Camuliana

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Camuliana an entity of type: WikicatCatholicTitularSeesInAsia

Camuliana, Camulia o Kamoulia es la denominación de una antigua ciudad, o quizás pueblo, de Capadocia, situada al noroeste de Caesarea, hoy Kayseri, en la actual Turquía. Se la menciona en las fuentes principalmente​ por su conexión con la también llamada "Camuliana", una vera icon o acheiropoieta (es decir, una "verdadera imagen" de la Santa Faz o rostro de Cristo "no hecha por manos [humanas]"). Sería uno de los más tempranos de esta clase de iconos creados milagrosamente.​ Fue la primera imagen cristiana llevada en procesión para obtener fondos, imitando la tradición que en las provincias romanas se llevaba a cabo con los (entre los años 560 y 574); una vez en Constantinopla pasó a utilizarse como imagen protectora del ejército bizantino (palladion), llevándose a las batallas.​ rdf:langString
Camuliana, Camulia, Kamoulianai, or Kamoulia (Greek: Καμουλιαναί, Καμούλιανα) was an ancient town or perhaps a village in ancient Cappadocia, located northwest of Caesarea, today Kayseri in Turkey. It is mostly mentioned in connection with the Image of Camuliana, an acheiropoieton or "icon not made by hands" of the face of Christ, which was one of the earliest of this class of miraculously created icons to be recorded; this is also sometimes referred to simply as the "Camouliana". During Byzantine times, the town was also called Iustinianoupolis Nova. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Camuliana
rdf:langString Camuliana
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rdf:langString Camuliana, Camulia, Kamoulianai, or Kamoulia (Greek: Καμουλιαναί, Καμούλιανα) was an ancient town or perhaps a village in ancient Cappadocia, located northwest of Caesarea, today Kayseri in Turkey. It is mostly mentioned in connection with the Image of Camuliana, an acheiropoieton or "icon not made by hands" of the face of Christ, which was one of the earliest of this class of miraculously created icons to be recorded; this is also sometimes referred to simply as the "Camouliana". During Byzantine times, the town was also called Iustinianoupolis Nova. Its site is tentatively located near , Asiatic Turkey. It lay on the old Byzantine road from Kaisareia to Tabia, near the point where it crossed the Halys river by the bridge. The name of the place is of Celtic origin. Camuliana was made into a polis under Justinian with the name Iustinianopolis, but after the acheiropoieton was transferred to Constantinople in 574, the city lost much of its significance and the name "Iustinianopolis" fell out of use. It is probably identical with the tourma of Kymbalaios in the later Byzantine theme of Charsianon. From 971-5 Kymbalaios was the seat of a strategos whose task was probably to secure the road near the Çokgöz Köprüsü.
rdf:langString Camuliana, Camulia o Kamoulia es la denominación de una antigua ciudad, o quizás pueblo, de Capadocia, situada al noroeste de Caesarea, hoy Kayseri, en la actual Turquía. Se la menciona en las fuentes principalmente​ por su conexión con la también llamada "Camuliana", una vera icon o acheiropoieta (es decir, una "verdadera imagen" de la Santa Faz o rostro de Cristo "no hecha por manos [humanas]"). Sería uno de los más tempranos de esta clase de iconos creados milagrosamente.​ Fue la primera imagen cristiana llevada en procesión para obtener fondos, imitando la tradición que en las provincias romanas se llevaba a cabo con los (entre los años 560 y 574); una vez en Constantinopla pasó a utilizarse como imagen protectora del ejército bizantino (palladion), llevándose a las batallas.​
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