Neha Patil (Editor)

Linoë

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Linoë was a city and episcopal see in the Roman province of Bithynia Secunda and is now a titular see.

History

It is known only from the Notitiae Episcopatuum which mention it as late as the twelfth and thirteenth centuries as a suffragan of the archbishopric of Nicaea. The Byzantine Emperor Justinian must have raised it to the rank of a city.

It is probably the modern Turkish town of Biledjik, a station on the Hnidar-Pasha railway to Konya. It became an important centre for the cultivation of the silk-worm.

Lequien (Oriens christianus, I, 657) mentions four bishops of Linoe:

  • Anastasius, who attended a Council of Constantinople in 692
  • Leo, at the Second Council of Nicea in 787
  • Basil and Cyril, the one a partisan of St. Ignatius, the other of Photius, at the Fourth Council of Constantinople in 879.
  • References

    Linoë Wikipedia