Abāmūn of Tukh

Abāmūn of Tukh
Venerated in Coptic Orthodox Church
Feast April 13

Abāmūn of Tukh is a Coptic Egyptian martyr known only from a mention of him in the Synaxarion of Mikhail of Atrib. His feast day is Abib 13 in the Coptic calendar.

Biography

He was from Tukh in the diocese of Abu Sir Bana (ancient Busiris). He is said to have been visited by the archangel Michael, who told Abāmūn that he would be martyred at Antinopolis. Abamun traveled to Antinopolis, There he was tortured by the governor Eukhious by a variety of means, including the rack, fire, red-hot irons, flogging, flaying, and the furnace) before he was finally beheaded. He is also said to have worked a number of miracles.

After his execution, another Christian, Julius of Aqfahs, wrapped the body in cloths and had it carried back to his homeland, Tukh. Vagaries of translation have led some to believe that Mikhail went on to imply that Abāmūn's body had been taken there immediately, although other translators have made it clear that the intended meaning was more likely that the body was moved from Tukh sometime in the thirteenth century.

Veneration

Abu Salih the Armenian records that in the thirteenth century there was a church dedicated to Abamūn (note the spelling difference) at Al-Bahnasa. He went on to say that he himself was not sure whether the church was dedicated to Abāmūn of Ṭukh or his namesake Abāmūn of Tarnūt.

The evidence available makes it seem more likely that it was named after Abāmūn of Ṭukh, for several reasons. One is that Julius of Aqfahs personally took care of this martyr's body, but not the other's. Another is that Mikhail specifically mentions that this Abāmūn was at the time of his writing in the Said, which indicates that there was a cult extant at the time venerating this Abāmūn, but not the other. Lastly, there is the existing reference to this individual working a number of miracles, with no such reference made to any miracle by the other Abamun.

References

Atiya, Aziz S. The Coptic Encyclopedia. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1991. ISBN 0-02-897025-X

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