Aprus (Thrace)


Aprus or Apros, also Apri or Aproi, was a town of ancient Thrace and, later, a Roman city established in the Roman province of Europa.

History

collects a quote of Theopompus that mentions Aprus. Pliny the Elder notes that Aprus is situated in the interior of Thrace, 22 M.P. from Resisto, 50 Roman miles from Bizya and 180 Roman miles from Philippi.
The city was re-founded as Colonia Claudia Aprensis in the mid-1st century AD, probably in connection with the emperor Claudius's annexation of Thracia, and was intended for retired members of the Roman military. It was situated on the Via Egnatia that ran from the Adriatic coast in the province of Illyricum to Byzantium, the city that was to become Constantinople.
In the 4th century, Aprus was the principal city of the region southwest of Heraclea, the capital of the province.
The city was called Theodosiopolis in documents of the 6th century, in honour of Theodosius II, emperor from 401 to 450, or of Theodosius I.
After the capture of Constantinople during the Fourth Crusade, the Henry of Flanders, brother of Baldwin I, attacked the city and killed many of the citizens. The Latin Empire made Theodore Branas lord of Aprus. In 1206, Tsar Kaloyan of Bulgaria destroyed the city, but Branas rebuilt it.
In the Battle of Apros of July 1305, the Catalan Company annihilated the Byzantine imperial army under Michael IX Palaiologos.

Site

Its location is near the modern Turkish village of Kermeyan.

Name

The Romans named the town Colonia Claudia Aprensis, and the Byzantines called it
Apros and latter Theodosiopolis.

Ecclesiastical history

The former archbishopric was a double Catholic titular archbishopric - under the name Theodosiopolis ante Apri it was the only Bulgarian Catholic titular see, but has been suppressed as such, yet it remains a Latin titular see as Aprus.

Archbishopric

In a Notitia Episcopatuum of about 640, the bishopric appears as an autocephalous archdiocese and as the 22nd in order of precedence among 34 sees dependent upon the Patriarchate of Constantinople. Perhaps due to error, it is missing from the next such document, composed at the start of the 10th century, but reappears in the middle of the same century. In the 15th century it was dropped from the official lists of the dioceses dependent on the Patriarchate of Constantinople.
No longer a residential diocese, it has been listed by the Catholic Church as a double titular see, but remains only Latin

Latin titular see

No later than 1848, the diocese was nominally restored as a Latin Episcopal as Titular bishopric under the names of Theodosiopolis / Teodosiopoli / Apri / Apros / Aprus.
It was repeatedly renamed : in 1926 as Titular Episcopal See of Theodosiopolis / Teodosiopoli d’Europa / Apri / Apros / Aprus; in 1929 as Titular Episcopal See of Theodosiopolis / Teodosiopoli di Frigia and in 1930 as Titular Episcopal See of Theodosiopolis / Teodosiopoli d’Europa / Apri / Apros / Aprus.
In 1931 it was suppressed, having had the following incumbents, however none of the then fitting Episcopal rank, all of the higher Archiepiscopal rank:
In 1933 however, it was restored, renamed and promoted as Titular archbishopric of Aprus / Apro / Apren.
It has been vacant for several decades, having had the following incumbents, so far of the now fitting Archiepiscopal rank;
No later than 1907, it was also and separately restored as the only-ever titular see of the particular Bulgarian Byzantine Catholic Church as Titular archbishopric of Theodosiopolis ante Apri / Teodosiopoli.
In 1924 it was suppressed, having had a single incumbent of the fitting Archiepiscopal rank :
  • Michail Miroff, no actual prelature.