window at
St Michael's Church, Brighton. From left:
Michael,
Gabriel,
Uriel,
Chamuel (Camael),
Raphael,
Jophiel, and
Zadkiel. The earliest specific Christian references are in the late 5th to early 6th century:
Pseudo-Dionysius gives them as Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, Uriel,
Camael,
Jophiel, and
Zadkiel. In
Western Christian traditions,
Michael,
Gabriel and
Raphael are referred to as archangels. Through its Byzantine tradition, however, the Catholic Church recognizes seven archangels altogether, sometimes named, sometimes unnamed other than the three mentioned above. Lists of archangels also exist in smaller religious traditions usually regarded within mainstream Christianity as
occultist or
superstitious. A reference to seven archangels appeared in an 8th- or 9th-century
talisman attributed to Auriolus, a "servant of God" in north-western Spain. He issues a prayer to "all you patriarchs Michael, Gabriel, Cecitiel, Uriel, Raphael,
Ananiel, Marmoniel.
Archangels in current church traditions ,
Michael,
Uriel, and
Raphael. Stained glass window at
Hull Minster. holding a book, depicted in a stained-glass window at
St Michael and All Angels Anglican Church, Hughenden In the
Catholic Church, three archangels are mentioned by name in
its Biblical canon: Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael. Raphael appears in the
deuterocanonical Book of Tobit, where he is described as "one of the seven angels who stand ready and enter before the glory of the lord of spirits", a phrase recalled in . Three Popes rejected to authorize veneration
of the purported names of the Seven Archangels within the Roman Catholic Church:
Pope Leo XII (1826–1828),
Pope Pius VIII (1830) and
Pope Gregory XVI (1831–1832). The
Directory on popular piety and the Liturgy (2001) at n. 217 states that "the practice of assigning names to the Holy Angels should be discouraged, except in the case of Gabriel, Raphael and Michael whose names are contained in Holy Scripture." Some
Eastern Orthodox Churches, exemplified in the Orthodox Slavonic Bible (
Ostrog Bible,
Elizabeth Bible, and later consequently
Russian Synodal Bible), recognize as authoritative also
2 Esdras, which mentions Uriel and
Jerahmeel. The Eastern Orthodox Church and Eastern Catholic Churches of the Byzantine tradition venerate seven to eight archangels. As well as Michael, Gabriel, Raphael and Uriel, the
Book of Enoch, regarded as canonical by the
Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, mentions (in chapter 20) Raguel, Saraqâêl, and
Remiel; however, apocryphal sources give instead the names Izidkiel, Hanael, and Kepharel. Within the
Oriental Orthodox Christian denominations, the
Ethiopian Orthodox tradition names seven Archangels as
Michael,
Gabriel,
Raphael,
Uriel,
Raguel,
Phanuel, and Remiel; in the
Coptic Orthodox tradition the seven to eight archangels are named as Michael, Gabriel, Raphael,
Suriel,
Zadkiel,
Sarathiel, and
Ananiel, as well as often
Sakakael. Uriel is not officially recognized or named in Anglican doctrine, though some still include him; one Episcopal church,
St. Uriel’s Episcopal Church, bears his name. == Other traditions ==