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A titular see taking its title from one of the many Egyptian
cities of the same name. This particular Busiris was situated in the
middle of the Delta, on the Pathmitish, or Damietta Branch of the Nile.
The ancient Egyptian name, Pa-osiri means "House of Osiris", the god being supposed to be buried there; hence the Coptic Pousiri, Greek Pousiris and Bouseiris, Arabic Abusir.
It now exists as a village under the last of these names and is to be
distinguished from another similarly named town on the coast of Lydia.
Busiris was the chief town of the Busirite nomos (Hierocles,
Synecdemos 725,7) and became a see of Ægyptus Secunda. Its bishop,
Hermæon, is mentioned at Nicæa (325) by Meletius, as one of his
partisans. About this time there was united to the title of Busiris
that of Kynos, from the important city of Lower Kynos (Athanas., "Apol.
c. Arianos", lxxviii, in P.G.., XXV, 376). Its bishop, Athanasius,
defended Dioscorus at the Latroecinium of Ephesus in 449, but
apologized publicy at Chalcedon (Liberatus, Breviarium, xiv). From the
seventh century on, the see is mentioned in the lists of the Greek
patriarchate (Georgius Cyprius, 736), though its titulars belong really
to the Jacobite patriarchate. Thus, in 742, its bishop, James, takes a
part in the election of the Patriarch Michael I (Renaudot, "Hist.
Patriarch. Alexandrin.", 207); a little later, under the same
patriarch, its bishop, Peter, is mentioned (ibid., 227); we hear also
of Severus, under Philotheus (979-1003) and of Chail, or Michael, and
Mohna in the thirteenth century (ibid., 458, 569).
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