Ven. Anna Maria Gesualda Antonia Taigi
Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord
Marie-Marthe-Baptistine Tamisier
Sts. Tarachus, Probus, and Andronicus
Vicariate Apostolic of Tarapacá (de Tarapacá)
Catherine Tegakwitha (Tekakwitha, Takwitha)
Vicariate Apostolic of Temiskaming
Sixteen Blessed Teresian Martyrs of Compiègne
Diocese of Terracina, Sezze, and Piperno
Thanksgiving before and after Meals
Theodore, Archbishop of Canterbury
Joseph Albert Alberdingk Thijm
Peter Paul Maria Alberdingk Thijm
Right Honourable Sir John Sparrow David Thompson
Johann Amadeus Franz de Paula Thugut
Louis-Sébastien Le Nain de Tillemont
Johannes Tserclæs, Count of Tilly
Tomb of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Charles-Thomas Maillard de Tournon
Alexandre de Prouville, Marquis de Tracy
Tradition and Living Magisterium
Feast of Transfiguration of Christ
Vicariate Apostolic of the Transvaal
Vicariate Apostolic of Trichur (Trichurensis)
Diocese of Triest-Capo d'Istria
Abbey of Trinità di Cava dei Tirreni
Prefecture Apostolic of Tripoli
Tryphon, Respicius, and Nympha
A titular metropolitan see in the Province of Scythia, on the Black Sea. It was a Greek colony from Miletus. In 29 B.C. the Romans captured the country from the Odryses, and annexed it as far as the Danube, under the name of Limes Scythicus. The city was afterwards included in the Province of Moesia, and, from the time of Diocletian, in Scythia Minor, of which it was the metropolis. In A.D. 10 Ovid was exiled thither by Augustus, and died there eight years later, celebrating the town of Tomi in his poems. Few places had so many Christian memories as this town, in the barbarous country of the Getae; e.g. Sts. Macrobius, Gordianus, and their companions, exiled to Scythia and slain in 319, venerated on 13 Sept.; Sts. Argeus, Narcissus, and Marcellinus, also slain under Licinius and venerated 2 Jan.; a great many others whose names only are known, and who are mentioned in the Roman Martyrology for 3 April, 20 June, 5 July, and 1 October. The first bishop may have been Evangelicus, mentioned in the Acts of Sts. Epictetus and Action (8 July), and who must have lived at the end of the third century. Eusebius (De Vita Constantini, III, 7) mentions a Scythian bishop at Nicaea who may have belonged to Tomi. Mention should be made of St. Bretanion, martyred under Valens, and whose feast is observed 25 Jan.; Gerontius, at the Council of Constantinople, in 381; St. Theotimus, writer and friend of St. John Chrysostom, venerated 20 April; Timotheus, at Ephesus in 431; John, ecclesiastical writer, d. about 448; Alexander, at Chalcedon in 451; Theotimus II, in 458; Paternus, in 519; and Valentinian, in 550. The Province of Scythia formed a single diocese, that of Tomi, and autocephalous archdiocese, subject to the patriarch of Constantinople. It is mentioned in 640 in the Ecthesis of Pseudo-Epiphanius (Gelzer, "Ungedruckte . . . Texte der Notitiae episcopatuum", 535). Shortly afterwards the Bulgarians invaded the region and the Archdiocese of Tomi was suppressed. The city subsequently belonged to the Byzantines, again to the Bulgarians, then to the Turks, and finally to the Rumanians since the Treaty of Berlin in 1878. The town of Tomi is near Constantza, the capital of Dobroudja and a port on the Black Sea, which has about 15,000 inhabitants. There is a Catholic parish. A statue of the poet Ovid stands in the chief square.
LE QUIEN, Oriens christianus, I, 1211-16; NETZHAMMER, Das altchristliche Tomi (Salzburg, 1903), IDEM, Nach Adam Klissi (Salzburg, 1906); IDEM, Die christlichen Altertumer der Dobrogea (Bukarrest, 1906).
S. VAILHÉ