- day for
Saint Archippus on
March 20.
According to tradition, he was
stoned to death. The
Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates Archippus on
several days...
- The
viceroy (Limenitis
archippus) is a
North American butterfly. It was long
thought to be a
Batesian mimic of the
monarch butterfly, but
since the viceroy...
-
Archippus (/ɑːrˈkɪpəs/;
Ancient Gr****: Ἅρχιππος; fl. late 5th
century BC) was an
Athenian poet of the Old Comedy. His most
famous play was the Fishes...
-
greetings to Apphia,
Archippus and the
church that
meets in Philemon's house.
Apphia is
often presumed to be Philemon's wife and
Archippus, a "fellow labourer"...
- the
Romans in 146 BCE.
Archippus was
seized by Diaeus, but
released upon the
payment of
forty minae.
There was
another Archippus from
Achaea who expelled...
- Philemon, our dear
friend and
fellow worker, also to
Apphia our
sister and
Archippus our
fellow soldier, and to the
church that
meets in your home". Paul asks...
-
establishes Jerusalem as the
capital of the
Kingdom of Israel. 994 BC—
Archippus,
Archon of
Athens dies
after a
reign of 19
years and is
succeeded by his...
-
Aristophanes (/ˌærɪˈstɒfəniːz/;
Ancient Gr****: Ἀριστοφάνης [aristopʰánɛːs]; c. 446 – c. 386 BC) was an
Ancient Gr****
comic playwright from Athens. He wrote...
- Apostles. 6 July: The
Apostles Philemon,
Archippus, and Onesimus. 22 November: The
Apostles Philemon,
Archippus, Onesimus, and equal-to-the-apostles Apphia...
- the
author of a
treatise on the thratta, a type of fish
mentioned by
Archippus and
other comic poets, and of a
history of the
Syrian kings. Both works...