Hermopolis
Hermopolis was a major city in antiquity, located near the boundary between Lower and Upper Egypt. Its Egyptian name Khemenu derives from the eight deities said to reside in the city.
A provincial capital since the Old Kingdom of Egypt, Hermopolis developed into a major city of Roman Egypt, and an early Christian center from the third century. It was abandoned after the Muslim conquest of Egypt but was restored as both a Latin Catholic and a Coptic Orthodox titular see.
Its remains are located near the modern town of el-Ashmunein in Mallawi, Minya Governorate, Egypt.
Name
The common English name is Hermopolis.Khemenu, the Egyptian language name of the city, means "Eight-Town", after the Ogdoad, a group of eight "primordial" deities whose cult was situated there. The name survived as Coptic Shmun, from which the modern name el Ashmunein is derived.
In Koine Greek, the city was called "The City of Hermes" since the Greeks identified Hermes with Thoth, because the city was the main cult centre of Thoth, the Pharaonic god of magic, healing, and wisdom and the patron of scribes. Thoth was associated in the same way with the Phoenician deity Eshmun. Inscriptions at the temple call the god "The Lord of Eshmun".
History
The city was the capital of the Hare nome in the Heptanomis. Hermopolis stood on the borders of Upper and Lower Egypt, and, for many ages, the Thebaid or upper country extended much further to the north than in more recent periods. As the border town, Hermopolis was a place of great resort and opulence, ranking second to Thebes alone. A little to south of the city was the castle of Hermopolis, at which point rivercraft from the Thebaid paid tolls. The grottos of Beni Hasan, near Antinoöpolis on the opposite bank of the Nile, were the common cemeteries of the Hermopolitans because although the river divided the city from its necropolis, from the wide curve of the western hills at this point, it was easier to ferry the dead over the water than to transport them by land to the hills.Hermopolis became a significant city in the Roman province of Thebais Prima in the administrative diocese of Egypt.
The principal Egyptian deities worshipped at Hermopolis were Typhon and Thoth. Typhon was represented by a hippopotamus, on which sat a hawk fighting with a serpent. Thoth, whom the ancient Greeks associated with Hermes because they were both gods of magic and writing, was represented by the ibis.
Ecclesiastical history
A Christian tradition holds it to be the place where the Holy Family found refuge during its exile in Egypt.Hermopolis Maior was a suffragan diocese of the provincial capital's Metropolitan Archdiocese of Antinoe, in the sway of the Patriarchate of Alexandria. Like most, it faded under Islam.
List of bishops of Hermopolis:
- Conon
- Fasileus
- Dios
- Plusianus
- Andreas
- Gennadius
- Victor
- Ulpianus
- Johannes I
- Johannes II
- Isidorus
- Eugenius
- Paulus
For the Coptic Church, the diocese is led by the Metropolitan of Mallawi, Ansina and Ashmonin. The diocese was nominally restored in the 18th century as Latin Titular bishopric of Hermopolis Maior / Ermopoli Maggiore
Its territory was reassigned in 1849 to the Coptic Catholic Eparchy of Mina, as a restoration of Hermopolis.
In 1949 the titular see was suppressed, having had the following incumbents, all of the fitting Episcopal rank :
- Luigi Antonio Valdina Cremona no actual prelature recorded
- Dominik Józef Kiełczewski as Auxiliary Bishop of Roman Catholic Diocese of Chełm and on emeritate
- Bishop-elect? Bernardo Maria Serio as Auxiliary Bishop of Archdiocese of Palermo
- Denis-Antoine-Luc de Frayssinous no actual prelature recorded
- Antoni Melchior Fijałkowski as Apostolic Administrator of Archdiocese of Warszawa ; later succeeded as Metropolitan Archbishop of Warszawa
- Agostino Franco as Ordinary of Silicia of the Italo-Albanese and Ordinary of Italia continentale of the Italo-Albanese
- Charles-Bonaventure-François Theuret as Apostolic Administrator of the Subiaco Benedictine Abbey nullius of Saints-Nicholas-et-Benoît ; later first Bishop of Monaco
- Father Jan Ignacy Korytkowski as Auxiliary bishop of Archdiocese of Gniezno
- Raphael Valenza as Auxiliary Bishop of Archdiocese of Chieti
- Robert Brindle as Auxiliary Bishop of Archdiocese of Westminster ; later Bishop of Nottingham, emeritus as Titular Bishop of Tacapæ
- Juan Bautista Benlloch y Vivo as Apostolic Administrator of Solsona ; later Bishop of Urgell, Metropolitan Archbishop of Burgos, created Cardinal-Priest of S. Maria in Ara Coeli
- John Jeremiah Lawler as Auxiliary Bishop of Archdiocese of Saint Paul ; later Bishop of Lead, Bishop of Rapid City
- Giorgio Glosauer as Auxiliary Bishop of Archdiocese of Praha
- Eduardo José Herberhold, Friars Minor as Coadjutor Bishop-Prelate of Territorial Prelature of Santarem ; later Bishop of Ilhéus
- Francesco Fulgenzio Lazzati, O.F.M. as Apostolic Vicar of Mogadishu .