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Kirsehir, formerly Macissus is a city in Turkey with a population of 85,000. It is the capital district of the Kırşehir Province.
The history of Kirsehir dates back to the Hittites. The Romans called the city Macissus, and after the city was rebuilt by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian (527-565), it was renamed Justinianopolis. This name was retained until the end of Byzantine rule. The Turks took the city in 1071 and bestowed the current name. In Turkish, "Kır Şehri" means "Steppe City". It became the chief town of a sanjak in the Ottoman vilayet of Angora, which possessed 8000 inhabitants, most of them Muslims. Ecclesiastical historyUnder the Latin name Mocissus it remains a titular metropolitan see in the former Roman province of Cappadocia. Procopius informs us that this fortified site, in north-western Cappadocia, was constituted metropolis of Cappadocia Tertia by Justinian, when he divided that province into three parts, and gave it the name of Justinianopolis. Nothing is known of its history, and its name should perhaps be written Mocessus. There is no doubt that the site of Mocissus, or Mocessus, is that which is occupied by the modern town sometimes called Kir-Sheir. This metropolis figured in the Notitiæ episcopatuum" until the twelfth or thirteenth century. |

