militum praesentales in Constantinople.[5]

The comes limitis Aegypti enjoyed great power and influence in the diocese, rivalling that of the praefectus augustalis himself. From the 5th century, the comes is attested as exercising some civilian duties as well, and from 470 on, the offices of comes and praefectus augustalis were sometimes combined in a single person.[6]

This tendency to unite civil and military authority was formalized by Justinian I in his 539 reform of Egyptian administration. The diocese was effectively abolished, and regional ducats established, where the presiding dux et augustalis was placed above the combined civil and military authority:[6][7]

  • dux et augustalis Aegypti, controlling Aegyptus I and Aegyptus II
  • dux et augustalis Thebaidis, controlling Thebais superior and Thebais inferior
  • Augustamnica I and Augustamnica II were likewise probably — the relevant portion of the edict is defective — were placed under a single dux et augustalis
  • in the two Libyan provinces, the civil governors were subordinated to the respective dux
  • Arcadia remained under its praeses, probably subordinated to the dux et augustalis Thebaidos, and a dux et augustalis Arcadiae does not appear until after the Persian occupation of 619–629.

قائمة Praefecti Augustalii

مأخوذة من Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire (عدا Theognostus):

  • Eutolmius Tatianus (367-370)
  • Olympius Palladius (370-371)
  • Aelius Palladius (371-374)
  • Publius (ح. 376)
  • Bassianus (ح. 379)
  • Hadrianus (ح. 379)
  • Iulianus (ح. 380)
  • Antoninus (381-382)
  • Palladius (382)
  • Hypatius (383)
  • Optatus (384)
  • Florentius (384-386)
  • Paulinus (386-387)
  • Eusebius (387)
  • Flavius Ulpius Erythrius (388)
  • ألكسندر (388-390)
  • Evagrius (391)
  • Hypatius (392)
  • Potamius (392)
  • Orestes (415)
  • Theognostus (ح. 482)[8]
  • Petrus Marcellinus Felix Liberius (ح. 539-542)

انظر أيضاً

الهوامش

  1. ^ Palme 2007, p. 245.
  2. ^ Palme 2007, pp. 245–246.
  3. ^ Notitia Dignitatum, in partibus Orientis, I
  4. ^ Palme 2007, p. 247.
  5. ^ Palme 2007, pp. 247–248.
  6. ^ أ ب Palme 2007, p. 248.
  7. ^ Hendy 1985, pp. 179–180.
  8. ^ Duchesne, Louis (1909): Early History of the Christian Church. From Its Foundation to the End of the Fifth Century. – Volume III: The Fifth Century – Read Books, 2008, p. 550. ISBN 978-1-44377-159-7