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Leontopolis

Coordinates: 30°41′N 31°21′E / 30.683°N 31.350°E / 30.683; 31.350
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Leontopolis
Leontopolis is located in Egypt
Leontopolis
Shown within Egypt
LocationDamietta Governorate, Egypt
Coordinates30°41′N 31°21′E / 30.683°N 31.350°E / 30.683; 31.350

Leontopolis was an Ancient Egyptian city located in the Nile Delta, Lower Egypt. It served as a provincial capital and Metropolitan Archbishopric, which remains a Latin Catholic titular see. The archaeological site and settlement are known today as Kafr Al Muqdam.

Name

Known most popularly in the modern era and to scholarship by its traditional Greek name "Leontopolis" Λεόντων πόλις[1] (literally, "city of lions"), or Leonto Λεοντώ, ("lion"),[2] the demographic makeup of the city varied culturally and linguistically over its long history, and the Greek name was progressively used more and more over the native Egyptian Taremu ("Land of Fish").[3] After the annexation of Ptolemaic Egypt as a Roman province, the city retained the Greek name, and was referred to in Latin sources as the oppidum Leontos,[4] though the Egyptian name still lingered among primary speakers of Coptic Egyptian into the post-classical period. Today, the site itself is referred to in Arabic as Tell el-Muqdam ("mound of the city").

History

Iuput II ruled over Leontopolis from 754 to 720/715 BCE

The city is located in the central part of the Nile Delta region. It was the capital of the 11th nome of Lower Egypt (the Leontopolite nome) and was probably the centre of pharaonic power under the 23rd dynasty. In his conquest-stela found at the fourth Nile Cataract at Jebel Barkal, Piye writes about his conquest over Iuput II. who ruled over Leontopolis.[5] Strabo is the earliest writer who mentions either the nome, or its chief town: and it was probably of comparatively recent origin or importance.

The Greek name of this city means, "City of Lions", given on account of the presence of temples to the lioness goddesses Bast and Sekhmet, and their son, Maahes, the lion prince. Live lions were kept at the temples during the time of the Greek occupation.

It became the capital of the Roman province of Augustamnica Secunda.

Ecclesiastical history

As provincial capital it also was a Metropolitan archbishopric, known as Leontopolis in Augustamnica, which was to fade.

Titular see

The diocese was restored nominally in the 18th century, as titular bishopric, erroneously called Leontopolis in Bithynia, and as such had the following incumbents of fitting episcopal (lowest) rank :

  • Elias Daniel von Sommerfeld (1714.01.26 – 1742.07.26)
  • Joaquim de Nossa Senhora de Nazareth Oliveira e Abreu, Friars Minor (O.F.M.) (1815.09.04 – 1819.08.23)
  • Alexander Dobrzański (1819.12.17 – 1831?)
  • Ludwig Forwerk (1854.07.11 – 1875.01.08)

It was promoted circa 1880 to titular archbishopric of Metropolitan rank; it was renamed in 1925 Leontopolis, in 1933 Leontopolis in Augustamnica. It has had the following incumbents, of fitting (Metropolitan? archiepiscopal) rank :

  • Jean-Pierre-François Laforce-Langevin (1891.02.06 – 1892.01.26)
  • Dominique-Clément-Marie Soulé (1893.03.21 – 1919.04.21)
  • Andrea Cassulo (1921.01.24 – 1952.01.09)
  • Terence Bernard McGuire (1953.11.16 – 1957.07.04)
  • Angelo Ficarra (1957.08.02 – 1959.06.01)
  • Cornelius Bronsveld, White Fathers (M. Afr.) (1959.12.21 – 1970.11.30)

The site

Antiquarians were long divided as to the real site of the ruins of Leontopolis. According to D'Anville, they were covered by a mound called Tel-Essabè (Tel es-sab`), or the Lion's Hill.[6] Jomard, on the other hand, maintains that some tumuli near the village of El-Mengaleh in the Delta, represent the ancient Leontopolis., And this supposition agrees better with the account of the town given by Xenophon of Ephesus.[7] Smith sites the city at latitude 30° 6′North, which is considerably further south than the actual site.

Most scholars today [citation needed] agree that Leontopolis is located at Tell al Muqdam, at latitude 30° 45′North.

Notes

  1. ^ Ptol. iv. 5. § 51, Strabo xvii. pp. 802, 812
  2. ^ Hieronym. ad Jovian. ii. 6
  3. ^ GDG VI, 26; LÄ VI, 351
  4. ^ Plin. v. 20. s. 17
  5. ^ TUAT 1, 1985, 557ff.
  6. ^ Comp. Champollion, l'Egypte, vol. ii. p. 110, seq
  7. ^ Ephesiaca, iv. p. 280, ed. Bipont
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSmith, William, ed. (1854–1857). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
Printed sources
External links
Preceded by Capital of Egypt
818 - 715 BC
Succeeded by