Lares
Lares
Formerly a titular archiepiscopal see in pro-consular Africa. In
ancient times it was a fortified town, mentioned by Sallust (Jugurtha,
xc), later it received the name of Colonia Xlia Aug. Lares. At least
five of its bishops are known: Hortensian, who took part in 242 and 255
at the Councils of Carthage; Victorinus who with his Donatist colleague
Honoratus figured at the conference of Carthage; Quintian who lived at
the time of the persecution of Huneric (about 480); Vitulus, who was
living in 525 in the time of King Hilderic. St. Augustine (Ep. ccxxix),
Victor Vitensis (Hist. Pers. Vand., 6 and 9), Procopius (Bell. Vand.,
II, 22 and 28), also Arabian and other historians mention the town. It
is the Lorbeus of today, between Tunis and Tebessa; the ruins cover a
large area, which would indicate that once it had been a town of
considerable importance. A mosque has taken the place of a church, and
the ruins of a basilica are still visible.