Limnae (in Pisidia) was a city and bishopric in the Roman province of Pisidia (Asia Minor), which is now a Latin Catholic titular see.
The city was called ÃÂïüýñù (genitive ÃÂùüýῶý, as in ÃÂÃÂûùàÃÂùüýῶý, city of Limnae), as well as ÃÂùüÃÂýñù (Limenae) and ÃÂàüýñïñ (Lymnaea). The Greek word ÃÂïüýñù means lakes or marshes. The town was also called Limnopolis (ÃÂùüýῶý ÃÂÃÂûùÃÂ). The town, in the north of Pisidia, is only mentioned by ecclesiastical writers.
It is also spelled Limnæ and has been identified with early-modern Gaziri (also spelled Ghaziri), where there is a wall-surrounded island in Lake Hoyran called Limenia, housing ruins that include those of a temple of Artemis. In the present day, it is located at the shore of .
The Pisidian city Limnae was an episcopal see, now listed in the Annuario Pontificio as a Latin Catholic titular bishopric, suffragan of Antioch of Pisidia, since the diocese was nominally restored in 1933 (Limne in Curiate Italian; Latin adjective Limnen(sis)).
It is vacant since decades, having had the following incumbents, so far of the fitting Episcopal (lowest) rank :