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Diocese of Egypt

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Diocese of Egypt
Dioecesis Aegypti
Διοίκησις Αἰγύπτου
Diocese of the Byzantine Empire
c. 380 – c. 642

The Diocese of Egypt c. 400.
Historical eraLate Antiquity
• Established
380
642
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Roman Egypt
Rashidun Empire

The Diocese of Egypt (Template:Lang-la, Template:Lang-el) was a diocese of the later Roman Empire, incorporating the provinces of Egypt and Cyrenaica. Its capital was at Alexandria, and its governor had the unique title of praefectus augustalis (Augustal Prefect, of the rank vir spectabilis) instead of the ordinary vicarius. The diocese was initially part of the Diocese of the East, but in the year 370, it became a separate entity, which lasted until its territories were finally overrun by the Muslim conquest of Egypt in the 640s.

The diocese was included in the Praetorian prefecture of the East and included originally five provinces:

Attributes Iovia and Herculia were related to the tetrarchs Diocletian and Maximian respectively, and were later changed to remove the pagan connotations.

By the early 6th century, the provinces had increased with the creation of:

During the reforms of Justinian I in the late 530s, the administrative structure changed again. The post of Augustal Prefect (vicar of the diocese) was abolished, and five independent governors (duces), who combined military and civilian authority, were appointed instead. Two of them, the dux Alexandriae and the dux Thebaidos also held the title augustalis (dux et augustalis).[1]

List of Praefecti Augustalii

Taken from the Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire (except for Theognostus):

  • Eutolmius Tatianus (367-370)
  • Olympius Palladius (370-371)
  • Aelius Palladius (371-374)
  • Publius (c. 376)
  • Bassianus (c. 379)
  • Hadrianus (c. 379)
  • Iulianus (c. 380)
  • Antoninus (381-382)
  • Palladius (382)
  • Hypatius (383)
  • Optatus (384)
  • Florentius (384-386)
  • Paulinus (386-387)
  • Eusebius (387)
  • Flavius Ulpius Erythrius (388)
  • Alexander (388-390)
  • Evagrius (391)
  • Hypatius (392)
  • Potamius (392)
  • Orestes (415)
  • Theognostus (c. 482)[2]
  • Petrus Marcellinus Felix Liberius (c. 539-542)

Notes

  1. ^ The Cambridge History of Africa, p. 447
  2. ^ 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 978-1-4437-7159-7