Arsenius (Latinized form) and Arsenios (Greek form) is a male first name. It is derived from the Greek word arsenikos (ἀρσενικός), meaning "male", "virile".[1]
It may refer to:
- Saint Arsenius the Great (c. 350 – 445), also known as Arsenius the Deacon, Arsenius of Scetis and Turah, and Arsenius the Roman
 - Saint Arsenius of Corfu, first bishop of Corfu, (d. 800 AD or perhaps 959 AD) one of the principal patron saints of Corfu
 - Patriarch Arsenius of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria from 1000 to 1010
 - Arsenius Autorianus (died 1273), Patriarch of Constantinople
 - Arsenius Apostolius (c. 1468 – 1538), Greek scholar and Bishop of Monemvasia
 - Gualterus Arsenius (? – c. 1580), instrument maker
 - Arsenius Walsh (1804 – 1869), Irish Catholic missionary in Hawaii
 - Saint Arsenios the Cappadocian (1840-1924), god father and spiritual father of Saint Paisios of Mount Athos
 - Arsenius Stadnitsky (1862 – 1936), Archbishop and then Metropolitan of Novgorod from 1910 to 1933
 - Arsenios the Cave-Dweller (1886 – 1983), Greek Orthodox monk and elder at Mount Athos
 
Variants
- Armenian: Arsen
 - Georgian: Arsen
 - French: Arsène
 - Italian, Portuguese and Spanish: Arsenio
 - Kazakh: Arsen
 - Macedonian: Arsen
 - Polish: Arseniusz
 - Romanian: Arsenie
 - Russian: Arseny (Russian: Арсений, also transliterated as Arseni, Arseniy, Arsenij, Arsenii). The Russian surname Arsenyev is derived from it. The older form of this name is Arsentiy (Арсентий)
 - Serbian and other South Slavic languages: Arsenije and diminutives Arsen, Arsa
 - Lithuanian: Arsenijus
 - Hungarian: Arzén
 
References
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