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6,462 saints match

  • Saint Abeluzius
    Saint Abeluzius

    Abeluzius is a saint of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church. He is commemorated with a feast day of January 15. Little else is known of the person. It has been speculated that the name may be a typographical error for "Abba Lucius", a Syro-Roman name.

  • Saint Abercius of Hieropolis
    Saint Abercius of Hieropolis

    200–200 · Early Church

    Abercius of Hieropolis (Ancient Greek: Ἀβέρκιος; died c. 167) was a Christian clergyman from Hierapolis at the time of Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius. He is maybe identical to an author who is called Avircius Marcellus in later sources.

  • Saint Abgar V
    Saint Abgar V

    -1–50 · Early Church

    Abgar V (c. 1st century BC – c. AD 50), called Ukkāmā (meaning "the Black" in Syriac and other dialects of Aramaic), was the King of Osroene with his capital at Edessa. Abgar was described as "king of the Arabs" by the Roman historian Tacitus, a near-contemporary source.

  • Saint Abhai of Hach

    The Martyrology of Rabban Sliba is a book containing the names and feast days of a number of martyrs of the Syriac Orthodox Church. The book was composed by the monk Rabban Sliba in the late thirteenth century or early fourteenth century.

  • Saint Abibus of Edessa
    Saint Abibus of Edessa

    307–322 · Early Church

    Abibus of Edessa (Syriac: ܚܒܝܒ ܐܘܪܗܝܐ, romanized: Ḥabbīḇ Ōrhāyā; Greek: Άβιβος της Εδέσσης; Church Slavonic: абиб от едеса; Arabic: حبيب الرهانيا, romanized: Ḥabīb al-rhanīyya; c.

  • Saint Ablak

    Ablak is a saint of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church. His feast day is kept on 30 May.

  • Saint Ableberto de Cambrai

    650–645 · Medieval

    Ableberto, also known as Emeberto (died in Ham, first half of the 7th century), was Bishop of Cambrai and Arras during the first half of the 7th century and is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church.

  • Saint Abo of Tiflis
    Saint Abo of Tiflis

    756–786 · Medieval

    Abo of Tiflis (Arabic: أبو التفليسي, romanized: Abu al-Tiflisi; Georgian: აბო თბილელი, romanized: abo tbileli; c. 756 – 6 January 786) was a Christian martyr of Arab origin, who went on to practice his faith in what is now Tbilisi, the capital of present-day Georgia.

  • Saint Abra of Poitiers
    Saint Abra of Poitiers

    339–360 · Early Church

    Abra of Poitiers/ˈæbrə/ (c. 343 – c. 360), Afra or Apra is a Christian saint who may have lived in the 4th century. Her existence is historically uncertain, but she may have been the daughter of Hilary of Poitiers.

  • Saint Abraham

    501 · Medieval

    Abraham of Farshut was an abbot and is a saint of the Coptic Church, and by extension all of the Oriental Orthodox Churches. His feast day in the calendar of saints of the Coptic Church is February 12. He was born in Farshut, near the modern city of Huw.

  • Saint Abraham Kidunaia
    Saint Abraham Kidunaia

    267–366 · Early Church

    Abraham Kidunaia (died c. 366) was a Syriac Christian hermit and priest. He is venerated as a saint in Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy and Oriental Orthodoxy. The Vita of St. Abraham was written by his friend, St. Ephrem.

  • Saint Abraham of Arazd

    455 · Early Church

    Abraham of Arazd (died 455, Persia) was a deacon and one of the Leontine Martyrs. He was murdered along with a group of Armenian martyrs by order of King Yazdegerd II in 455. He was a companion of the Armenian Patriarch Joseph of Armenia and the priest Leontius of Vanand.

  • Saint Abraham of Bulgaria
    Saint Abraham of Bulgaria

    1190–1229 · Medieval

    Abraham of Bulgaria (Russian: Авраамий Болгарский; died April 1, 1229) was a Christian convert from Islam later who was martyred for his faith and is venerated as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church.

  • Saint Abraham of Clermont

    450–470 · Early Church

    Abraham of Clermont (died c. 479) was the founder and abbot of the monastery of St.Cyriacus in Clermont-Ferrand. He was born in Byzantine Syria, along the Euphrates River and was of Persian origins. He later left for Byzantine Egypt, to visit some of the hermits there.

  • Saint Abraham of Cratia

    474–558 · Medieval

    Abraham of Cratia or Krateia (c. 474 – c. 558) was a Christian monk from Emesa (now Homs) Byzantine Syria. Abraham was the most important of the bishops on the see of Kratia from its foundation in the 2nd century until its dissolution in the 12th century.

  • Saint Abraham of Egypt

    400–400 · Early Church

    Abraham of Egypt or Abraham of Minuf was a fourth-century monk and hermit of Egypt, is known only from the Synaxarion. He was a native of Minuf in the Delta, born of Christian parents who held an important position in the world.

  • Saint Abraham of Ephesus

    550 · Medieval

    Abraham of Ephesus was a 6th-century Archbishop of Ephesus in the Byzantine Empire and monastery founder. He is venerated as a saint by the Eastern Orthodox Church and Roman Catholic Church. His feast day is commemorated on 28 October.

  • Saint Abraham of Rostov
    Saint Abraham of Rostov

    1000–1077 · Medieval

    Abraham of Rostov, Archimandrite of Rostov, in the world Abercius, was born in the tenth century in Chuhloma, which is in Kostroma region near Galich, Russia. Born Abercius, he was very ill as a child.

  • Saint Abraham of Scetes

    350 · Early Church

    Abraham of Scetis was a monk who became a saint of the Coptic Church. He was born the son of a wealthy landowner in Egypt. He is said to have had a vision of Christ riding the chariot of the Cherubim. He died after an 18 year illness at Djirdjeh.

  • Saint Abraham of Smolensk
    Saint Abraham of Smolensk

    1172–1221 · Medieval

    Abraham of Smolensk (Russian: Авраамий Смоленский; 1150 or 1172 - c. 1222) was a Russian monk and priest. He resided at the Bogoroditzkaja convent and was regarded as a miracle worker.

  • Saint Abraham the Great of Kashkar

    503–588 · Medieval

    Abraham the Great of Kashkar was the father of the Assyrian monastic revival in the 6th century. He is a doctor and saint of the Church of the East. He was born in Kashkar in Persia around 492.

  • Saint Abraham the Poor

    301–372 · Early Church

    Abraham the Poor (also Saint Abraham the Child and Abraham the Simple) was a fourth-century Egyptian hermit and a saint. Born in the town of Menuf, he became a disciple of Pachomius, who founded cenobitic monasticism, in the delta region of the Nile River.

  • Saint Abraham the Writer

    Abraham the Writer is a saint of the Syriac Orthodox Church. His feast day is 30 December.

  • Saint Abran

    515 · Medieval

    Saint Abran (Breton for 'Abraham'), was a 6th-century Irish hermit in Brittany. Abran was born in Ireland and was a brother of Gibrian. Abran and Gibrain traveled to Brittany with their siblings.

  • Saint Abu Merouane

    1037 · Medieval

    Abu Merouane was born in Seville in 1037. He served as an imam and is recognized as a saint within Islam.

  • Saint Abudimus

    201–305 · Early Church

    Abudimus (Greek: Ἅγιος Ἀβούδιμος; died 305) was a Greek Christian martyr also known as Abudemius of Tenedos. Abudimus was tortured during the Diocletian persecution on the island of Tenedos, before dying in 305.

  • Saint Abulak

    Abulak is a martyr and saint of the Coptic Church. Abulak was martyred with some two hundred companions. Their feast day is June 9.

  • Saint Abundius
    Saint Abundius

    615–854 · Medieval

    Abundius (also Abondius, Abundias, or Abbondio; early fifth century – 469), venerated in the Catholic Church as Saint Abundius, was a bishop of Como, Northern Italy. Abundius was born at Thessalonica. Around 448 Abundius became the fourth Bishop of Como, succeeding Amantius.

  • Saint Abundius of Como
    Saint Abundius of Como

    468 · Early Church

    Abundius (also Abondius, Abundias, or Abbondio; early fifth century – 469), venerated in the Catholic Church as Saint Abundius, was a bishop of Como, Northern Italy. Abundius was born at Thessalonica. Around 448 Abundius became the fourth Bishop of Como, succeeding Amantius.

  • Saint Abundius of Villers

    1239 · Medieval

    Abundius was a monk who died in 1239. He is recognized as a saint.

  • Saint Abundius the Sacristan
    Saint Abundius the Sacristan

    485–564 · Medieval

    Saint Abundius the Sacristan (also Abonde, or, variously, Acontius) (died c. 564) was a sacristan of the Church of Saint Peter in Rome. His holy life was reportedly an inspiration to all who knew him, and several miracles were attributed to him.

  • Saint Acacius of Amida
    Saint Acacius of Amida

    301–425 · Early Church

    Acacius or Aqaq (died 425) was bishop of Amida, Mesopotamia (modern-day Turkey) from 400 to 425, during the reign of the Eastern Roman Emperor Theodosius II.

  • Saint Acacius of Beroea

    330–436 · Early Church

    Acacius or Aqaq was a Syrian, lived in a monastery near Antioch, and, for his active defense of the Church against Arianism, was made Bishop of Beroea in 378 AD, by Eusebius of Samosata.

  • Saint Acacius of Melitene
    Saint Acacius of Melitene

    370–435 · Early Church

    Acacius II of Melitene (? - after 437) was metropolitan bishop of Melitene. He was an opponent of Nestorius and close ally of Cyril of Alexandria at the Council of Ephesus of 431. He delivered a homily at Ephesus and wrote two letters to Cyril.

  • Saint Acacius of Sebaste
    Saint Acacius of Sebaste

    201–320 · Early Church

    Saint Acacius of Sebaste (Greek: Ἅγιος Ἀκάκιος Σεβαστείας; died c. 304) was a 4th-century Christian priest and hieromartyr who lived in Sebaste, Armenia, during the Diocletianic Persecution.

  • Saint Acacius the Younger

    350–400 · Early Church

    Saint Acacius or Akakios the Younger, also known as Akakios the New of Kafsokalyvia (Greek: Ακάκιος ο Νέος, ο Καυσοκαλυβίτης; 1630s – 12 April 1730) was a Greek Orthodox Christian monk and ascetic who lived on Mount Athos.

  • Saint Acarius
    Saint Acarius

    550–639 · Medieval

    Acarius (died 14 March 642), venerated as Saint Acarius, was a monk of Luxeuil Abbey who became Bishop of Doornik and Noyon, which today are located on either side of the Franco-Belgian border. Acarius was born to a noble family of Burgundy.

  • Saint Acathius
    Saint Acathius

    300–251 · Early Church

    Saint Acathius (died c. 251, also known as Acacius or Achates) was bishop of Melitene (now Malatya in modern Turkey) in the third century, although he is occasionally given as bishop of Antioch. Melitene was the capital of the Roman Province of Second Armenia.

  • Saint Acca of Hexham
    Saint Acca of Hexham

    660–740 · Medieval

    Acca of Hexham (c. 660 – 740/742) was an early medieval Northumbrian prelate, serving as bishop of Hexham from 709 until 732, and subsequently commemorated as a Christian saint.

  • Saint Accolito di Parenzo

    Saint Accolito di Parenzo is a saint in the Catholic Church. He died as a result of torture.

  • Saint Acepsimas of Hnaita
    Saint Acepsimas of Hnaita

    376 · Early Church

    Acepsimas of Hnaita (Syriac: ܥܩܒ݂ܫܡܐ) (died October 10, 376) was a bishop, martyr, and saint. Acepsimas was the bishop of Hnaita, residing at Paka in western Persia.

  • Saint Acepsimas, Joseph and Aeithalas
    Saint Acepsimas, Joseph and Aeithalas

    Akepsimas, Joseph, and Aithalas are early Christian hieromartyrs. Their feast day in the Orthodox Church is November 3 (16). Joseph was a presbyter in the city of Beth-Ketuba in Adiabene.

  • Saint Achaicus of Corinth
    Saint Achaicus of Corinth

    100 · Early Church

    Saint Achaicus of Corinth (Ancient Greek: Ἀχαϊκός Achaikos, "belonging to Achaia") was a Corinthian Christian saint who according to the Bible, together with Saints Fortunatus and Stephanas, carried a letter from the Corinthians to Saint Paul, and from Saint Paul to the Corinthia…

  • Saint Achatius of Armenia
    Saint Achatius of Armenia

    200–140 · Early Church

    Acacius of Mount Ararat, also known as Acaste or Achaz (Latin: Achatius, Greek: Akakios), was a high-ranking Roman officer who was martyred and put to death under Antoninus Pius around 140 on Mount Ararat. He is a Christian saint and is counted among the Fourteen Holy Helpers.

  • Saint Acheul
    Saint Acheul

    Saint-Acheul is a commune in the Somme department in Hauts-de-France in northern France. It is not to be confused with Saint-Acheul, a suburb of Amiens after which the Acheulean archaeological culture of the Lower Paleolithic is named.

  • Saint Achilleus Kewanuka
    Saint Achilleus Kewanuka

    1869–1886 · Modern

    Achilleus Kiwanuka, also known as Achileo Kiwanuka or Achilles Kiwanuka or Achiles Kiwanuka (1869 – June 3, 1886), was a Ugandan Catholic martyr revered as a saint in the Catholic Church.

  • Saint Achillius of Larissa
    Saint Achillius of Larissa

    150–330 · Early Church

    Saint Achillius of Larissa, also known as Achilles, Ailus, Achillas, or Achilius (Greek: Άγιος Αχίλλειος, Ágios Achílleios) (died 330 AD), was a 4th century bishop of Larissa and one of the 318 persons present at the First Council of Nicaea. His feast day is on 15 May.

  • Saint Acindynus
    Saint Acindynus

    330 · Early Church

    Septimius Acindynus (Greek: Σεπτίμιος ό Άκίνδυνος) was a Roman consul with Valerius Proculus in 340 AD. He was governor of Antioch when he imprisoned a man who had been unable to pay a pound of gold into the public treasury.

  • Saint Acisclus
    Saint Acisclus

    250–313 · Early Church

    Saint Acisclus (also Ascylus, Ocysellus; Spanish: Acisclo; French: Aciscle) (died 304) was a martyr of Córdoba, in Hispania (the Iberian Peninsula, i.e., modern Portugal and Spain). His life is mentioned by Eulogius of Cordoba.

  • Saint Adalard of Corbie
    Saint Adalard of Corbie

    751–827 · Medieval · Benedictines

    Adalard of Corbie (Latin: Adalhardus Corbeiensis; c. 751, Huise – 2 January 827) was the son of Bernard who was the son of Charles Martel and half-brother of Pepin; Charlemagne was his cousin. He is recognised as a saint within the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Church.