Euroea in Phoenicia


Euroea in Phoenicia was a city in the late Roman province of Phoenicia Secunda. today Hawarin, north of al-Qaryatayn and on the road from Damascus to Palmyra. A former bishopric, it remains a Latin Catholic titular see.

History

The true name of this city seems to have been Hawârin; as such it appears in a Syriac inscription of the fourth to the sixth century. According to Ptolemy it was situated in the Palmyrene province. Georgius Cyprius calls it Euarios or Justinianopolis.
There are ruins of a Roman castellum and of a basilica.

Bishopric

The Notitiae episcopatuum of the Patriarchate of Antioch gives Euroea as a suffragan see of the archdiocese of Damascus. One of its bishops, Thomas, is known in 451; there is some uncertainty about another, John, who lived a little later.
Euroea is included in the Catholic Church's list of titular sees. The diocese was nominally restored as a Latin titular bishopric in 1737 as Evaria, which name was changed to Euhara in 1925, Euaria in 1929 and finally Euroea in Phoenicia in 1933.

Titular bishops

It is vacant, having had the following incumbents, of the lowest rank with a single intermediary-rank exception: