:''This article is about a city or area in eastern present-day Libya during its Greek and Roman antiquities. For the same area during its Islamic, Ottoman or subsequent eras, see
Barqah. For the football club "''Barça''", see
FC Barcelona. For all other uses see
Barca (disambiguation). ''
'Barca' or 'Barce' () was an ancient Greek colony and later Roman,
Byzantine, city in
North Africa. It occupied the coastal area of what is modern day
Libya. As a Greek city it was part of the
Cyrenaican Pentapolis along with the city of
Cyrene itself.
According to most archeologists, it was situated at
Al Marj, but according to Graham (Roman Africa) at
Tolometa, or
Tolmeita.
History
It became part of the
Exarchate of Africa until it was conquered by the
Arabs in AD
643-
644 during the
Islamic conquest of North Africa and originally served as the capital of a homonymous province of the
Caliphate. When the
Ottoman Turks conquered the region in
1521 they adopted the Arabic name '
Barqah' in Turkish, but not the city's status as capital.
After often being destroyed and then restored, during the Roman period it became a mere borough but was, nevertheless, the site of a
bishopric. Its bishop, Zopyros (Zephyrius is a mistake), was present at the
First Council of Nicaea in
325. The subscriptions at
Ephesus (
431) and
Chalcedon (
451) give the names of two other bishops, Zenobius and Theodorus. The see must have disappeared when the
Arabs conquered the
Pentapolis in 643-44.
It is now a
Roman Catholic titular see of
Cyrenaica in
Libya,
Northern Africa, but vacant.
The modern city on the same site,
Al Marj, grew up around a 19th century Turkish fort. It was developed by the
Italians during their
colonial dominance of Libya and today has a population of 120 000.
Sources and references
★
[1]
★
GigaCatholic- Titular sees
★ Butler, ''The Arab Conquest of Egypt'', p. 430
★ Gelzer, ''Patrum Nicaenorum nomina'', p. 231
★ Marquardt, ''Staatsverwaltung'', I, p. 459
★ Westermann, ''Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte'' (in German)