Abibus of Edessa
Abibus  | |
|---|---|
Russian Icon depicting Saint Abibus (right) holding a censer  | |
| Deacon, Confessor, Martyr | |
| Born | 307 AD Edessa, Roman Syria (modern-day Urfa, Turkey)  | 
| Died | 322 AD Edessa, Roman Syria (modern-day Urfa, Turkey)  | 
| Cause of death | Immolation | 
| Venerated in | Eastern Orthodox church Oriental Orthodox Church Roman Catholic Church  | 
| Canonized | Pre-congregation | 
| Feast | 15 November (Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic) 2 September (Oriental Orthodox)  | 
| Attributes | Depicted holding a censer while on fire | 
| Patronage | Contracts, marriages; firemen; Syria (region), Syrians | 
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. AD 307–322), also known as Abibus the New, Habib the Deacon or Saint Habibus the Martyr, was a 4th-century Syrian Christian deacon, confessor and martyr, who according to the Martyrdom of Habib the Deacon, was executed at Edessa by immolation under Roman Emperor Licinius. He is venerated as a saint by the Catholic, Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Churches.