• Thumbnail for Africa (Roman province)
    Africa was a Roman province on the northern coast of the continent of Africa. It was established in 146 BC, following the Roman Republic's conquest of...
    28 KB (3,070 words) - 15:23, 29 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Aïn El Hammam
    Aïn El Hammam (category Catholic titular sees in Africa)
    (ISBN 978-2-911328-25-1), p.79. Joseph-Anatole Toulotte, Geography of Christian Africa: Proconsular. Author: (Rennes, 1892) p312. Wikimedia Commons has media related...
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  • Thumbnail for Roman province
    135 and upgraded to proconsular province. AD 17 – Cappadocia (central Anatolia – Turkey); imperial propraetorial (later proconsular) province, created...
    47 KB (5,973 words) - 15:59, 8 November 2023
  • Thumbnail for Byzantine–Moorish wars
    Byzantine–Moorish wars (category 6th century in Africa)
    various Berber kingdoms which formed after the collapse of Roman North Africa. The war also featured other rebels such as the renegades of Stotzas and...
    30 KB (3,880 words) - 22:29, 25 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Aïn Tebernoc
    Aïn Tebernoc (category Roman towns and cities in Africa (Roman province))
    (CHBeck , 1989). Joseph-Anatole Toulotte, Geography of Christian Africa: Proconsular. Author: (Rennes, 1892) p312. Joseph-Anatole Toulotte, Géographie...
    2 KB (202 words) - 20:56, 21 April 2024
  • Taddua (category Roman towns and cities in Africa (Roman province))
    ancient town of the Roman Empire located in the Roman province of Africa Proconsular. Today the exact location of the town is uncertain but it is in Tunisia...
    1 KB (111 words) - 19:09, 17 December 2018
  • Faustianus, a proconsular man recorded in an inscription in Tebessa, Africa Esuvia Quintula, woman recorded in an inscription in Africa List of ancient...
    1 KB (145 words) - 02:01, 25 April 2024
  • Publius Cornelius Dolabella (consul 10) (category Roman governors of Africa)
    always precede any punishment. Dolabella was awarded the proconsular governorship of Africa for AD 23–24. The previous proconsul had been Blaesus, the...
    16 KB (1,862 words) - 20:13, 11 October 2023
  • Thumbnail for Vitellius
    Vitellius (category Roman governors of Africa)
    befriended Caligula. He was elected consul in 48, and served as proconsular governor of Africa in either 60 or 61. In 68, he was chosen to command the army...
    31 KB (3,477 words) - 16:40, 30 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Asia (Roman province)
    after reconquest by the Eastern Empire in 534 as the separate Prefecture of Africa 3 Later the Diocese of Illyricum 4 Placed under the Quaestura exercitus...
    16 KB (1,758 words) - 11:48, 26 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Proconsul
    rise of bureaucracy and rapid communication has reduced the scope for proconsular freelancing. The Latin word prōconsul is a shortened form of prō consule...
    19 KB (2,452 words) - 23:15, 31 October 2023
  • Thumbnail for Christianity in the Roman Africa province
    from restoring unity to the African Church. The Councils of Carthage brought together the bishops of Proconsular Africa, Byzacena, and Numidia, but those...
    45 KB (5,977 words) - 15:47, 10 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ancient theater of Sabratha
    Ancient theater of Sabratha (category Protected areas of Africa)
    Sabratha is the Roman theater of the ancient city of Sabratha in Proconsular Africa (now modern Tripolitania), on the Mediterranean coast of northwestern...
    32 KB (3,705 words) - 22:00, 27 April 2024
  • stated, the names of the proconsular governors from 333 to 392 are taken from the list in Barnes, T.D. (1985). "Proconsuls of Africa, 337–392". Phoenix. 39...
    20 KB (2,240 words) - 14:18, 24 October 2023
  • Felix of Aptunga (category 4th-century bishops in Roman North Africa)
    Felix, Bishop of Aptunga, in proconsular Africa was a 4th-century churchman, at the center of the Donatist controversy. Felix was one of those who laid...
    4 KB (465 words) - 05:12, 5 January 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pupienus
    The claim in the Historia Augusta that Pupienus held three praetorian proconsular governorships is unlikely. For one thing, as Bernard Rémy points out...
    17 KB (1,671 words) - 09:56, 21 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Scipio Africanus
    Spain in the early autumn. He was the first person to have been given proconsular imperium without having held consular office. He went to Spain with some...
    63 KB (7,770 words) - 13:06, 21 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Crete and Cyrenaica
    Crete and Cyrenaica (category Roman provinces in Africa)
    org. Retrieved 2016-11-24. Unless otherwise stated, the names of the proconsular governors from 30 BC to AD 67 are taken from Werner Eck, "Über die prätorischen...
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  • though not formalized primacy in the Early African Church, not only in the Roman province of Proconsular Africa in the broadest sense (even when divided...
    4 KB (438 words) - 12:25, 13 June 2023
  • dictionary. Assura (or Assuras) was a town in the Roman province of Proconsular Africa. Assura may also refer to: The Roman Catholic titular see of Assura...
    474 bytes (102 words) - 11:39, 19 May 2021
  • White settlement in Zimbabwe before 1923 (category European colonisation in Africa)
     539. ISBN 0-393-04770-9. "Robert Thorne Coryndon: Proconsular Imperialism in Southern and Eastern Africa, 1897–1925 By Christopher P. Youé". Wilfrid Laurier...
    10 KB (1,310 words) - 06:39, 29 October 2023
  • Thumbnail for Vandal Kingdom
    and confirmed their control of Proconsular Africa. Historians since Edward Gibbon have seen the capture of North Africa by the Vandals and Alans as the...
    40 KB (4,744 words) - 16:16, 30 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mauretania
    Mauretania (category Countries in ancient Africa)
    their control of Proconsular Africa. For the next 90 years, Africa was firmly under the Vandal control. The Vandals were ousted from Africa in the Vandalic...
    21 KB (1,959 words) - 22:49, 24 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Sulla
    betrayed by a slave. Marius and his son, along with some others, escaped to Africa. Sulla then had Sulpicius' legislation invalidated on the grounds that all...
    82 KB (11,175 words) - 08:58, 27 April 2024
  • appointed consul. Shortly after his consulship, Marcianus was appointed proconsular governor of Macedonia. This is unusual, since Macedonia was considered...
    3 KB (391 words) - 11:19, 4 April 2021
  • Thumbnail for Capture of Carthage (439)
    Carthage and the small but rich proconsular province in which it was situated, while Hippo and the other six provinces of Africa were abandoned to the Vandals...
    8 KB (974 words) - 21:09, 10 September 2023
  • Thumbnail for Augustus
    proconsular imperium (power) that applied throughout the empire, not solely to his provinces. Moreover, the Senate augmented Augustus's proconsular imperium...
    143 KB (17,150 words) - 19:12, 13 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Roman governor
    Though all ten were "proconsular", only two of these provinces (Asia and Africa), were actually governed by senators with proconsular imperium, the remaining...
    13 KB (1,799 words) - 19:01, 24 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gallia Narbonensis
    Lepidus was given responsibility for Narbonese Gaul (along with Hispania and Africa), while Mark Antony was given the balance of Gaul. After becoming Emperor...
    13 KB (1,310 words) - 08:52, 22 January 2024
  • Thumbnail for Arnobius
    rhetorician at Sicca Veneria (El Kef, Tunisia), a major Christian center in Proconsular Africa, and owed his conversion to a premonitory dream. However, Arnobius...
    9 KB (1,118 words) - 14:39, 29 March 2024