A table should appear at this position in the text. See Help:Table for formatting instructions. |
Diocese of the East (L. Ver.) = Diocese of Egtyp (L. Polem., Notit.)
List of Verona
List in "Polemius".
Ammianus
Notitia Dignitatum
Libya superior Lybia inferior Thebais Ægyptus Jovia[1] Ægyptus Herculea[2] --
Libya Pentapolis Libya Sicca Thebais {{AE}gyptus Augustamnis[3] -- [4]
Pentapolis Libya Thebais Ægyptus Augustamnica -
Libya superior
Lybia inferior
Thebais
Ægyptus
Augustamnica
Arcadia[5]
List of Verona
List in "Polemius".
Notitia Dignitatum.
Arabia
Arabia Augusta Libanensis
Palæstina
Phœnice
Syria Cœle
Augusta Euphratensis
Cilicia
Isuaria
Cyprus
Mesopotamin
Osroena
-
-
-
-
-
- - Syria Palæstina Syria Phœnice Syria Cœle Euphratesia Cilicia Isauria Cyprus Mesopotamia Soroene Sophanene</ref>5</ref>
Palæstina Salutaris[6] Arabia Palæstina Phœnice Syria Euphratensis Cilicia Isuaria Cyprus Mesopotamia Osroena - Palæstina secunda Phœnice Libani Syria Salutaris Cilicia secunda
1 These names were clearly given in hoonour of Diocletian and Maximian.
2 This name first occurs in an edict of 342 A. D. C,. Theod. xii. 1, 34.
3 Arcadia is added by Polemius; it cannot have stood in the old laterculus which he used, which was prior to 384 A. D.
4 Arcadia (and Honorias) formed after 384; Mommsen thinks perhaps as late as 393, when Arcadius became Augustus.
5 Not a regular province; governed by a satrap.
6 See Nöldeke, Hermes, x. 163 sqq. Ohnesorge (Die röm. Provinzliste, x. 297, p. 33 sqq.) has shown that the northern province (chief city, Bostra) was Arabia (the addition "Aug. Lib." was dropped early in the fourth century), and the southern (Diocletian's Arabia) was renamed Palæstina Salutaris before 325 A.D. (p 43).