Hospita

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Hospita is former Ancient city and Roman bishopric, in present Algeria, now a Latin Catholic titular see.

History[edit]

Hospita was one of many cities in the Roman province of Numidia, important enough to become a suffragan bishopric, but like most faded completely.

Its only recorded bishops were :

  • Bennatus, participating in the conference of Carthage of 411, confronting Catholic and Donatist (heretical) bishops in Roman North Africa,
    • joined by his Donatist counterpart as anti-bishop of Hospita, Lucullus.
  • Gedalius partook in the synod called in Carthage in 484 by the Vandal king Huneric, again with Donatists, after which he was exiled with his Catholic peers.

Titular see[edit]

The diocese was nominally restored in 1933: Established as Latin Titular bishopric of Hospita (Latin) / Ospita (Curiate Italian) / Hospiten(sis) (Latin adjective).

It has had the following incumbents, so far of the fitting Episcopal (lowest) rank :

Other uses[edit]

  • pen name of novelist Charles Lamb
  • Latin (fem. of hospes 'host'; adopted in various languages) for a landlady.

See also[edit]

Sources and external links[edit]

Bibliography
  • Pius Bonifacius Gams, Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae, Leipzig, 1931, p. 466
  • Stefano Antonio Morcelli, Africa christiana, Volume I, Brescia, 1816, pp. 187–188