The true name of this city seems to have been Hawârin; as such it appears in a Syriac inscription of the fourth to the sixth century. According to Ptolemy[2] it was situated in the Palmyrene province. Georgius Cyprius calls it Euarios or Justinianopolis.
There are ruins of a Roman castellum and of a basilica.
Euroea is included in the Catholic Church's list of titular sees.[5] The diocese was nominally restored as a Latin titular bishopric in 1737 as Evaria, which name was changed to Euhara in 1925, Euaria in 1929 and finally Euroea in Phoenicia in 1933.[6][7]
Titular bishops
It is vacant, having had the following incumbents, of the lowest (episcopal) rank with a single intermediary-rank (archiepiscopal) exception:[7]
Titular Bishop Hernando Eusebio Oscot y Colombres, Dominican Order (O.P.) (1737.10.01 – 1743.11.28)
Titular Bishop Franciszek Kazimierz Dowgiałło Zawisza (1744.04.13 – 1766)
Titular Bishop Antonius Urbański (1769.09.11 – 1770)
Titular Bishop Józef Ignacy Rybiński (1774.02.28 – 1777.06.23)
Titular Bishop Antoni Narzymski (1778.07.20 – 1799.12.10)
Titular Archbishop Thomas Hyland, O.P. (1882.03.10 – 1884.10.09)
Titular Bishop Johann Zobl (1885.03.27 – 1907.09.13)
Titular Bishop Jan Feliks Cieplak (1908.07.12 – 1919.03.28), Auxiliary Bishop of Mohilev (Belarus) (1908.07.12 – 1925.12.14), became Titular Archbishop of Acrida (1919.03.28 – 1925.12.14); also Apostolic Administrator of the above Mohilev (Belarus) (1923.07.05 – 1925.12.14), later Metropolitan Archbishop of Vilnius (Lithuania) (1925.12.14 – 1926.02.17)
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Euaria". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.