Evodius of Antioch
Orthodox tradition counts Evodius (also spelled Euodias) among the Seventy Apostles and names him as the first bishop of Syrian Antioch after the Apostle Peter. The Hieromartyr Ignatius the God-Bearer, traditionally his successor in that see, is cited as honoring him; sources report that he held the bishopric for about twenty-seven years.
Some sources credit Evodius with being the first to call the disciples of Jesus 'Christians,' a name that the New Testament records as first arising at Antioch (Acts 11:26). Several writings have been attributed to him, though most are not preserved; later historians such as Nicephorus Callistus mention a work associated with his name. Tradition holds that he died a martyr under the emperor Nero, dated by sources to the year 66, though these martyrdom traditions are recorded by later writers.