Theophilus
Theophilus stands for.
- Theophilus (moon crater)
- Theophilus bell, a type of bell
- Theophilus colliery , mine
- Theophilus (script) , a work published in 1649 by the German theologian Johann Valentin Andreae
- Theophilus play , spiritual singing and acting
Theophilus , Theofilos or Theophilos is the name of the following people:
- Theophilos (Indo-Greek) (2nd / 1st century BC), Indo-Greek king
- Theophilos (Luke) , person in the New Testament
- Theophilus ben Ananus , Jewish high priest in Jerusalem from 37–41 AD
- Theophilus (Antioch) (2nd century), Bishop of Antioch
- Theophilos the Indian (4th / 5th century), late antique missionary and bishop
- Theophilus of Alexandria († 412), Patriarch of Alexandria
- Theophilus Protospatharius (7th century) , Greek medical writer, court physician and uroscopist around 670, teacher of Stephanos of Athens
- Theophilos of Edessa (695–785), Syrian Christian scholar
- Theophilos (Byzantium) (around 813–842), Byzantine emperor
- Theophilus of Caesarea († 195), Bishop of Caesarea and saint
- Theophilos Protospatharios (9th century) , Byzantine medicine writer of the. 9./10. Century
- Theophilos Erotikos († after 1042), Byzantine rebel in Cyprus
- Theophilos I (Jerusalem) , Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem (1012-1020)
- Theophilus Presbyter (around 1070 – after 1125), Benedictine monk and author of handicrafts
- Theophilus Jacobäer (1591–1659), venerated citizen of Pirna as the town savior
- Theophilus (Ethiopia) (17th / 18th century), Ethiopian emperor
- Theophilus von Corte (1676–1740), Corsican Franciscan priest and saint
- Theophilus III. of Alexandria (1764–1833), Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Alexandria
- Theofilos (around 1870–1934), Greek naive painter
- Theophilus III. of Jerusalem (* 1952), Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem
Theophilus is a family name for the following people:
- Nicolaus Theophilus (1541–1604), Landgrave Hessian Councilor, professor at the University of Copenhagen, diplomat and poet
See also:
Wiktionary: Theophilus - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations (English)