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Rhesaina ( Rhesaena) () Claudius Ptolemaeus, Geographia, p.108 or Resina (Ῥέσινα) Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Resaina was a city in the late of Mesopotamia Secunda and a that was a suffragan of Dara. Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2013, ), p. 958]

Rhesaina (Rhesaena, Resaena – numerous variations of the name appear in ancient authors) was an important town at the northern extremity of , near the sources of the Chaboras (now the Khabur River. It was on the way from to , about eighty miles from and forty from Dara. Nearby, fought the Persians in 243, at the battle of Resaena. It is now Ra's al-'Ayn, .

Its show that it was a from the time of Septimius Severus. The Notitia Dignitatum (ed. Boecking, I, 400) represents it as under the jurisdiction of the governor or Dux of Osrhoene. Hierocles ( , 714, 3) also locates it in this province but under the name of Theodosiopolis (Θεοδοσιούπολις); it had in fact obtained the favour of Theodosius the Great and taken his name. It was fortified by . In 1393 it was nearly destroyed by 's troops.


Bishops
Rhesaina was also the site of a . The of Rhesaina is today a suppressed and of the Roman Catholic Church in the episcopal province of

Oriens christianus, II, 979. mentions nine bishops of Rhesaena:


Roman bishops
  • Antiochus, present at the First Council of Nicaea (325);
  • Eunomius, who (about 420) forced the Persians to raise the siege of the town;
  • John, at the Council of Antioch (444);
  • Olympius, at the Council of Chalcedon (451);
  • Andrew (about 490);
  • Peter, exiled with (518);
  • Ascholius, his successor, a ;
  • Daniel (550);
  • Sebastianus (about 600), a correspondent of Gregory the Great.


Middle Ages
The see is again mentioned in the 10th century in a Greek Notitia episcopatuum of the Patriarchate of Antioch (Vailhé, in "Échos d'Orient", X, 94). Le Quien (ibid., 1329 and 1513) mentions two Jacobite bishops: Scalita, author of a and of , and Theodosius (1035). About a dozen others are known.


Titular bishops
  • Joseph-Louis Coudé,(15 Jan 1782 Appointed – 8 Jan 1785) Rhesaina at catholic-hierarchy.org.
  • Alexander MacDonell (12 Jan 1819 Appointed – 27 Jan)
  • Antonio Maria de J. Campos Moreno (19 Dec 1834 – 12 Jan 1851)
  • (22 Dec 1871 – 12 Oct 1877
  • Tommaso Bichi (16 Dec 1880 – 1901)
  • Domenico Scopelliti (15 Dec 1919 – 16 Apr 1922)
  • Vicente Huarte y San Martín (26 Apr 1922 – 23 Aug 1935)
  • Joseph Gjonali (Gionali) (30 Oct 1935 – 20 Dec 1952)
  • Gerardo Valencia Cano, (24 Mar 1953 – 21 Jan 1972)

Attribution
  • The entry cites:
    • Revue de l'Orient chrét. VI (1901), 203;
    • D'Herbelot, Bibl. orientale, I, 140; III, 112;
    • , Erdkunde, XI, 375;
    • William Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography, s. v., with bibliography of ancient authors;
    • Müller, notes on Ptolemy, ed. Didot, I, 1008;
    • Victor Chapot, La frontière de l'Euphrate de Pompée à la conquête arabe (Paris, 1907). 302.

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