Serapion
Serapion /səˈreɪpiən/ is a given name, a variant of Seraphin.
People called Serapion:
- Serapion of Alexandria (3rd century BC), Greek physician
 - Serapion (strategos), probably negotiated in 48 BC for Caesar with Achillas, strategos of Cyprus in 43 BC, executed in 41 BC
 - Mara bar Serapion (1st century AD), Syrian stoic
 - Serpion of Macedonia (d. 195), martyr
 - Serapion of Antioch (c. 200 AD), Patriarch of Antioch
 - Serapion (3rd century AD), neoplatonic philosopher, one of the disciples of Plotinus
 - Serapion (4th century AD), author of the Sacramentary of Serapion of Thmuis
 - Serapion the Sindonite (4th century AD), Egyptian monk and saint
 - Yahya ibn Sarafyun (9th century), also known as Serapion the Elder or Johannes Serapion, Christian physician who wrote two medical compilations in Syriac
 - Serapion of Algiers (1179–1240), Mercedarian saint
 - Serapion the Younger (c. 12th century), physician who wrote The Book of Simple Medicine (in Arabic)
 - Serapion of Vladimir (13th century), bishop of Vladimir
 - Serapion of Novgorod (d. 1516), Russian archbishop
 - Serapion (Coptic bishop of Los Angeles) (b. 1951)
 - Serapion Kolosnitsin (1964–2025), Russian Orthodox archbishop of Kokshetau and Akmola
 
See also
- Sarapion (Serapion), ancient port city in present-day south-central Somalia
 - Saint Serapion (Zurbarán), an oil on canvas painting by the Spanish artist Francisco de Zurbarán
 - Serapion Brothers, a literary movement in the early Soviet Union