Abadir and Iraja
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Abadir and Iraja are saints in the Coptic Church and the Roman Catholic Church.
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Abadir and Iraja (Ter and Erai) | |
---|---|
Saint | |
Died | Roman era Antinoe |
Venerated in | Coptic Church Roman Catholic Church |
Major shrine | Asyut, Egypt |
Feast | September 25 (Gregorian Calendar), October 8 (Julian Calendar) |
They are reported to have been children of the sister of Basilides, "the father of kings".[1] According to their legend, Abadir and Iraja fled from Antioch to Alexandria. They were arrested there and brought to Antinoe in Upper Egypt, where they were beheaded along with Cluthus, a physician and priest, and another 3,685 companions.[2] These included the following priests:
Abadir and Iraja had a church dedicated to them in Asyut in Egypt.[3] Their feast day is on September 25 (Gregorian Calendar) and October 8 (Julian Calendar). The text of their Passion exists in both Sahidic and Bohairic Coptic and fragments can be found at the National Library, Vienna, Wiener Papyrussammlung, K2563 a-l, ed. Orlandi, 1974, the National Library, Paris, Copte 129.16.104 and the Vatican Library, Rome, Copti 63, fols. 1-65, ed. Hyvernat, 1886–1887.[4]
A summary of their lives, commemorated on Tout 28 (October 8), can be found in the Copto-Arabic Synaxarion.[5]
Hagiographer and church historian Frederick George Holweck considers the story "spurious".[3]
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