Bir-Mecherga Explained

Official Name:Bir Mcherga
Settlement Type:Commune and town
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Tunisia
Subdivision Name1:Zaghouan Governorate
Unit Pref:Imperial
Population As Of:2014
Population Total:13665
Utc Offset:+1

Bir Mcherga (Arabic : بئر مشارڨة) is a town and commune in the Zaghouan Governorate, Tunisia in the northwest of Tunisia, the site of former Roman North African city and bishopric Giufi, which only remains as Latin Catholic titular see.

It is located fifty kilometers southwest of Tunis at 36° 31 'north, 9° 58 'east, in the Zaghouan Governorate. As of 2004 it had a population of 7,203.[1]

Modern town

Bir Mchergais is a municipality of 7203 inhabitants and the chief town of a 'delegation' of 21 508 inhabitants comprising several sectors including that of Djebel Oust.[2]

The city participates in the loosening of the industrial activities of the capital, notably because of its situation on the RN3 . With Djebel Oust, it hosts three large industrial zones on more than 300 hectares. Its labor force employs more than 35% in industry (21% nationally).

Bir Mcherga is located a few kilometers from the dam of Bir Mcherga, one of two dams on the Wadi Miliane, located 35 kilometers from its mouth in the Gulf of Tunis Benefiting from a watershed of 1,442 km 2, its reservoir lake irrigatean area of 1,600 hectares while avoiding the flood spectrum for the capital.

History

Giufi was among the many cities of sufficient importance to become a suffragan diocese in the Roman province of Africa Proconsularis, in the papal sway.

It historically documented bishops were, as phrased in the sources :

Titular see

The diocese was nominally restored in 1933 as Latin titular bishopric of Giufi (Latin = Curiate Italian) / Giufitan(us) (Latin adjective).

Bishops of Giufi
FromUntilIncumbentNotes
25 December 194925 April 1959John Baptist Hubert Theunissen, S.M.M.Simultaneously Apostolic Vicar of Blantyre in Malawi. On 25 April 1959 appointed as Archbishop of Blantyre.
10 October 195914 December 1978Bogdan Stefanov DobranovPreviously a priest. On 22 July 1975 appointed as Apostolic Vicar of Sofia-Plodviv in Bulgaria. On 14 December 1978 appointed as Bishop of Sofia-Plovdiv.
14 September 198029 July 1985Petar ČuleThe only Archbishop of Giufi. Previously Bishop of Mostar-Duvno and Apostolic Administrator of Trebinje-Mrkan in Yugoslavia. Died in office.
28 August 19876 November 2004Edouard MathosSimultaneously Bishop Coadjutor of Bossangoa in the Central African Republic. On 6 November 2004 appointed as Bishop of Bambari in the Central African Republic.
9 March 200526 September 2012Tomé Ferreira da SilvaSimultaneously Bishop Coadjutor of São Paulo in Brazil. On 26 September 2012 appointed as Bishop of São José do Rio Preto in Brazil.
20 February 201331 May 2017José Mário Scalon AngoneseSimultaneously Bishop Coadjutor of Curitiba in Brazil. On 31 May 2017 appointed as Bishop of Uruguaiana in Brazil.
31 July 201730 May 2020Jesús Castro MarteSimultaneously Bishop Coadjutor of Santo Domingo in Dominican Republic.
4 November 2020presentValter Magno de CarvalhoSimultaneously Auxiliary Bishop of São Salvador da Bahia in Brazil.
Sources:[3]

See also

Sources and external links

Bibliography - ecclesiastical history

Notes and References

  1. Recensement de 2004 (Institut national de la statistique)
  2. Web site: Institut National de la Statistique - Tunisie . 2009-02-07 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150924035354/http://www.ins.nat.tn/fr/rgph2.1.commune.php?code_modalite=24416&Code_indicateur=0301007&Submit3=Envoyer . 2015-09-24 .
  3. Web site: Giufi. Catholic-hierarchy.org. 3 August 2018.