Archaeological site in Turkey
Aureus belonging to emperor Augustus, minted in the ancient city of Lugdunum.
Germa (Greek Γέρμα) or Germokoloneia (Γερμοκολώνεια, from Latin Colonia Iulia Augusta Felix Germenorum ) was an ancient and Byzantine city in the Roman province of Galatia Secunda . The Byzantine writer Theophanes informs us that at a later period Germa took the name of Myriangeli .[ 1] The few archaeological remains lie close to present-day Babadat in Eskişehir Province , Turkey .[ 2] [ 3]
When between 25 and 20 BCE Augustus made Galatia a Roman province, he founded Germa as a Roman colony . The city was situated at the point where the road from Ancyra forked, one branch going to Dorylaeum , the other to Pessinus . From the time of Domitian it had a mint.
Titular see
Its Christian bishopric was a residential see until the 12th century and is now, as "Germa in Galatia", a titular see of the Catholic Church .[ 4]
References
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain : Smith, William , ed. (1854–1857). "Germa". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography . London: John Murray.
External links
39°31′54″N 31°37′37″E / 39.5317603°N 31.6268837°E / 39.5317603; 31.6268837