The particulars of his
conversion
have been already alluded to, in the Life of St.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v4
iv.
, cap.
xi.
, p.
5°.
Skellig Rock, '"
'' See Lignum Vitae," lib. ii. , cap. Iv. •' "
Topographical Dictionary of Ireland," vol. ii. , pp. 556, 557.
' The accompanying illustration has been drawn from Miss Stokes' admirable work, by the writer, and transferred by William K. Wakenian to the wood, engraved by Mrs. Millard.
» See "Notes on Irish Architecture," by Edwin, third Earl of Duuraven, edited by Margaret Stokes, vol. i. , part i. , sect. ii. Early Christian Monasteries, pp. 26, 27.
In — Generalis . S. . nctorum. " Catalogus
Dr. Todd here
Article iv.
Rev. Dr. At this date, we find Suibni i Scelic.
Kelly, p. xxii. '
'. Edited
by
adds
These Islands are shown, on the Ord-
nance
County of Kerry," sheet 104.
Survey
^ See Lewis' •'
Townland for the Maps
'"A note
more recent hand
[Sc;lig Michael, an island off the coa«t of Kerry] ut videtur. "
by
says,
"The ' . 1. SceiLic rmCnl'
April 28. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 535
of Seilig Mhichel,' or Michael's Rock, with a group of surrounding monastic cells, is built on the northern summit of the Great Skellig. This Island, which rises in the Atlantic Ocean, is about twelve miles distant from the western- most point, and off the coast of Kerry. The lilmd Rock is dedicated to St.
Sceilig Michil Oratory, County of Kerry.
Michael the Archangel, and its steep peak rises over the waves, like the spire of some grand cathedral. ' On this day was venerated, Suibhne, of Scellic,'"" Hcrordins; to the Martyrologies of Marianus O'Gorman and of Dones;il. "
Article V. —St. Coipp, or Copa, Daughter of Diomma. The Bollandists state,' that Copa, the daughter of Dima, is entered in the Martyr- ology ofTallagh, at the 28th of April; but, neither in the Franciscan copy, nor in that one published by Rev. Dr. Kelly, can we meet with such a record. However, a holy woman, who is called Coipp, daughter of Diomma, was venerated, on this day, as the register in the Martyrology of Donegal" indi- cates. A Cipia or Copia, the mother of St. Bite, is said to have been veiled by St. Patrick, and to have been left by him, at the church of F. lphin. J It is not certain, however, that she can be identical with this St. Coipp. '*
"
E'liled by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp. Septima Vita S. Patricii, lib. ii. , cap. xxxix. ,
112, 113. Article v. — "
See "Act. i
p. 13 J, and n. 78, p. 176. See also, p. S. nnctorum," 270.
tomus iii. ,
the
' See what has been when already said,
treating about the festivals of saints similarly n. inied. at the iStli of Januar)', and at the
24th of this month—.
Article vi. ' Edited Rev. Dr. by
xxviii. termitted saints, p. 546.
Among
'
Edited by Dri. Todd and Reeves, pp
112, 113. ^ See
Colgan's
" Trias
Thaumaturga,"
Aprilis
pre-
536 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [April 28.
Article VI. —St. Caurnan, or Caernan, of Cluain-each. In the
Martyrologies of Tallagli,' and of Marianus O'Gorman, at the 28th of April, is recordedSt. CaurnanofCluain-each. However,theBoUandistsassert,"thataSt. Caernaniis de Chiain-eich is entered in those Martyrologies. A monastery ofClumet3 is mentioned, in the Acts of St. Fursey, as having been founded by the holy Abbot. * Tiie reader is referred to his Life, which has been given, in a foregoing vojume. 5 There was a Cairnanus, son to Brandubh, son to Melgi ; and, he was the companion of St. Columkille, when the latter first set out for Britain. ^ The reader is referred, to what has been already stated regarding him, at the 31st 'of January. A saint, who. is called Caernan, of Cluain-each, was venerated on this day, as we find it set down, in the Martyrology of Donegal. '
ArticleVII. —St. ConchindofCill-achaid. Atthe28thofApril,
'
the Martyrology of Tallagh registers Conchind of Cill-achaid. This place
must probably be identical with Kill Achaidh Conchinn, founded first by St. Abban,^ in the district of Corca Duibhne, now Corcaguiney barony, in the
county of Kerry. One Coincheann, a daughter of Ceallach Cualann, died, a. d. 738, according to the " Annals of tlie Four Masters ;"3 but, we cannot feel assured, tliat slie may be identified with St. Conchind of Cill-Achaid. A festival is also recorded to her honour, at the 20th of August. It would seem, the present day, or that already mentioned, must have been her Natalis. This holy woman, called also Conchennia, is said to have been the sister of St. Kentigerna, or Centigerna, who has been already noticed, at the 7th day of Januar). '' Her royal parentage is there mentioned.
Article VIII. —Festival of St. Christopher, Martyr. In the Leabhar Breac copy of St. Angus' Feilire, a festival of St. Christopher is commemorated, at the 28th of April. In a sckolio? i affixed to this account, he is set down as a martyr," who suffered under Decius, with no less than 10,403 martyrs. " In the genuine Martyrology of Bede, as also in the Martyrologies of St. Raban Maur, and in the Manuscripts at Monte Cassino, at St. Maxi- min's and at St. Martin's church of Treves, and in Ado's Manuscript copy belonging to the Queen of Sweden, this feast has been recorded. However,
Kelly, p. xxii. In the Franciscan copy, we read CAUfn«n Ctudin ecli.
'
See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. Ap- rilis xxviii. Among ihe pretermitted saints, p. 546.
'
See his Acts, at the 27th of October, 'See Dr. O'Donovan's edition, vol. i. ,
pp. 340, 341.
'See ''Acta Sanctorum Hiberniae," vii.
'
The
print for Cluainet or Cluainech, alias applied to him of being a cotichent), ren-
' Colgan thinks tliis may have been amis-
strange epithet is
Cluaineach. See "Acta Sanctorum Hibcr- nii! e,"ix. Februaiii. Vita S. Fursiei, n. 10, p. 299.
dered a "doghead," or "wolfhead. " See
Mrs. Jameson's "Sacred and Legendary Art,' p. 449.
• See his Life, at the l6th of
' An Irish is quoted, poem
following eulogy:—
s See
"
January. Lives of the Irish Saints," vol. i. ,
containing
chap, v. , n. 48. '"
See Colgan's Trias Th^iumaturga,"' Quarta Appendix ad Acta S. ColumbjE, cap. X , num. 14, p. 4S8, and p. 501.
' Ediied by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
Tloboclei\ech congliMne Hobe incpiib-oech ciMj-caise Ue^Aipm cemjimef •oa)xle|\ <XiMtim tjile]' Cpipcicep.
112, 113. — . \RTICLE VII.
Thus translated, by
Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xxii. The Franciscan copy, at this
Whitley Stokes;
dale, enters ConchiiTO Cilli <Xchi'D.
Januiirii, n. 8, p —22. Article viii.
tlie
—
Dr.
"He was a cleric with jiurity : he was a pious Christian: before the call without
. April 29. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 537
in a certain document of tlie Carthusians, at Bnixelles, it is set down as the Translation of St. Christoi)her's reh'cs. The Natal day of this holy Martyr is thought to be the 25th of July. 1 There is a beautiful allusion •• to this holy martyr, who is thought to have carried Christ on his shoulders, over a sea ; although the allegorical meaning seems to be, that he carried our Redeemer
in his breast, while wading through a sea of temporal tribulation.
CtofntP-nintf) ©ay of 9pnl.
ARTICLE I. —ST. DIOCHU, OR DICHUS, OF . SABHA1. L, OR SAUL, COUNTY OF DOWN.
{FIFTH CENTURY. \
has been very generally supposed, that the first convert made by the IT illustrious Apostle of Ireland, after his mission had opened in Ulidia, was Dichu,' or Dichus,' or Dicluio,3 sometimes written Diochu, and Dichon,* who lived in that district, comprising the present Barony of Lecale, in the county of Down.
The particulars of his conversion have been already alluded to, in the Life of St. Patrick. ' His early neophyte, having once em- braced the faith, afterwards led a most exemplary life. In the published Martyrology of Tallagh,* however, there is no notice of this pious convert, at the 29th of April; although the Bollandists ' refer to that calendar, and at that same date, for the entry Dichus de Sabhall. In Irish ecclesiastical history, he has attained much celebrity, and his story has often been related. * He de- scended from a distinguished family, who belonged to the northern part of
Ireland; and there he appears to have been born, perhaps, about tiie close of tlie fourth, or the beginning of the fifth, century. His father is said to have had a very numerous family of sons, whose names have been placed on record. Thus, we are informed, that Trichem, a chief of Uladh, had seven sons, viz. , Dichu of Sabhall, or Saul, Laeghaire of Dun, Ailill of Magh-bile, or Moville, Diiirthecht of Aeudruim, or Mahee Island, Eoghan of Cillcleithi, or Kiiclief. Ros of Dundaletbglas, or Downpatrick, and Niall of Cillcleithi, or
reproach over sea his proper name was Sexia Vita S. Patricii, cap. xxxii. , xxxiv. ,
Chiistopher. '
3 See the Bollanilisti' "Acta Sanctorum,"
toiiius iii. , Aprilis xxviii. Among the pre- termitted saints, p. 547.
*In the "Opera" of Vida, tomus ii. , Hymnus 26, th—ere is an Epigram, thus re-
xxxvi. , xxxviii. , pp. 71 to 73.
» See ibid. Quarta Vita S. Palricii, cap.
xxxiii. , p. 39.
'
See ibid. Septima Vita S. Patricii, lib. , iii. , cap. Ivii. , p. 160.
* See ibid. Septima Vita S. Patricii, lib. i. , cap. xlvii. , xlix. , li. , Iii. , pp. 124, 125.
5 See vol. iii. of this work, at tlie 17th of
fering to him
" Christophere,
Pictores Christum dant tibi ferre humeris," &c.
Articlk 1. — ' lie is 50 called, in Cnl-
"
S. P. itricii, cap. xxix. , p. 14. Also, in the Irish Celts," at p. 321.
gan's
"Trias
Thanmatiirg,! ,"
Secunda Vita
Pa'rick
Kennedy's
related, in Legendary Fictions of
:
infixum
eum
qnod usfjue in corde gerebas,
M. Trch, chap, vii. , '
viii.
Neither is it in the Franciscan copy.
'See "Acta Sanctorum,' tomus iii. , Aprilis xxix. Among the pretermitted saints,
p.
611.
« Ihe Fortune of Dichu is
538 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [Apru. ip.
Kilclief. 9 These were of the race of Fiatach Finn, the ancestor of the Dal Fiatach, a strictly Ultonian tribe. The patrimony of Dichuo seems to have been near tl)e southern shore of Lough Cuan, now Lough Strangford, and wliere a small river, formerly called the Slaney, enters into the sea. There, he had a swineherd employed, who, on the arrival of St. Patrick and of Jiis companions, gave the alarm to his master. He thought these strangers were to be regarded as thieves or pirates. Jocelyn relates, that when St. Patrick first opened his Irish mission in the north, which is generally thought to have been A. D. 432, a certain man named Dichu, who was powerful of strength, gigantic of stature, and savage of mind, '° occupied the district in that quarter. " where the Irish Apostle landed in Ulidia. Dichuo " brought dogs to attack the voyagers, but he was unable to succeed in his purpose. As when the prophet sent from Juda to Bethal was opposed by the king sacrificing to idols, and when Jereboam stretciied forth his hand against the man of God, the king's hand withered, so that he was not able to again withdraw it, until the prophet interposed in his behalf ;'3 so, it would seem, such a miracle took ])lace, in the case of Dichuo. St. Patrick and his companions are said, by Probus, to have landed, at an island, called Milclion;''* but, this seems to be a mistake for Mag-Inis, a low-lying island in the district known as Leth- Cathuil, or Lecale. 's Tliis chieftain brandished his sword intending to destroy the saint. But, the Lord interposed his protecting anin, all Dichu's strength withered, and he entirely stiffened, so that he could move, neither his foot to go forwards, nor liis hands to strike. Experiencing such a miracle, suddenly Dichuo changed into another man ; and from being proud becoming humble, his fierceness was changed into mildness, from an infidel, he became a be- liever, with all his household, at the preaching of St. Patrick, and lie was baptized in the Christian faith. "^ As his soul was then loosed from the chains of sin, so were his limbs loosed from their heaviness, and all their strength was restored unto them. Thus, he who had been the first and principal opposer of the Faith in Ireland, became its first professor, and even to his latest age, he continued its most devoted follower.
To atone for his former obstinacy, Dichu presented a place, called
Sabhal, now Saul,"' where St. Patrick might erect a church. To this
proposal, the great Irish Apostle most willingly assented. Dichu requested it might be erected in a direction, lying north and south. "' On account of some peculiarity in its position, or use, the name Sab- hall, which means "a barn," was probably applied to the original church. '9
5 All their churches were witliiiiTrichem's "See Miss Corner's of Julia "History
territory, as we are told, by Rev. Dr. Irehnd," p. 16.
Reeves, in Note i, to the "Martyrology of
lJonegal,"at April 29th, p. 114. However, we doubt, if-iU tlieir places may be converted into churches, with which they had been connected.
'"See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Vita Sexta S. Patricii, cap. xxxii. , p. 72.
" His castle is said to have been where
Saul is now built, a village about two miles
from Downpatrick.
" CSullivan Bcare, in his Decades on St.
Patrick, has an account of Dichuo, lib. i. , cap. vii. , and lil). iii. , cap. i.
'3 See iii. Kings xiii. , i to 6.
'* See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Quinta Vita S. Patricii, lib. i. . cap. xxviii. , p. 49-
'= See ibiJ. , n. 30, p. 63.
'' Tlie monastic remains there, about the middle of the last century, are very interest- inyly described, by Walter Harris, in his "Ancient and Present State of the County of Down. " cliap. i. , sect, ii. , pp. 39, 40.
'"Jocelyn confesses his inability to dis-
over tlie re. is^in for such a request; but, he
conjectures, it might have the mystic mean-
ing. that those persons who had been then
adiiicted to the worship of idols might be
persuaded from the northern coldness of un-
belief, to the meridian fervour of the faith
and to the charily of Christ. In the twelfth
century, this church was called Sabhall Pha-
druiijh. that is, the Uarn of P. itrick. See
"
Trias Thiiumaturya," Sexta Vita S. Patricii, cap. xxxii. , p. 72.
Colgan's
'» See Rev. William Reeves' " Ecclesiasti-
April 29. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. S39
This church of Saul was the first founded, by St. Patrick ; its ground was the first consecrated and offered in Ulster, for a religious purpose ; while its donor Dichu was the first convert known, in that part of Ireland. •" The year 432 is said to have been that for its first ecclesiastical appropriation ;" and, it was probably erected, under tlie personal super\ision of St. Patrick and by his band of missionaries. After the foundation of this first Irish church, St. Patrick went northwards, to visit his former master Milcho, or Miliuc ; but, he failed in effecting a conversion, and afterwards, he came back to the house of Dichu, in the plain of Inish. '^ In that beautiful country around, St. Patrick wrought many miracles, and preaclied the Gospel, while he received many professions of the true Faith from the inhabitants. The monarch of Ireland, King Leoghaire,'3 detained two of Dichuo's sons as hostages at that time, and he decreed, that they should be put to death, because their father had given sanctuary and protection to St. Patrick. However, owing to the holy prayers of the Irish . Apostle, both of those young nobles obtained their freedom. We have no furdier account of Dicluio, in the various Lives of St. Patrick ; but, it is reasonable to conjecture, that tlie local dynast passed his days at or near Saul, where it seems probable he died and was buried. In process of time, St. Patrick built there a suitable monastery, to which he introduced monks, who had passed their novititate under him. For their use, not long afterwards, and through his prayers, St. Patrick produced a fountain out of the earth. Over that
to be Abbot. When the holy Apostle had returned from his mission probably in the south of Ireland —he dwelt with Dunnius ' not a few days. ^5 The feast of St. Patrick's disciple Dichuo has been assigned, to the 29th of April, by Father John Colgan. '* At this date, also, he had intended to dilate on Dichuo's Acts. ^7 St. Dicha is set down in Henry Fitzsimon's List of Irish Saints, but the date for his festival is not recorded. '* On the 29th day of April was venerated, Diochu, of Sabhall, as we read in the Martyrology of Donegal. "' It is likely, says the calendarist, that this is the Dichu, son of Trichera, descended from the race of Fiatach Finn, monarch of Erin ; and that it was he, who gave Sabhell, to Patrick ; and that it was on him Patrick bestowed the famous blessing, by which he promised Dichu the kingdom of heaven. 3° As if doubting his own identification, the author then adds : there
cal Antiquities of Down, Connor and Dro- *< It is thought by Colgan, that this holy more," p. 40, n. (I). Also, Appendix man may have tjeen the Moduinus of Maria-
of Saul did he his St. — monastery appoint disciple, Dunnius,
O, pp. 220 to 223, and Appendix LL, p. 377.
"See Colgan's "Trias Thaumattirg. i," Vita Tripartita, orSeptima Vita S. Pairicii, pars. I, cap. xlvii. , p. 124.
"See Ussher's " Britannicarum Eccle-
siarum -Antiquitates," Index Chronoloyicus, A. D ccccxxxil.
nus O'Gorman, who places his feast, at the 29th of May.
'5 gge Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Sexta Vila S. Patricil, cap. xxxii.
Skellig Rock, '"
'' See Lignum Vitae," lib. ii. , cap. Iv. •' "
Topographical Dictionary of Ireland," vol. ii. , pp. 556, 557.
' The accompanying illustration has been drawn from Miss Stokes' admirable work, by the writer, and transferred by William K. Wakenian to the wood, engraved by Mrs. Millard.
» See "Notes on Irish Architecture," by Edwin, third Earl of Duuraven, edited by Margaret Stokes, vol. i. , part i. , sect. ii. Early Christian Monasteries, pp. 26, 27.
In — Generalis . S. . nctorum. " Catalogus
Dr. Todd here
Article iv.
Rev. Dr. At this date, we find Suibni i Scelic.
Kelly, p. xxii. '
'. Edited
by
adds
These Islands are shown, on the Ord-
nance
County of Kerry," sheet 104.
Survey
^ See Lewis' •'
Townland for the Maps
'"A note
more recent hand
[Sc;lig Michael, an island off the coa«t of Kerry] ut videtur. "
by
says,
"The ' . 1. SceiLic rmCnl'
April 28. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 535
of Seilig Mhichel,' or Michael's Rock, with a group of surrounding monastic cells, is built on the northern summit of the Great Skellig. This Island, which rises in the Atlantic Ocean, is about twelve miles distant from the western- most point, and off the coast of Kerry. The lilmd Rock is dedicated to St.
Sceilig Michil Oratory, County of Kerry.
Michael the Archangel, and its steep peak rises over the waves, like the spire of some grand cathedral. ' On this day was venerated, Suibhne, of Scellic,'"" Hcrordins; to the Martyrologies of Marianus O'Gorman and of Dones;il. "
Article V. —St. Coipp, or Copa, Daughter of Diomma. The Bollandists state,' that Copa, the daughter of Dima, is entered in the Martyr- ology ofTallagh, at the 28th of April; but, neither in the Franciscan copy, nor in that one published by Rev. Dr. Kelly, can we meet with such a record. However, a holy woman, who is called Coipp, daughter of Diomma, was venerated, on this day, as the register in the Martyrology of Donegal" indi- cates. A Cipia or Copia, the mother of St. Bite, is said to have been veiled by St. Patrick, and to have been left by him, at the church of F. lphin. J It is not certain, however, that she can be identical with this St. Coipp. '*
"
E'liled by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp. Septima Vita S. Patricii, lib. ii. , cap. xxxix. ,
112, 113. Article v. — "
See "Act. i
p. 13 J, and n. 78, p. 176. See also, p. S. nnctorum," 270.
tomus iii. ,
the
' See what has been when already said,
treating about the festivals of saints similarly n. inied. at the iStli of Januar)', and at the
24th of this month—.
Article vi. ' Edited Rev. Dr. by
xxviii. termitted saints, p. 546.
Among
'
Edited by Dri. Todd and Reeves, pp
112, 113. ^ See
Colgan's
" Trias
Thaumaturga,"
Aprilis
pre-
536 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [April 28.
Article VI. —St. Caurnan, or Caernan, of Cluain-each. In the
Martyrologies of Tallagli,' and of Marianus O'Gorman, at the 28th of April, is recordedSt. CaurnanofCluain-each. However,theBoUandistsassert,"thataSt. Caernaniis de Chiain-eich is entered in those Martyrologies. A monastery ofClumet3 is mentioned, in the Acts of St. Fursey, as having been founded by the holy Abbot. * Tiie reader is referred to his Life, which has been given, in a foregoing vojume. 5 There was a Cairnanus, son to Brandubh, son to Melgi ; and, he was the companion of St. Columkille, when the latter first set out for Britain. ^ The reader is referred, to what has been already stated regarding him, at the 31st 'of January. A saint, who. is called Caernan, of Cluain-each, was venerated on this day, as we find it set down, in the Martyrology of Donegal. '
ArticleVII. —St. ConchindofCill-achaid. Atthe28thofApril,
'
the Martyrology of Tallagh registers Conchind of Cill-achaid. This place
must probably be identical with Kill Achaidh Conchinn, founded first by St. Abban,^ in the district of Corca Duibhne, now Corcaguiney barony, in the
county of Kerry. One Coincheann, a daughter of Ceallach Cualann, died, a. d. 738, according to the " Annals of tlie Four Masters ;"3 but, we cannot feel assured, tliat slie may be identified with St. Conchind of Cill-Achaid. A festival is also recorded to her honour, at the 20th of August. It would seem, the present day, or that already mentioned, must have been her Natalis. This holy woman, called also Conchennia, is said to have been the sister of St. Kentigerna, or Centigerna, who has been already noticed, at the 7th day of Januar). '' Her royal parentage is there mentioned.
Article VIII. —Festival of St. Christopher, Martyr. In the Leabhar Breac copy of St. Angus' Feilire, a festival of St. Christopher is commemorated, at the 28th of April. In a sckolio? i affixed to this account, he is set down as a martyr," who suffered under Decius, with no less than 10,403 martyrs. " In the genuine Martyrology of Bede, as also in the Martyrologies of St. Raban Maur, and in the Manuscripts at Monte Cassino, at St. Maxi- min's and at St. Martin's church of Treves, and in Ado's Manuscript copy belonging to the Queen of Sweden, this feast has been recorded. However,
Kelly, p. xxii. In the Franciscan copy, we read CAUfn«n Ctudin ecli.
'
See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. Ap- rilis xxviii. Among ihe pretermitted saints, p. 546.
'
See his Acts, at the 27th of October, 'See Dr. O'Donovan's edition, vol. i. ,
pp. 340, 341.
'See ''Acta Sanctorum Hiberniae," vii.
'
The
print for Cluainet or Cluainech, alias applied to him of being a cotichent), ren-
' Colgan thinks tliis may have been amis-
strange epithet is
Cluaineach. See "Acta Sanctorum Hibcr- nii! e,"ix. Februaiii. Vita S. Fursiei, n. 10, p. 299.
dered a "doghead," or "wolfhead. " See
Mrs. Jameson's "Sacred and Legendary Art,' p. 449.
• See his Life, at the l6th of
' An Irish is quoted, poem
following eulogy:—
s See
"
January. Lives of the Irish Saints," vol. i. ,
containing
chap, v. , n. 48. '"
See Colgan's Trias Th^iumaturga,"' Quarta Appendix ad Acta S. ColumbjE, cap. X , num. 14, p. 4S8, and p. 501.
' Ediied by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
Tloboclei\ech congliMne Hobe incpiib-oech ciMj-caise Ue^Aipm cemjimef •oa)xle|\ <XiMtim tjile]' Cpipcicep.
112, 113. — . \RTICLE VII.
Thus translated, by
Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xxii. The Franciscan copy, at this
Whitley Stokes;
dale, enters ConchiiTO Cilli <Xchi'D.
Januiirii, n. 8, p —22. Article viii.
tlie
—
Dr.
"He was a cleric with jiurity : he was a pious Christian: before the call without
. April 29. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 537
in a certain document of tlie Carthusians, at Bnixelles, it is set down as the Translation of St. Christoi)her's reh'cs. The Natal day of this holy Martyr is thought to be the 25th of July. 1 There is a beautiful allusion •• to this holy martyr, who is thought to have carried Christ on his shoulders, over a sea ; although the allegorical meaning seems to be, that he carried our Redeemer
in his breast, while wading through a sea of temporal tribulation.
CtofntP-nintf) ©ay of 9pnl.
ARTICLE I. —ST. DIOCHU, OR DICHUS, OF . SABHA1. L, OR SAUL, COUNTY OF DOWN.
{FIFTH CENTURY. \
has been very generally supposed, that the first convert made by the IT illustrious Apostle of Ireland, after his mission had opened in Ulidia, was Dichu,' or Dichus,' or Dicluio,3 sometimes written Diochu, and Dichon,* who lived in that district, comprising the present Barony of Lecale, in the county of Down.
The particulars of his conversion have been already alluded to, in the Life of St. Patrick. ' His early neophyte, having once em- braced the faith, afterwards led a most exemplary life. In the published Martyrology of Tallagh,* however, there is no notice of this pious convert, at the 29th of April; although the Bollandists ' refer to that calendar, and at that same date, for the entry Dichus de Sabhall. In Irish ecclesiastical history, he has attained much celebrity, and his story has often been related. * He de- scended from a distinguished family, who belonged to the northern part of
Ireland; and there he appears to have been born, perhaps, about tiie close of tlie fourth, or the beginning of the fifth, century. His father is said to have had a very numerous family of sons, whose names have been placed on record. Thus, we are informed, that Trichem, a chief of Uladh, had seven sons, viz. , Dichu of Sabhall, or Saul, Laeghaire of Dun, Ailill of Magh-bile, or Moville, Diiirthecht of Aeudruim, or Mahee Island, Eoghan of Cillcleithi, or Kiiclief. Ros of Dundaletbglas, or Downpatrick, and Niall of Cillcleithi, or
reproach over sea his proper name was Sexia Vita S. Patricii, cap. xxxii. , xxxiv. ,
Chiistopher. '
3 See the Bollanilisti' "Acta Sanctorum,"
toiiius iii. , Aprilis xxviii. Among the pre- termitted saints, p. 547.
*In the "Opera" of Vida, tomus ii. , Hymnus 26, th—ere is an Epigram, thus re-
xxxvi. , xxxviii. , pp. 71 to 73.
» See ibid. Quarta Vita S. Palricii, cap.
xxxiii. , p. 39.
'
See ibid. Septima Vita S. Patricii, lib. , iii. , cap. Ivii. , p. 160.
* See ibid. Septima Vita S. Patricii, lib. i. , cap. xlvii. , xlix. , li. , Iii. , pp. 124, 125.
5 See vol. iii. of this work, at tlie 17th of
fering to him
" Christophere,
Pictores Christum dant tibi ferre humeris," &c.
Articlk 1. — ' lie is 50 called, in Cnl-
"
S. P. itricii, cap. xxix. , p. 14. Also, in the Irish Celts," at p. 321.
gan's
"Trias
Thanmatiirg,! ,"
Secunda Vita
Pa'rick
Kennedy's
related, in Legendary Fictions of
:
infixum
eum
qnod usfjue in corde gerebas,
M. Trch, chap, vii. , '
viii.
Neither is it in the Franciscan copy.
'See "Acta Sanctorum,' tomus iii. , Aprilis xxix. Among the pretermitted saints,
p.
611.
« Ihe Fortune of Dichu is
538 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [Apru. ip.
Kilclief. 9 These were of the race of Fiatach Finn, the ancestor of the Dal Fiatach, a strictly Ultonian tribe. The patrimony of Dichuo seems to have been near tl)e southern shore of Lough Cuan, now Lough Strangford, and wliere a small river, formerly called the Slaney, enters into the sea. There, he had a swineherd employed, who, on the arrival of St. Patrick and of Jiis companions, gave the alarm to his master. He thought these strangers were to be regarded as thieves or pirates. Jocelyn relates, that when St. Patrick first opened his Irish mission in the north, which is generally thought to have been A. D. 432, a certain man named Dichu, who was powerful of strength, gigantic of stature, and savage of mind, '° occupied the district in that quarter. " where the Irish Apostle landed in Ulidia. Dichuo " brought dogs to attack the voyagers, but he was unable to succeed in his purpose. As when the prophet sent from Juda to Bethal was opposed by the king sacrificing to idols, and when Jereboam stretciied forth his hand against the man of God, the king's hand withered, so that he was not able to again withdraw it, until the prophet interposed in his behalf ;'3 so, it would seem, such a miracle took ])lace, in the case of Dichuo. St. Patrick and his companions are said, by Probus, to have landed, at an island, called Milclion;''* but, this seems to be a mistake for Mag-Inis, a low-lying island in the district known as Leth- Cathuil, or Lecale. 's Tliis chieftain brandished his sword intending to destroy the saint. But, the Lord interposed his protecting anin, all Dichu's strength withered, and he entirely stiffened, so that he could move, neither his foot to go forwards, nor liis hands to strike. Experiencing such a miracle, suddenly Dichuo changed into another man ; and from being proud becoming humble, his fierceness was changed into mildness, from an infidel, he became a be- liever, with all his household, at the preaching of St. Patrick, and lie was baptized in the Christian faith. "^ As his soul was then loosed from the chains of sin, so were his limbs loosed from their heaviness, and all their strength was restored unto them. Thus, he who had been the first and principal opposer of the Faith in Ireland, became its first professor, and even to his latest age, he continued its most devoted follower.
To atone for his former obstinacy, Dichu presented a place, called
Sabhal, now Saul,"' where St. Patrick might erect a church. To this
proposal, the great Irish Apostle most willingly assented. Dichu requested it might be erected in a direction, lying north and south. "' On account of some peculiarity in its position, or use, the name Sab- hall, which means "a barn," was probably applied to the original church. '9
5 All their churches were witliiiiTrichem's "See Miss Corner's of Julia "History
territory, as we are told, by Rev. Dr. Irehnd," p. 16.
Reeves, in Note i, to the "Martyrology of
lJonegal,"at April 29th, p. 114. However, we doubt, if-iU tlieir places may be converted into churches, with which they had been connected.
'"See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Vita Sexta S. Patricii, cap. xxxii. , p. 72.
" His castle is said to have been where
Saul is now built, a village about two miles
from Downpatrick.
" CSullivan Bcare, in his Decades on St.
Patrick, has an account of Dichuo, lib. i. , cap. vii. , and lil). iii. , cap. i.
'3 See iii. Kings xiii. , i to 6.
'* See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Quinta Vita S. Patricii, lib. i. . cap. xxviii. , p. 49-
'= See ibiJ. , n. 30, p. 63.
'' Tlie monastic remains there, about the middle of the last century, are very interest- inyly described, by Walter Harris, in his "Ancient and Present State of the County of Down. " cliap. i. , sect, ii. , pp. 39, 40.
'"Jocelyn confesses his inability to dis-
over tlie re. is^in for such a request; but, he
conjectures, it might have the mystic mean-
ing. that those persons who had been then
adiiicted to the worship of idols might be
persuaded from the northern coldness of un-
belief, to the meridian fervour of the faith
and to the charily of Christ. In the twelfth
century, this church was called Sabhall Pha-
druiijh. that is, the Uarn of P. itrick. See
"
Trias Thiiumaturya," Sexta Vita S. Patricii, cap. xxxii. , p. 72.
Colgan's
'» See Rev. William Reeves' " Ecclesiasti-
April 29. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. S39
This church of Saul was the first founded, by St. Patrick ; its ground was the first consecrated and offered in Ulster, for a religious purpose ; while its donor Dichu was the first convert known, in that part of Ireland. •" The year 432 is said to have been that for its first ecclesiastical appropriation ;" and, it was probably erected, under tlie personal super\ision of St. Patrick and by his band of missionaries. After the foundation of this first Irish church, St. Patrick went northwards, to visit his former master Milcho, or Miliuc ; but, he failed in effecting a conversion, and afterwards, he came back to the house of Dichu, in the plain of Inish. '^ In that beautiful country around, St. Patrick wrought many miracles, and preaclied the Gospel, while he received many professions of the true Faith from the inhabitants. The monarch of Ireland, King Leoghaire,'3 detained two of Dichuo's sons as hostages at that time, and he decreed, that they should be put to death, because their father had given sanctuary and protection to St. Patrick. However, owing to the holy prayers of the Irish . Apostle, both of those young nobles obtained their freedom. We have no furdier account of Dicluio, in the various Lives of St. Patrick ; but, it is reasonable to conjecture, that tlie local dynast passed his days at or near Saul, where it seems probable he died and was buried. In process of time, St. Patrick built there a suitable monastery, to which he introduced monks, who had passed their novititate under him. For their use, not long afterwards, and through his prayers, St. Patrick produced a fountain out of the earth. Over that
to be Abbot. When the holy Apostle had returned from his mission probably in the south of Ireland —he dwelt with Dunnius ' not a few days. ^5 The feast of St. Patrick's disciple Dichuo has been assigned, to the 29th of April, by Father John Colgan. '* At this date, also, he had intended to dilate on Dichuo's Acts. ^7 St. Dicha is set down in Henry Fitzsimon's List of Irish Saints, but the date for his festival is not recorded. '* On the 29th day of April was venerated, Diochu, of Sabhall, as we read in the Martyrology of Donegal. "' It is likely, says the calendarist, that this is the Dichu, son of Trichera, descended from the race of Fiatach Finn, monarch of Erin ; and that it was he, who gave Sabhell, to Patrick ; and that it was on him Patrick bestowed the famous blessing, by which he promised Dichu the kingdom of heaven. 3° As if doubting his own identification, the author then adds : there
cal Antiquities of Down, Connor and Dro- *< It is thought by Colgan, that this holy more," p. 40, n. (I). Also, Appendix man may have tjeen the Moduinus of Maria-
of Saul did he his St. — monastery appoint disciple, Dunnius,
O, pp. 220 to 223, and Appendix LL, p. 377.
"See Colgan's "Trias Thaumattirg. i," Vita Tripartita, orSeptima Vita S. Pairicii, pars. I, cap. xlvii. , p. 124.
"See Ussher's " Britannicarum Eccle-
siarum -Antiquitates," Index Chronoloyicus, A. D ccccxxxil.
nus O'Gorman, who places his feast, at the 29th of May.
'5 gge Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Sexta Vila S. Patricil, cap. xxxii.
