Paul was on his way to Damascus in Syria when he had is conversion.
Saint Paul was traveling throughout the mideast when he was persecuting the Christians. It was on the Damascus road where he was supposed to have had his miraculous conversion. At that time he was not known as Paul, but was known as Saul.
Before his conversion, Saint Paul (known as Saul) persecuted Christians and was present at the stoning of Saint Stephen. He played a key role in the early persecution of the church and actively worked against its growth.
Your question is not clear. What kind of conversion? Many saints experienced some form of conversion during their lives. A few in particular are St. Paul, St. Augustine and St. Francis of Assisi. Each experienced a different type of conversion.
Saint Paul was a devout follower of Jesus Christ and played a crucial role in spreading Christianity throughout the Roman Empire. He was originally a Pharisee and a persecutor of Christians before his conversion on the road to Damascus.
He was converted to Christianity on the road to Damascus with his encounter with Jesus Christ. Read the account in Luke 9:1-9.
The main events in Pauls life are the conversion on the road to Damascus, The ship wreck, starting the first church, The imprisinment.
his conversion on the road to Damascus.
Saul of Tarsus after he had a vision of Christ & a conversion while on the road to Damascus.
about 644 miles
When Stephen was martyred in ch8... However, he was known as Saul then; becoming Paul after his conversion on the road to Damascus.
It is unfortunate but we do not have much knowledge of Paul prior to his conversion on the road to Damascus so we don't know who his parents were.
There is no biblical record of Jesus ordaining Paul as an apostle himself on Mount Sinai. Paul's encounter with Jesus, leading to his conversion and call to apostleship, occurred on the road to Damascus (Acts 9:1-19). The location of Paul's ordination as an apostle is not specifically mentioned in the Bible.