Eleutheropolis (diocese)

Eleutheropolis in Palaestina is a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church located in modern Israel.

In A.D. 200 Septimius Severus founded a Roman colony on the site of a previous Jewish town, Maresha, destroyed by Vespasian 130 years earlier.

[2] The new colony grew quickly,[3] due to its location on important trade routes and in 325 it became the site of an episcopal see in Palaestina Prima, with Macrinus as first bishop.

Eusebius of Caesarea an important early church writer who lived at this time and was based from this Bishopric used it as a starting point for measuring distances of other locations.

Church texts mention 50 soldiers who were executed here in 638 for not abandoning the Christian religion following the arrival of Islam.

Ruins of Eleutheropolis in Palaestina (1843).