Philippe-Jacques Abraham (Syriac: ܐܒܪܗܡ ܦܝܠܝܦܘܣ ܝܥܩܘܒ) (Orahim Pillipus Yaqub) (3 January 1848 – 28 August 1915) was an ethnic Assyrian bishop of the Chaldean Catholic Church.
He joined the Rabban Hormizd Monastery at a young age where he pursued his clerical studies and was consecrated as a bishop by the Syro-Malabar Church in British India on 25 July 1875.
Seven years later he was consecrated as a bishop for the Chaldeans of the Jazira region by Joseph VI Audo.
[2] During the Assyrian genocide he tried to ask for protection from the local Kurdish Agha to spare the city's Christians.
The authorities had him executed a week later alongside the Syriac Catholic bishop Flavianus Michael Malke[3] and his body was dragged in the town's streets.