Aphrahat

Aphrahat (c. 280–c. 345; Syriac: ܐܦܪܗܛ, Ap̄rahaṭ ,Persian: فرهاد, Arabic: أفراهاط الحكيم, Ancient Greek: Ἀφραάτης, and Latin Aphraates), venerated as Saint Aphrahat the Persian, was a third-century Syriac Christian author of Iranian descent from the Sasanian Empire, who composed a series of twenty-three expositions or homilies on points of Christian doctrine and practice. All his known works, the Demonstrations, come from later on in his life. He was an ascetic and celibate, and was almost definitely a son of the covenant (an early Syriac form of communal monasticism). He may have been a bishop, and later Syriac tradition places him at the head of Mar Mattai Monastery near Mosul in what is now northern Iraq. He was a near contemporary to the slightly younger Ephrem the Syrian, but the latter lived within the sphere of the Roman Empire. Called the Persian Sage (Syriac: ܚܟܝܡܐ ܦܪܣܝܐ, Ḥakkimā Pārsāyā), Aphrahat witnessed to the concerns of the early church beyond the eastern boundaries of the Roman Empire.

Saint

Aphrahat the Persian
Aphrahat depicted in Les Vies des Pères des déserts d'Orient : leur doctrine spirituelle et leur discipline monastique (1886)
Bishop, Abbot
Bornc.280
Erbil, Sassanian empire
Diedc.345
Erbil, Sassanian empire
Honored inOriental Orthodox Church
Church of the East
Eastern Orthodox Church
Roman Catholic Church
CanonizedPre-congregation
Major shrineMar Mattai Monastery
Feast29 January (Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox)
20 Tobi (Coptic Orthodox)
AttributesShemagh, habit
PatronageErbil, Mosul
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