Arsenius

Arsenius (Latinized form) and Arsenios (Greek form) is a male first name. It is derived from the Greek word arsenikos (ἀρσενικός), meaning "male", "virile".[1]

It may refer to:

  • Saint Arsenius the Great (c. 350 – 445), also known as Arsenius the Deacon, Arsenius of Scetis and Turah, and Arsenius the Roman
  • Saint Arsenius of Corfu, first bishop of Corfu, (d. 800 AD or perhaps 959 AD) one of the principal patron saints of Corfu
  • Patriarch Arsenius of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria from 1000 to 1010
  • Arsenius Autorianus (died 1273), Patriarch of Constantinople
  • Arsenius Apostolius (c. 1468 – 1538), Greek scholar and Bishop of Monemvasia
  • Gualterus Arsenius (? – c. 1580), instrument maker
  • Arsenius Walsh (1804 – 1869), Irish Catholic missionary in Hawaii
  • Saint Arsenios the Cappadocian (1840-1924), god father and spiritual father of Saint Paisios of Mount Athos
  • Arsenius Stadnitsky (1862 – 1936), Archbishop and then Metropolitan of Novgorod from 1910 to 1933

Variants

gollark: Encryption, I mean.
gollark: No, that's totally different and unrelated.
gollark: What?
gollark: IIRC you can't really make your own enzymes easily or edit them much, because they have weird folding stuff going on, and are hyperoptimized by billions of years (well, for some of them, just hundreds or tens of millions in others) of evolution for their particular tasks.
gollark: Not specifically for that, but practice exam questions?

References

  1. "Arsenic", in Online Etymological Dictionary
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