Serapion 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, Syrian stoic
Serapion of Macedonia (d.
195), Martyr
Serapion of Antioch (c.
200 AD), Patriarch of Antioch
Serapion, was a 3rd-century neoplatonic philosopher and one of the disciples of Plotinus
Serapion (4th century), author of the Sacramentary of Serapion of Thmuis
Yahya ibn Sarafyun (9th century), also known as Serapion the Elder or Johannes Serapion, Christian physician who wrote two medical compilations in Syriac
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 Algiers (1179–1240), Mercedarian saint
Serapion of Novgorod (d.
1516), Russian archbishop
Serapion of Egypt (1709–1903), Coptic monk
Serapion (Coptic bishop of Los Angeles) (b.