Saint Frumentius (flourished 4th century; feast day October 27 in the Roman Catholic Church; November 30 in Eastern Orthodox churches; December 18th in the Coptic Church) was a Syrian apostle who worked to spread Christianity throughout Ethiopia. As the first bishop of its ancient capital, Aksum, he structured the emerging Christian church there in the orthodox theology of the Alexandrian school during the 4th-century controversy over Arianism.
A student of philosophy from Tyre, Frumentius and a colleague (possibly his brother), Aedesius, were captured by Ethiopians in about 340. They became civil servants at the court of the Aksumite king, whom Frumentius converted. On the death of the monarch, Frumentius joined the queen’s court as the royal administrator and became tutor to the crown prince, Ezana. Frumentius was empowered to grant freedom of religious expression to visiting Christian merchants from the Roman Empire and was himself permitted to evangelize.
After fulfilling his regency Frumentius visited St. Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria, in about 347. Athanasius ordained Frumentius bishop and commissioned him to initiate the cultural adaptation of Greek Christianity’s biblical-liturgical texts to Ethiopic symbols and language. The link between the Egyptian Coptic and Ethiopian churches having thus been established, Frumentius returned to Ethiopia to set up his episcopal see and erect churches. He baptized King Ezana, and Christianity became the official religion of the Aksumite kingdom. Despite the enmity of the Byzantine Roman emperor Constantius II (337–361), Frumentius also worked to repudiate the Arians. The 4th-century church historian Rufinus of Aquileia, by meeting Aedesius later at Tyre, was able to document Frumentius’ achievements, noting that the Ethiopians addressed him as abuna, or “Our Father,” a title that is still used for the patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.