The town was also the seat of an ancient bishopric[3] in the ecclesiastical province of Carthage.[4]
From this former bishopric only one bishop is known, Dominic, who took part in the African council of 646 and signed a letter to the Patriarch of Constantinople Paul, and which was later read during the Synod called by Pope Martin I in 649.
The diocese effectively ceased to function at the end of the 7th century with the arrival of the Islamicarmies, however the diocese was refunded in name in 1933, Established as a Titular Episcopal.[5][6]Today Absasalla survives as titular bishopric and the current is bishop Christopher Glancy Auxiliary Bishop of Belize City–Belmopan.[7][8]
Known Bishops
Dominic fl646.[9][10]
Domenico Ferrara MCCJ Apostolic Vicar of Mupio (Sudan) March 15, 1966 to 21 September 1998
Lawrence Pius Dorairaj Auxiliary Bishop in Madras-Mylapore (India) 28 November 1998 to January 13, 2012
^Joseph Bingham, Origines ecclesiasticæ; or, The antiquities of the Christian church (1834) p442.
^R. B. Hitchner, R. Warner, R. Talbert, T. Elliott, and S. Gillies, 'Absasallensis: a Pleiades place resource', Pleiades: A Gazetteer of Past Places, 2012 [accessed: 02 December 2016]
^Pontificio Annuario, Libreria Editrice Vaticana, the Città del Vaticano, 2003, p. 748
^Stefano Antonio Morcelli, Africa Christiana, Volume I, (Brescia, 1816), p. 65.
^Pius Bonifacius Gams, Series Episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae, (Leipzig 1931), p. 463.
^Auguste Audollent, v. Absasallensis, in Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de Géographie ecclésiastiques, vol. I, Paris, 1909, col. 201.
^Absa Salla, at catholic-hierarchy.org
^Titular Episcopal See of Absa Salla at GCatholic.org.
^Stefano Antonio Morcelli, Africa Christiana: divided into three heads; and that, Volume 1 (Betton, 1816), p65.
^Corpus: sive biblioteca universalis..., Volume 11.