bishop of Sebaste in Cappadocia, in the second and third centuries, suffered death under Dio- clesian by decapitation, after being whipped and having his flesh torn with iron combs. He is a person of great note among the vulgar, who in their proce- sions relative to the woollen trade, always carry a re- presentation of him as the inventor or patron of the art of wool-combing; though that art must have been known long before his time. It is difficult to say how the invention came to be attributed to him; but it had probably no better origin than the circumstance of his being tortured by instruments used in combing of wool.