Julian of Antioch
4th-century Christian martyr and saint / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This article is about the 4th-century Cilician martyr. For other martyrs named Julian, see Saint Julian (disambiguation). For the patriarchs of Antioch, see Patriarch Julian (disambiguation).
Julian of Antioch (Latin: Julianus, Greek: Ίουλιανός; d. AD 305 x 311),[1] variously distinguished as Julian the Martyr, Julian of Tarsus, Julian of Cilicia, and Julian of Anazarbus, was a 4th-century Christian martyr and saint. He is sometimes confused with the St Julian who was martyred with his wife Basilissa.
Quick Facts Saint Julian of Antioch, Martyr ...
Saint Julian of Antioch | |
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Martyr | |
Died | ~305 AD |
Venerated in | Eastern Orthodox Church Roman Catholic Church |
Feast | June 21 (Eastern Orthodox); March 16 (Roman Catholicism) |
Attributes | portrayed as being cast into the sea in a sack full of serpents and scorpions. He may also be shown as his coffin floats with four angels seated on it, or being led bound on a dromedary. |
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