list of coptic saints

      List of Coptic saints GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21

      Early church historians, writers, and fathers testified to the numerous Copt martyrs. Tertullian, a 3rd-century North African lawyer, wrote, "If the martyrs of the whole world were put on one arm of the balance and the martyrs of Egypt on the other, the balance will tilt in favor of the Copts."
      The following is a list of saints commemorated by the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria. The majority of saints are from Egypt, with the majority venerated in all of Christianity.


      Alphabetical list of Christian Saints in the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria



      Aaron ⲁⲁⲣⲟⲛ, the high priest, and brother of Moses ⲙⲱⲩⲥⲏⲥ
      Ababius, monk of Scetes
      Abadiu, bishop and martyr of Ansena
      Abakir ⲁⲡⲁ ⲕⲩⲣ, John, the 3 Virgins and their Mother, martyrs from Alexandria
      Abakragoun ⲁⲡⲁ ⲕⲣⲁⲅⲱⲛ, martyr
      Abāmūn of Tarnūt, martyr
      Abāmūn of Tukh ⲁⲡⲁ ⲁⲙⲟⲩⲛ, martyr
      Abanoub ⲁⲡⲁ ⲁⲛⲟⲩⲃ, the child martyr
      Abanoub ⲁⲡⲁ ⲁⲛⲟⲩⲃ , confessor
      Abanoub ⲁⲡⲁ ⲁⲛⲟⲩⲃ of The Golden Fan
      Abaskhayroun ⲁⲡⲁ ⲥⲭⲩⲣⲟⲛ, the soldier, martyr from Qallin
      Abdel Messih El-Habashi Eritrean monk of the Paromeos Monastery
      Abdel Messih El-Makari, 20th-century monk of the Monastery of St. Marcarius
      Abib and Apollo, 4th-century monks from Akhmim
      Abraam, abbot of El-Muharraq Monastery, bishop of Fayoum and Giza, noted for his devotion to the poor
      Abraam Anba Samuel ⲁⲃⲣⲁⲁⲙ ⲁⲡⲁ ⲥⲁⲙⲟⲩⲏⲗ, abbot of the Monastery of St. Thomas the Anchorite
      Abraam and George ⲁⲃⲣⲁⲁⲙ ⲛⲉⲙ ⲅⲉⲱⲣⲅⲓⲟⲥ, 7th-century monks of the Monastery of St. Marcarius
      Abraham ⲁⲃⲣⲁⲁⲙ, 4th-century monk and hermit of Minuf
      Abraham, 4th-century monk of Scetes
      Abraham, ⲁⲃⲣⲁⲁⲙ 6th-century abbot of the Monastery of St. Phoibammon, and 14th bishop of Hermonthis
      Abraham of Farshut, 6th-century abbot
      Abraham, the 62nd Pope of Alexandria
      Abraham, the poor, the simple, monk
      Abraham, the prophet
      Abratacus (feast day April 16)
      Acacius, bishop of Jerusalem
      Acacius, patriarch of Constantinople
      Achillas, 4th–5th century monk
      Achillas, the 18th Pope of Alexandria
      Aesculapius and Dioscorus, 4th-century ascetes and martyrs of Akhmim
      Agabus, one of the seventy disciples
      Agatho,. ⲡⲁⲡⲁ ⲁⲅⲁⲑⲟⲥ the 39th Pope of Alexandria
      Agathon, Peter, John, Amun, Amuna & their mother Rebecca, 4th-century martyrs from Qus
      Agathon, the stylite ⲁⲅⲁⲑⲟⲛ ⲡⲓⲥⲧⲩⲗⲗⲁⲧⲓⲥ spent ten years in Scetes and fifty years in solitude on a pillar
      Agrippinus, the 10th Pope of Alexandria
      Alexander, bishop of Jerusalem
      Alexander I, the 19th Pope of Alexandria
      Alexander II, the 43rd Pope of Alexandria
      Ambrose, theologian and confessor
      Ammonius, bishop of Esna, martyr
      Ammonius, founder of the Monastery of the Martyrs
      Ammonius of Kellia, disciple of St. Pambo ⲁⲡⲁ ⲡⲁⲙⲃⲱ of Scetes
      Amos, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Amun,ⲁⲡⲁ ⲁⲙⲟⲩⲛ anchorite and bishop from Scetes
      Anna Simone (Anasimon), the anchoress queen
      Anastasia, martyr
      Anastasia the Patrician
      Anastasius, the 36th Pope of Alexandria
      Andrew, the apostle and brother of St. Peter
      Andrianus, the martyr
      Andronicus, the 37th Pope of Alexandria
      Anianus, the 2nd Pope of Alexandria
      Anne (Hannah), the mother of the Theotokos
      Anthony the Great, ⲡⲓⲛⲓϣϯ ⲁⲡⲁ ⲁⲛⲧⲱⲛⲓⲟⲥ father of monasticism
      Apakir
      Apali, martyr and son of St. Justus and St. Theoclia
      Apollonia, virgin martyr
      Apollo of Bawit, native of Akhmim, founder of the Monastery of St. Apollo at Bawit
      Apollos
      Apraxios, native of Upper Egypt, became a monk at twenty and lived until seventy
      Archiledes
      Ari, priest of Shatanouf
      Arianus, Governor of Ansena who repented after martyring many Christians
      Aristobulus, one of the Seventy Apostles
      Arsenius, slave of St. Sousnyous
      Arsenius, tutor of Arcadius and Honorius, the sons of Emperor Theodosius the Great
      Athanasius, metropolitan of Beni Suef and El-Bahnasa
      Athanasius I, the Apostolic, the 20th Pope of Alexandria
      Athanasius II, the 28th Pope of Alexandria
      Athanasius III, the 76th Pope of Alexandria
      Athanasius and his sister Irene, martyrs
      Athenagoras, the Athenian, apologist, and philosopher
      Avghanistos, martyr and soldier of The Martyr St. Arianus The Governor of Ansena
      Avilius, the 3rd Pope of Alexandria
      Awgin, father of Monasticism in Mesopotamia


      = B

      =

      Babnuda, the anchorite, martyr
      Bagoosh and his mother, martyrs
      Balamon, the anchorite
      Barbara and Juliana, martyrs
      Barsanuphius, monk, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt
      Barsauma, the Father of Ascetism
      Barnabas, one of the seventy apostles
      Bartholomew, one of the twelve apostles
      Bashnouna, monk, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt in 1164
      Basil, bishop of Caesarea
      Basilides and Potamiana, martyrs
      Basilissa, the child martyr
      Basilius, metropolitan of Jerusalem
      Basin and her Children
      Benjamin I, the 38th Pope of Alexandria
      Benjamin II, the 82nd Pope of Alexandria
      Bessarion, disciple of St. Anthony the Great and later St. Macarius the Great
      Bisada, the priest, martyr
      Bishoy Kamel, the hegumen
      Butamina, the chaste virgin, martyr


      = C

      =

      Candidus, commander of the Theban Legion
      Cassius and Florentius, members of the Theban Legion
      Catherine of Alexandria, virgin martyr
      Celadion, the 9th Pope of Alexandria
      Chiaffredo, member of the Theban Legion
      Christoldoulos, the 66th Pope of Alexandria
      Chrysanthus and Daria, martyrs
      Clement of Alexandria, the 5th Dean of Catechetical School of Alexandria
      Cleopas, the apostle and bishop of Jerusalem
      Cleopatra
      Colluthus, of Antinoöpolis, martyr
      Constantine, the Emperor of the Roman Empire
      Cosmas I, the 44th Pope of Alexandria
      Cosmas II, the 54th Pope of Alexandria
      Cosmas III, the 58th Pope of Alexandria
      Cosmas and Damian, martyrs
      Cyprian and Justina, martyrs
      Cyracuse and Julietta
      Cyril, bishop of Jerusalem
      Cyril I, the 24th Pope of Alexandria
      Cyril II, the 67th Pope of Alexandria
      Cyril III, the 75th Pope of Alexandria
      Cyril IV, the 110th Pope of Alexandria
      Cyril V, the 112th Pope of Alexandria
      Cyril VI, the 116th Pope of Alexandria
      Cyrus and John, unmercenary physicians, wonderworkers, martyrs


      = D

      =
      Dabamon

      Damian, the 35th Pope of Alexandria
      Daniel, the hegumen of Scetes during the 6th-century
      Daniel, the prophet
      Dasya, the soldier, 3rd-century martyr from Tanda
      David, the prophet and king
      Demetrius I, the 12th Pope of Alexandria
      Demetrius II, the 111th Pope of Alexandria
      Demiana and the 40 Virgins,
      Didymus the Blind, the 15th Dean of Catechetical School of Alexandria
      Dionysius, the 14th Pope of Alexandria
      Dioscorus I, the 25th Pope of Alexandria
      Dioscorus II, the 31st Pope of Alexandria
      Dorothea of Alexandria, virgin martyr


      = E

      =
      Elias and four companions, martyrs
      Elijah, the prophet
      Elisa, the anchorite
      Elisha, the prophet
      Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist
      Ephrem the Syriac
      Epimachus of Pelusium, martyr
      Epiphanius of Salamis, bishop of Cyprus, spent most of his monastic life in Egypt
      Erastus, the apostle
      Esther, Queen of Persia
      Esther of Akhmim, martyr
      Eudokia, martyr
      Eugenius, Eugander, and Abilandius
      Eumenes, the 7th Pope of Alexandria
      Euphrasia, the virgin, moved to Egypt to join a Monastery of Nuns near Alexandria
      Eusebius, the historian, bishop of Caesarea
      Eusignius, the soldier, martyr
      Eutychus, the disciple of St. John the Evangelist
      Ezekiel, the prophet
      Ezekiel, the anchorite, disciple St. Paul of Tamouh


      = F

      =

      Faltaous, martyr
      Faltaous El-Souriani, the desert eagle, 21st-century monk
      Fana, the hermit, founder of Monastery of Saint Fana
      Faustus, Abibus and Dionysius of Alexandria, martyrs
      Febronia, the ascetic, virgin, martyr
      Felix the Pope of Rome
      Felix and Regula, members of the Theban Legion
      Freig (Tegi or Ruwais), 15th-century Egyptian


      = G

      =

      Gabriel I, the 57th Pope of Alexandria
      Gabriel II, the 70th Pope of Alexandria
      Gabriel III, the 78th Pope of Alexandria
      Gabriel IV, the 86th Pope of Alexandria
      Gabriel V, the 88th Pope of Alexandria
      Gabriel VI, the 91st Pope of Alexandria
      Gabriel VII, the 95th Pope of Alexandria
      Gabriel VIII, the 97th Pope of Alexandria
      Bishop Gabriel Abdel El-Metgaly, Bishop and martyr
      Gallicanus, bishop of Pelusium, martyr
      Gallicanus, martyr
      Gelasius, monk of Shiheet
      George, the ascetic
      George, the prince of martyrs
      George of Alexandria, martyr
      George El Mozahem, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt in 969
      George the new martyr
      Gereon, member of the Theban Legion
      Ghalion, the anchorite
      Gideon one of the Judges of Israel
      Gregory, the ascetic
      Gregory, the illuminator, patriarch of Armenia
      Gregory, the theologian, bishop of Nyssa, brother of St. Basil the Great
      Gregory, the wonder-worker, bishop of Neocaesarea
      George, Bishop of Assiut, martyr


      = H

      =

      Habakkuk, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Habib Girgis, dean of Catechetical School of Alexandria
      Hadid, the priest
      Haggai, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Hannah, the prophetess, mother of Samuel the prophet
      Hedra, the anchorite, bishop of Aswan
      Helena, empress, built numerous churches in Egypt
      Hepatius, bishop of Gangra
      Heraclas, the 13th Pope of Alexandria
      Heraclides, the martyr
      Hermina, the anchorite
      Hezekiah, the king
      Hilaria, daughter of Emperor Zeno, lived disguised as a monk
      Hilarion, the anchorite of Palestine
      Hor, the ascetic, disciple of St. Pachomius
      Hor, Besoy, and Daydara, martyr
      Hor and Susia and their children, and Agathon the hermit, martyrs at Tamouh
      Hosea, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Hour and his mother Theodora, martyrs
      Hour El-Siriakousy, martyr


      = I

      =

      Ibrahim, the anchorite
      Ibrahim El-Gohary, formal prime minister of Egypt, built numerous churches
      Ignatius, patriarch of Antioch, martyr
      Irene, daughter of a pagan king
      Irini, the abbess of St. Mercurius Convent in Old Cairo
      Isaac, the 41st Pope of Alexandria
      Isaac of Hourin
      Isaac of Scetes, the disciple of St. Apollo
      Isaac of Tiphre
      Isaac, the hermit
      Isaac, the priest of El-Qalali
      Isaiah, the prophet
      Isidore, friend of Sina the soldier, martyr
      Isidore of Scété (died c. 390) Egyptian priest and desert ascetic
      Isidore of Pelusium, ascetic and scholar, relative of Theophilus of Alexandria and Cyril of Alexandria, the father of confession of Moses the Black


      = J

      =

      Pope Jacob of Alexandria, the 50th Pope of Alexandria
      Jacob of Nisibis, bishop of Nisibis, spiritual father of St. Ephrem the Syrian
      Jacob of Serugh, the flute of the Holy Spirit
      James, the apostle and martyr, brother of John the Apostle
      James, the apostle and martyr, son of Alphaeus
      James, the ascetic
      James, bishop of Cairo
      James of Manug
      James, bishop of Jerusalem
      Jeremiah, the prophet
      Jerome, the priest, theologian, and historian
      Joachim, the grandfather of Christ
      Joel, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      John I, the 29th Pope of Alexandria
      John II, the 30th Pope of Alexandria
      John III, the 40th Pope of Alexandria
      John IV, the 48th Pope of Alexandria
      John V, the 72nd Pope of Alexandria
      John VI, the 74th Pope of Alexandria
      John VII, the 77th Pope of Alexandria
      John VIII, the 80th Pope of Alexandria
      John IX, the 81st Pope of Alexandria
      John X, the 85th Pope of Alexandria
      John XI, the 89th Pope of Alexandria
      John XII, the 93rd Pope of Alexandria
      John XIII, the 94th Pope of Alexandria
      John XIV, the 96th Pope of Alexandria
      John XV, the 99th Pope of Alexandria
      John XVI, the 103rd Pope of Alexandria
      John XVII, the 105th Pope of Alexandria
      John XVIII, the 107th Pope of Alexandria
      John XIX, the 113th Pope of Alexandria
      John, 7th-century hegumen of Scetes
      John, the forerunner, baptist and martyr
      John, bishop of El-Borollos, who gathered the Synaxarion
      John, bishop of Nikiu
      John, the evangelist
      John Chrysostom, the golden month
      John Colobos, the short, one of the desert fathers
      John of Egypt, the anchorite
      John Kame, the priest
      John of Patmos, the author of the Book of Revelation
      John of Senhout, martyr
      John of Qalyub, monk from the monastery of St. Pishoy, and martyr
      Jonah, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Joseph, the 52nd Pope of Alexandria
      Joseph II, the 115th Pope of Alexandria
      Julian, the 11th Pope of Alexandria
      Julietta, martyr
      Julius of Aqfahs, the martyr and author of the biography of martyrs
      Justus, the 6th Pope of Alexandria
      Justus, disciple of St. Samuel The Confessor
      Justus, martyr, husband of St. Theoclia, and father of St. Apali


      = K

      =
      Karas, the anchorite of Scetes, brother of Emperor Theodosius the Great
      Karas, first bishop of the United States
      Kaou, martyr
      Keriakos, the anchorite
      Kedron, the 4th Pope of Alexandria
      Kloug, physician, ascetic, priest, and martyr
      Kosheh Martyrs, martyrs during the Islamic occupation of Egypt in 2000


      = L

      =
      Latsoun, the anchorite, native of El Bahnasa
      Lazarus of Bethany, the beloved of the Lord
      Lazarus, Salomi, his wife and their children, martyr
      Leonides of Alexandria, martyr, father of Origen
      Longinus, abbot of Ennaton monastery in Alexandria
      Longinus, Roman soldier who pierced Jesus Christ in his side on the cross
      Lucas I, bishop of Manfalut and Abnub
      Lucas II, bishop of Manfalut and Abnub
      Lucilianus and four others with him.
      Luke, one of the four evangelists


      = M

      =

      Macarius I, the 59th Pope of Alexandria
      Macarius II, the 69th Pope of Alexandria
      Macarius III, the 114th Pope of Alexandria
      Macarius of Alexandria, the abbot of the Coptic Monasteries
      Macarius, bishop of Edkow (Tkoou), martyr
      Macarius of Egypt, lamp of the desert, founder of several monasteries, including the Monastery of St. Macarius
      Malachi, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Malati, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt in 1803
      Marina, the monk
      Mark I, the apostle, evangelist, martyr, author of the Gospel of Mark, and the 1st Pope of Alexandria
      Mark II, the 49th Pope of Alexandria
      Mark III, the 73rd Pope of Alexandria
      Mark IV, the 84th Pope of Alexandria
      Mark V, the 98th Pope of Alexandria
      Mark VI, the 101st Pope of Alexandria
      Mark VII, the 106th Pope of Alexandria
      Mark VIII, the 108th Pope of Alexandria
      Markianos, the 8th Pope of Alexandria
      Martha of Egypt, formerly a prostitute, she became an ascetic and lived for 25 years in the wilderness
      Mary, the ascetic, the shut-in
      Mary of Egypt, the anchorite
      Mary Magdalene
      Margaret the Virgin, virgin-Martyr and Vanquisher of Demons
      Maspero Martyrs, killed in 2011
      Matra, martyr from Alexandria
      Matruna, the martyr
      Matthew, the apostle, evangelist, and martyr
      Matthew I, the 87th Pope of Alexandria
      Matthew II, the 90th Pope of Alexandria
      Matthew III, the 100th Pope of Alexandria
      Matthew IV, the 102nd Pope of Alexandria
      Matthias, apostle
      St. Maurice, commander of the Theban Legion
      Maximus, the 15th Pope of Alexandria
      Maximus and Domatius, monks of Paromeos Monastery, disciples of Macarius of Egypt
      Melitina, the virgin and martyr
      Menas, the martyr and wonder-worker
      Menas, of Akhmim, monk and martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt
      Mercurius, the Saint with two swords
      Mercurius and Ephraem, monks, martyrs
      Memnon, Wonder worker and saint
      Micah, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Michael, bishop of Naqadah
      Michael I, the 46th Pope of Alexandria
      Michael II, the 53rd Pope of Alexandria
      Michael III, the 56th Pope of Alexandria
      Michael IV, the 68th Pope of Alexandria
      Michael V, the 71st Pope of Alexandria
      Michael VI, the 92nd Pope of Alexandria
      Michael at-Tukhi, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt in 1837
      Mikhail Ibrahim, the priest
      Mikhaeil, metropolitan of Asyut
      Mina Ava-Mina, the bishop and first abbot the Monastery of St. Mina, disciple of St. Cyril VI
      Mina, bishop of Tamai (Thmoui)
      Mina I, the 47th Pope of Alexandria
      Mina II, the 61st Pope of Alexandria
      Misael, the anchorite of the Monastery of St. Samuel the Confessor
      Mohrael, child martyr
      Moisis (Moses), bishop of Ouseem
      Moura, martyr
      Moses, the prophet, former prince of Egypt
      Moses the Black, the strong, once a robber, he was converted and joined the monks under St. Isidore in the Wadi el-Natrun
      Mousa, the anchorite


      = N

      =
      Nag Hammadi Martyrs
      Nahum, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Narcissus, bishop of Jerusalem
      Nehroua of Fayyum, martyr
      Nicanor, one of the seven deacons
      Nicholas, bishop of Myra
      Nilus of Sinai
      Noub, the Confessor


      = O

      =

      Obadiah, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Olaghi, the anchorite
      Onesimus, the disciple of St. Paul
      Onesiphorus, one of the seventy apostles
      Onuphrius, the anchorite, one of the desert fathers (also called, Abba Nofer)
      Or, the bishop
      Otimus, the priest


      = P

      =

      Pakhom, the father of cenobitic monasticism (i.e. of the Koinonia)
      Pa’esia (Athanasia) of Minuf
      Pambo, one of the desert father
      Pantaenus, the 4th Dean of Catechetical School of Alexandria
      Pantaleon, the physician and martyr
      Paphnutius, 10th-century bishop
      Paphnutius, the anchorite, disciple of St. Macarius of Egypt
      Paphnutius, bishop of Thebaid
      Philomena, Virgin, Martyr
      Parsoma, the "naked"
      Patapios, Desert Father, Hermit
      Paul, the Apostle
      Paul of Tamouh, 4th-century hermit
      Paul of Thebes, the first anchorite, the first hermit
      Paul the Simple, disciple of Anthony the Great
      Peter, the brother of Andrew the Apostle
      Peter I, the 17th Pope of Alexandria
      Peter II, the 21st Pope of Alexandria
      Peter III, the 27th Pope of Alexandria
      Peter IV, the 34th Pope of Alexandria
      Peter V, the 82nd Pope of Alexandria
      Peter VI, the 104th Pope of Alexandria
      Peter VII, the 109th Pope of Alexandria
      Peter Elrahawy, bishop of Maiuma
      Philemon, the priest
      Philip, one of the twelve apostles
      Philip, one of the seven deacons
      Philogonus, patriarch of Antioch
      Philotheos, the 63rd Pope of Alexandria
      Philotheos, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt in 1380
      Philoxenous
      Phoebammon (Aba-Fam), the soldier, martyr from Awsim
      Pigol, founder of the White Monastery
      Pijimi, the anchorite, one of the desert fathers
      Pisentios
      Pishay, founder of the Red Monastery
      Pishoy, the righteous and perfect man, the beloved of our good savior, the star of the desert
      Pisora, the bishop of Masil, martyr
      Poemen, one of the desert fathers at Scetes
      Porphyrius, bishop of Gaza
      Primus, the 5th Pope of Alexandria
      Prochorus, one of the seven deacons
      Prophorius (Porphyrius), jester martyred by Emperor Julian the Apostate after a mock baptism he refused to disown
      Protus and Hyacinth, martyrs
      Psote, bishop of Ebsay


      = Q

      =
      Qozman El-Tahawy, martyr
      Quartus, one of the Seventy Disciples
      Quarshenoufa (Warshenofius), martyr


      = R

      =
      Rais, martyr
      Rebecca and her five children Agathon, Peter, John, Amun, & Amuna
      Rhipsime, Gaiana, and her sisters the virgins


      = S

      =

      Saint Salib, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt
      Samson, one of the judges of Israel
      Samuel the Confessor, abbot of the El-Qualamon Monastery
      Samuel the Prophet
      Sana the soldier
      Sarah, the nun of Upper Egypt
      Sarah, one of the Desert Mother
      Sarah and her two Sons, martyr
      Sarapamon, archpriest of the Monastery St. John the Dwarf
      Sarapamon, bishop of Niku
      Sarapamon, the veiled, bishop of El-Monufia
      Savories
      Serapion, bishop of Thmuis, disciple of St. Anthony the Great and St. Athanasius the Apostolic
      Serapion, the monk
      Sergius and Bacchus, martyrs
      Severianus, bishop of Gabala
      Severus, bishop of Ashmunein, historian
      Severus, patriarch of Antioch
      Shenouda, the Archimandrite, abbot of the White Monastery
      Shenouda I, the 55th Pope of Alexandria
      Shenouda II, the 65th Pope of Alexandria
      Shenouda III, the 117th Pope of Alexandria
      Sidhom Bishay, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt in 1844
      Silas, the anchorite
      Silvanus of Scetes, friend of St. Macarius the Great
      Simeon I, the 42nd Pope of Alexandria
      Simeon II, the 51st Pope of Alexandria
      Simeon, of Menouf, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt
      Simon, the apostle and martyr
      Simon, the stylite
      Simon, the tanner, he moved the Mokattam mountain
      Sina, the soldier, martyr
      Sinouti el-Bahnasa, martyr
      Sisoes the Great, one of the desert fathers
      Sophia of Egypt, martyr
      Sousenyos, martyr
      Stephanos, the anchorite of the wilderness of Fayoum
      Stephen, the archdeacon, protomartyr
      Stephen, the priest & Niketa the martyr
      Stratios, the anchorite


      = T

      =

      Tamada and her children, and Armenius and his mother
      Tekle Haymanot, the Ethiopian
      Thecla, the martyr
      Theoclia, martyr
      Theodora and Didymus, martyrs
      Theodora, 4th-century nun at the convent near Alexandria
      Theodora, chaste virgin martyr
      Theodora, the monk
      Theodore, disciple of St. Pakhomius
      Theodore the Martyr
      Theban Legion, is entire Roman legion of 6666 men
      Theodore, the prince of Mishreke
      Theodore, the prince of Shotb
      Theodoros I, the 45th Pope of Alexandria
      Theodorus, disciple of St. Pachomius
      Theodosius I, the 33rd Pope of Alexandria
      Theodosius II, the 79th Pope of Alexandria
      Theognosta, the virgin
      Theonas, the 16th Pope of Alexandria
      Theophilus I, the 23rd Pope of Alexandria
      Theophilus II, the 60th Pope of Alexandria
      Theophilus, the monk of the Ennaton monastery near Alexandria
      Theophilus, the bishop of Akhmim
      Theophilus & His Wife, martyr in Fayyum
      Theopista, took it upon herself to become a nun and honored with the holy Eskeem
      Theotokos, the pure, full of glory, ever-virgin, Saint Mary, who in truth, gave birth to God the Logos
      Thomas, the apostle and martyr
      Thomas, the anchorite of Shinshif
      Thomas, Victor, & Isaac, of the city of Ashmunein
      Timon, one of the seven deacons
      Timothy, the anchorite
      Timothy, the apostle, bishop, and martyr
      Timothy, bishop of Ansena
      Timothy I, the 22nd Pope of Alexandria
      Timothy II, the 26th Pope of Alexandria
      Timothy III, the 32nd Pope of Alexandria
      Titus, the apostle, and disciple of St. Paul


      = V

      =
      Varus, the soldier and martyr
      Verena, associated with the Theban Legion
      Veronica, a young girl from the monastery of virgins near Akhmim, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt in 749
      Victor, the soldier, from Asyut, martyr
      Vizier Abu Elaala Fahd ibn Ibrahim, martyr during the Islamic occupation of Egypt


      = W

      =
      Wadamoun, first martyr in Upper Egypt
      Wanas, boy deacon from Luxor, martyr
      Wissa, disciple of St. Shenouda


      = Y

      =
      Yostos El Antony, the silent monk
      Yostos, the bishop and martyr
      Yousab, the anchorite, native of Qift
      Yousab El Abah, the theologian, bishop of Girga and Akhmim
      Youstina, the martyr


      = Z

      =
      Zacharias, the 64th Pope of Alexandria
      Zacharias, bishop of Sakha
      Zacharias, the perfect monk of Scetes
      Zadok, and the 128 saints with him martyred in Persia
      Zechariah, the priest and martyr
      Zechariah, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Zephaniah, one of the minor twelve minor prophets
      Zosimas of Palestine, 5th-century anchorite


      Archangels


      Michael
      Gabriel
      Raphael
      Suriel (disputedly Uriel or Sariel)
      Sedakiel
      Sarathiel
      Ananiel


      Groups of martyrs


      7 Martyrs on the Mount of St. Anthony
      12 Martyrs of Naqlun
      21 Martyrs of Libya
      49 Martyrs of Shiheet
      150 Men and 24 Women from Ansena
      400 Martyrs in Dendera
      3,600 Martyrs of Esna
      6,600 Egyptian Soldiers of the Theban Legion
      8,140 Martyrs in Akhmim
      144,000 Children of Bethlehem


      References


      Atiya, Aziz S. The Coptic Encyclopedia. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1991. ISBN 0-02-897025-X

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: list of coptic saints

    list of coptic saintslist of coptic orthodox saints