If you are talking about Paul being beat by the Romans than it can be found in Acts 22:25
Paul is the English version of the Roman name "Pavlvs." So we can say that Paul is Roman in origin.
Paul himself, in his epistles, never mentioned his birthplace. The Acts of the Apostles, written some decades later, has Paul say that he was from Tarsus.
Paul "saw" Jesus on the road to Damascus. (Acts 9:1-19)
The Bible never mentions Emperor Nero. Although later Christian traditions say that he persecuted the early Christians throughout the Roman Empire and that he had both Peter and Paul executed in Rome, Acts of the Apostles never mentions these claims or anything else about Nero, although Acts was largely about Peter and Paul, and was clearly written after the time of Nero.
Because he was too sick to travel, and Paul had to keep moving. Beside that, Paul was in Roman custody and had no say in the matter.
In Acts of the Apostles chapter 27, Paul is sent by ship to Rome for his trial. Acts does not say what the name of the ship was.Since there is no confirmation in Paul's letters of the appeal to Caesar and the journey to Rome, some dismiss the account of Paul's hazardous sea voyage in Acts as novelistic fiction. On this view, there was no ship and therefore no name of the ship.
Acts 14:19 And there came thither certain Jews from Antioch and Iconium, who persuaded the people, and having stoned Paul, drew him out of the city, supposing he had been dead.
The name Saul is of Hebrew origin and means Respondent. Paul means Little or Small. Why the Lord chose to rename Saul to Paul is not known, though the original Jewish name of the apostle Saul was Paul.
1939
you say beat it
Yes. Paul had a sister and also a nephew who resided in Jerusalem. (Acts 23:16)