The Scottish writers thus appearing almost
unanimous
in these accounts, Soller wonders why O'Sheerin wishes to claim St.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v7
43 Otherwise Justinian II. , then ruling for the second time.
44 He died a. d. 701,
45 In the year 707, Pope John VII. filled the Papal chair.
46 See cap. xxii. , xxiii. , xxiv. , in the Bol- landists' " Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii ix. De S. Hildulfo, Confessore, &c, pp. 237, 238.
47 At this time, the Abbot Madaluinus is stated to have presided over the monastery of Moyenmoutier.
2oo LIVES OP THE IRISH SAINTS. [July it.
wereraised,andtransferredtoamorehonourablesituation. 4? Anothertrans- lation took place in 954,5° by the same Adalbert, and in presence ofa great number of the clergy, monks and laity. Then St. Hildulph's remains were taken from where they had previously rested, 51 to the greater church of St. Peter on the sixth of the October Ides—ioth of that month s*—and they were placed in a wooden shrine. At the same time were raised the relics of the holy brothers John and Benignus, and these were buried together in the same tomb. On that day, although dark clouds collected and rain had fallen, tradition reports, that a great calm ensued at the moment of this translation. " It furnished occasion for instituting a special festival in our saint's honour.
It is stated, moreover, that about the year 1028, 54 the remains of St. Hildulph had been removed to the Val de Galilee, where on account of damp they were deposited in the monastic church of St. Die. This afterwards caused a contentionfortheirpossessionbetweenthereligiousofbothhouses. Inthe year 1044, Humbert, a distinguished monk of Moyenmoutier, composed Hymns and metrical Responses in praise of our saint, with many other similar compositions. 55 These Responses are still in the Proper Office of St. Hildulph, and they were sung in a solemn manner on the festivals dedicated to his memory. In 1129 s6 or 1 130, the monks of Moyen-Moutier procured a still more valuable shrine of silver, in which St. Hildulph's remains were enclosed. On this, beautiful figures were wrought, which exhibit the style of art at that period, while these have been described for us, as containing a representation of Hildulph and Erhard, clothed with the Archiepiscopal Pal- lium. " Also,theyareunited,inbaptizingSt. Othilia; ingivingeachother the kiss of peace; also, at the dedication of some church; besides a king, doubt- less Childeric, offering the episcopal or abbatial staff to Hildulph. In the year 161 8, this shrine was repaired, but it is feared in the work of renovation, some of the ancient figures have been removed. 58 The monastery church of St. Hildulph has since become a parish church. In it, the remains of St. Hildulph have been preserved to the present day. Down to the period of the French Revolution, a silver shrine contained the relics of St. Hildulph. Since then it has disappeared. 5?
The French and German Martyrologies commemorate this holy man, at the present day. In some ancient Missals, evidences of his veneration are also to be found. Thus, at the v. Ides of July, the feast of St. Hildulph, Bishop of Treves, is to be found in a Manuscript Missal, belonging to the church of St. Simeon at Treves. This commemoration is repeated, more-
over, in an old Manuscript Missal, belonging to the Monastery of Epternac, and written, at latest, in the twelfth century, with the addition, that not only
48 See Mabillon's "Annates Ordinis S. Benedicti," tomus ii. , lib. xxv. , num. bo, p. 277.
*9 See ibid. , tomus iii. , sect, xlviii. , p. 465.
s° The author of the Tract, "DeSuccesso-
ribus B. Hildulphi in Vosago does not give any date for this occurrence ; but, he tells us, that the oratory of the Blessed Virgin was then in a ruinous state.
s 1 Mabillon incorrectly supposes this to have been the oratory of St. Gregory.
p. 523.
s2
the vii. of t
that month and at A. D. 956 or 963.
sis," lib. ii. , cap. xviii.
56 According to John of Bayon, lib. ii. ,
cap. 96.
57 See Mabillon's "Annates Ordinis S.
Benedicti," tomus i. , lib. xvi. , sect, xv. , p. 507.
s * See the Bollandists' "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii xi. De S. Ilildulfo, Con-
fessore, primum Archiepiscopo Trevirensi
Vosago. Commentarius Prsevius, sect, vi. ,
pp. 219 to 221.
59 See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's "Lives of
accounts have this —
Other translation, on
—he November Ides
53 See Mabillon's "Annates Ordinis S. Benedicti," tomus iii. , lib. xlv. , num. lxxiv. ,
7th
day
54 By John of Bayon, in lib. ii. , cap. 48.
5S See " Chronicon Senonien- Richerius,
; of deinde Abbate Mediani Monasterii in
July ii. ]
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
was he a bishop but an archbishop. At the v. Ides—corresponding with the nth—ofJuly, likewise, an old copy of Usuard's Martyrology, belonging to
60
the Monastery of Luxeu, has an account of his deposition, at that date.
at the nth of Likewise is his feast at this day, in the Lubec and Cologne imprint6* of
in 6 ' as edited Also, Ado,
Mosander, his feast Usuard. In Arnold Wion's Benedictine
by
occurs,
June.
Sausay's this date. In the " Menologium Scoticum "6s of Thomas Dempster, his feast
"
Martyrologium Gallicanum,''
6* and in other
6 3 in
his feast is set down at
Martyrology, works,
at this 66 The feast for the Translation of St.
day. — Hildulph's
is also
Relics was held, on the vi. Ides—corresponding with the 8th of November, as may be seen in Father John Baptist Soller's edition of Usuard's Martyr- ology enlarged, by additions from the Luxeu copy and from Greven.
recorded,
dead without works," and since a dead faith is no faith, this blessed prelate and preacher earnestly persuaded believers unto a holy and sincere faith by their diligent practice of good works. His example was as a light to those sitting in darkness. He lived solely for God, and loved to work out the Divine will. With senti- ments of most perfect resignation, and with the most complete abandonment of himself to God, giving him glory for the past, and commending to him all
concerns for the future, he breathed forth his pious soul at the moment of departure, and then received his eternal reward.
Article II. —St. Drostan, Confessor, in Scotland. [Sixth and Seventh Centuries. '] The learned Bollandist, John Baptist Soller, gives us the
Since faith, according to the Apostle James, is
"
Actsofthis — in six
saint, comprised paragraphs,
atthe nthof
July.
1 Hetells
—t Dempster elsewhere characterized by the Bollandist as a faithless us, tha
writer has placed the festival of this holy man at the 9th of November, in his Scottish Menology. Dempster makes him an uncle by the mother's side to King Eugenius. Again, he has placed the festival of Drostan, monk, at St.
Andrews, in Scotland, on the 14th of December. 2 Nor does he assign any reason for placing a St. Drostan, at both these days, and in a different form of words ; neither does he remark at either of those days a distinction between both, or whether they be one and the same person. Soller imagines, that Dempster, who raked together many things, had disposed these festivals according to his usual custom, by a mere arbitrary process. Ferrarius appears to have inserted the words of Dempster, and with little alteration, in his general Catalogue. 3 At this date, notices of him may be found in Rev. S.
theSaints,"vol. vii. ,JulyII,p. 280.
60 Thus " S. Hildulfi Archi- : Depositio
pnesulis, Mediano monasterio quiescentis, gloriosae sanctitatis viri. "
:
6sThus "TruerisHildulphiArchiepis-
61
episcopi et confessoris.
Scottish Saints,—" p. 205. »
62
tomus hi. , Julii xi.
fessore in Scotia, pp. 198 to 200.
piscopi
et confessoris. "
2 We find notices of a St. Drostan, son to Conanrod, the King of Demetia's son, by Fyn Wennem, daughter to King Aidus of Scotland, who flourished in the time of St. Columba. See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's " Life of St. Columba," lib. i. , cap. 9, n. (d), p. 35.
3 Arnold Wion enumerates him the among
monks who were sons of kings,—"quorum locus professions ignoratur. " "Lignum
Thus
Thus : "Treviris B. Hildulfi Archie-
Article ii. See "Acta Sanctorum,"
:
"Treviris, S. Hildulfi, "
ejus
urbis
63 Thus " Treviris S. Hildulfi episcopi
:
et confessoris, qui cum gregem sibi commis- sum sanctitate vitse et sapientiae doctrina
rexisset, taedio hujus vitse episcopatum abdi- cans, in saltu Vosagi multorum pater effectus
monachorum, clarus miraculis, quievit in "
pace.
64 Thus : "Treviris S. Hildulfi episcopi
et confessoris," &c.
copi °6
VV. "
See Bishop Forbes' "Kalendars of
De S. Drostano, Con-
202 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [J uly i i .
Baring-Gould'swork. * Sollerwasundersomedoubt,whetherSt. Drostan's
feast should be assigned to the nth of July. However, being moved by the
authority of Sirinus, who gave a short history of this saint,s and even by that 6
of Dempster, he appeals to the consent of churches belonging to his nation, as also, finding the festival of this saint, assigned to this day, in two editions of the English Martyrology, by Wilson. 7 Sufficient evidence has been estab- lished,toassertthevenerationduetothissaint. Sirinuswillnotallow,how- ever, that the Benedictine Order, to which Wilson says our saint belonged, had been established in Scotland, in the sixth century. Until this time, the rule of St. Columba, Abbot of Iona, prevailed there ; and even Mabillon does not enumerate Drostan among saints belonging to the Benedictine Order. There are conflicting accounts, also, regarding our saint. Thus, John Major 8 tells us, that Aidan, King of the Scots, grieved so much at the death of St. Columba,3 that he survived that saint only for a short time. Eugenius then succeededhiminthekingdom. Inthesetimes,St. Drostan,whowasuncle to the king on the mother's side, led a monastic life. He was famous for his miracles. From the obscurity of his manner in expressing himself, how- ever, Major leaves us in doubt, as to whether Drostan was an uncle on the mother's side to Aidan or to Eugene. But, Lesley explains this more clearly He says, that Drostan was uncle on the mother's side to Aidan the King, and
that disdaining the fleeting things of this world, he retired to a monastery. By the example of his great sanctity, he drew many to the profession of a
good life. 10 Some particulars, also, are to be gleaned from Hector Boetius, regarding this saint. 11 The Scottish writers generally agree, that St. Drostan flourished about the end of the sixth century, and at the beginning of the seventh.
The Scottish writers thus appearing almost unanimous in these accounts, Soller wonders why O'Sheerin wishes to claim St. Drostan, as an Irishman. Speaking about St. Drostan, Sirin says, he was born and educated in Ireland, as also was his sister Fedhelmia. She was mother to King Aidan, and a daughter to Fethelmius, a nobleman of Connaght origin. These par- ticulars are gleaned from a book, treating on the Mothers of the Kings and illustrious and from the Life of St.
Abbot. 12
in the opinion of O'Sheerin, it is most probable, this St. Drostan lived for the most part in Ireland, and that he was identical with that saint, to whom a parochial church had been dedicated. This was called Kill-Drostan,^ or the "cellofDrostan,"inElphindiocese. 1* TothesestatementsofSirinus,Soller
Cormac,
See his "Historia Majoris Britannia? tarn Angliae quam Scotiae," lib. ii. , cap. vii. , p. 68,
9 See his Life in the Sixth Volume of this work, at the 9th of June, Art. i.
,0 See his work, " De Origine, Moribus, et Rebus Gestis Scotorum," lib. iv. , num. xlix. , p. 145.
"In "Scotorum Hystorise," lib. ix. , fol. clxxvii.
"
His feast occufs on the 26th of March, estate sprevit mundi vanitates, ibidem when a brief notice may be found in the
Irishmen,
Wherefore,
Vitse," lib. iv. , cap. xxvi.
4 See "Lives of Saints," vol. vii. , July
II, p. 278.
5 Taken from the Breviary of Aberdeen.
6"
See Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Sco-
torum,"tomus i. , lib. iv. , num. 375, p. 206. 7 The following is Wilson's account as
8
" commemoratio S. Dro'stani Confessoris, qui in eodem regno natus e regio sanguine, et
rendered by Sirinus into Latin :
In Scotia,
Aidani regis avunculus existens, in juvenili
monasteriumingressus, S. Benedicti habitum suscepit, in quo statu adeo in humilitate et
perfectione excelluit, ut in Scotia Albiensi et Hibernia celeberrimae famse fuerit, donee plenus sanctitate et miraculis, diem clausit circa annum Christi DC; ubi multa fuere antiquitus altaria et sacella in ejus honorem dicata. " These words are not to be found, however, in the later edition of Wilsons work, published in 1640.
Third Volume of this work. His chief
festival, however, is on the 13th of Decem- ber.
' 3 By some this is placed in the neighbour- hood of Elgin. See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's
"
Lives of the Saints," vol. vii. , July 1 1, p. 278.
,4 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii xi. De S. Drostano, num. 4, p.
199.
July i i . ]
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
203
adds, that he had no means for calling them in doubt, nor for confirming
them ; although he could not conceal the fact, that no commemoration of St.
Drostan occurred in the Irish Catalogues of Saints, collected with great
diligence by the Jesuits, Fathers Henry Fitzsimon and Stephen White.
However, he is willing to allow a claim of the Irish to this saint, if Scotch-
men do not object ; but, he says, both Ireland and Scotland may challenge
St. Drostan, for many reasons adduced by Sirinus. What more may be learned
regardingSt. Drostan,canbefoundintheBreviaryofAberdeen. Insub-
stance, this work treats thus regarding the saint. It is there stated, that St.
Drostan was descended from a royal race of the Scots. In early youth he
cultivated pious dispositions. When he had come to a mature age, having
heard concerning the mystery of our Lord's Incarnation and Passion, being
filled with the Holy Ghost, he endeavoured to serve the Almighty, with all
the affection of his soul. His parents found, that the boy Drostan was con-
secrated to God by a deep affection. They sent him to be instructed in
liberal studies to his uncle by the mother's side, St. Columba, who then
dwelt in Ireland. Afterwards, our saint took the religious habit at Dal-
quongale, as stated in the Aberdeen Breviary, but in Dal-Congaile,as corrected
in a marginal note. On the death of his superior, St. Drostan was elected Abbot,
in his place. While he filled this position, for some time, Drostan laboured to
advance the spiritual life of those monks, over whom he presided, by that exam-
ple of life and doctrine he set them. Some time having elapsed, he betook him-
selftoaremoteScottishdesert. However,hedidnotforsaketheflockcom-
mitted to his charge; but rather, he committed it to the supreme Pastor of souls.
There he led the life of a hermit. He built a church, in a place called Glenu-
x
Eske. s According to the Gospel precepts, he thus left all things for Christ.
Drostan cared not for the dignities of this earth, nor for regal honours, which he
might enjoy, owing to the advantages of his birth ; he renounced an earthly kingdom and a human principality, that he might run to the embraces of his Saviour. A certain priest, named Sion, being deprived of sight, was restored to its use, through St. Drostan's merits. The holy man became a despiserof the world, a follower of Christ, a lover of the desert, a conqueror over the old enemy of our race. He always invoked Divine assistance against the snares of his latent enemy, who endeavoured to lay nets of temptation for him. He alwaysaspiredtothejoysofHeaven. And,thathemightneveryieldtothe devil, he bore a severe martyrdom of corporal maceration, while his heart overflowed with compunction of spirit. Through the way of this present life, he aimed at the rewards of life eternal, and the holy man deserved to enter into a deathless life. Having finished his mortal career, in all holiness and
5 ' 16
there to enjoy the happiness of all true saints. 1 ? Owing to his imperfect Acts, Soller did not care to investigate more closely the age in which St. Drostan lived, or theworksheperformed. Thatlearnedwriter,however,wishedtobemore exactly instructed, regarding what place or church he had formerly inhabited, where he had been buried, or with what peculiar honour he had been vene- rated ; since that general consent—asseverated by Dempster—bore as little weight with him as the announcement, already alluded to, that Drostan was venerated at St. Andrews, in Scotland. It would not be easy to discover, whether the church of Aberdeen, truly or falsely, celebrates St. Drostan's festival at the 14th of December. At the nth day of July, Camerarius enters
purity, he departed to "The bosom of his Father and his God,
j s Otherwise Glen-esk. 16
written in a
1? See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus Hi.
xi. De S. Drostano, num. 5, 6, pp 20°-
Gray's "Poems," Elegy Country Churchyard.
Julii i99>
2o 4 LIVES OP THE IRISH SAINTS.
a feast 18 for St. Drostan, Abbot and Confessor. T 9 He is also invoked in a
Litany.
30 The death of this man has been holy
21 placed by Wilson,
Culdee
at the year 600, while Dempster
have notices of this holy man, who was especially venerated in their country.
23 and
Article III. —St. Sigisbert, Comfessor, and St. Placidus, Martyr, Dissentis, Switzerland. {Sixth and Seventh Centuries? ^ Although one of these holy servants of Christ was born in Ireland and the other was a native of Switzerland ; yet, as their companionship in life, and the church honours paid to their memory, give both a claim to be remembered on this day, so it is intended to relate some particulars regarding them. Both these holy men were especially venerated in the Grisons, Switzerland ; but, their existence seems to have been unknown to all the other preceding Martyrolo-
gists, until Ferrarius drew the account from the Records of their church at
Chur, and from their Proper Office there recited. The Bollandists give their
Acts 2 at the present date. 3 The notices, as contained in the Bollandists,
are in part, however, of a legendary character. There is a notice of these
saintsinRev. S. Baring-Gould'swork. * Thereisanaccountoftheminthe
DisentisAnnals. 5 Theformerofthesesaintsmusthavebeenborntowardsthe
close of the sixth century. St. Sigisbert is held to have been an Irishman by
birth. Thenamehereceivedinbaptismwasprobablydifferent. Somehave
supposed, that his Teutonic name refutes the supposition of his having been
an Irishman. 6 as we have seen in numberless the names of But, instances,
Irish saints have been changed into forms more familiar to people living on
the Continent. His education is said to have been received at Bangor, and
this is probable enough if we accept the succeeding statements regarding
18
Thus : "Sanctus Drostanus Abbas et Confessor. "
" See Bishop Forbes' " Kalendars of Scot- tish Saints," p. 239.
20
torum. "
2
In ten paragraphs.
3 See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii
xi. I)e SS. Placido Martyre et Sigisberto Confessore in Tenitorio Curiensi in Rhretia. Sylloge ex Breviario Curiensi et Ferrario, pp. 238 to 240.
* See "Lives of the Saints," vol. vii. , July 11, pp. 280, 281.
s See in " Die Wallfartsorte d. Schweiz,"
by Burgener, 1867.
6 At this very day was celebrated the feast
of St. Dathi, Bishop of Ravenna, as Galesi- nus states. The form of his name is
According to Iladdan and Stubbs, Councils and Ecclesiastical Documents, relating to Great Britain and Ireland," vol.
"
ii. , part i. , App. C. 21 "
In his Martyrologium Anglicanum. " 22 In his "HistoriaEcclesiasticaGentis Sco-
torum," tomus i. , lib. iv. , num. 375, p. 2C6. 23 In his work, " De Origine, Moribus et
Rebus Gestis Scotorum," lib. iv. , num. xlix. , p. 145.
s* In his "Historia Britannia? tarn Majoris
and this is no that yet proof
r.
Anglise quam Scotiae," lib. ii. , cap. vii. , p. 69. Edinburgi, —1740, 4to.
altogether Irish,
he was a native of Ireland.
'
Article ill. He states: "In territo-
rio Curiensi —Platidi martyris et Sigisberti Confessori? . " "Catalogus Gcneialis Sane-
7 His Lifeisset downat the 21st ofNo- vember.
2*
has it, at a. d. 606.
The Scottish writers
heismentioned
styled Drostanus, or Dronstanus, the former being the more approved form for writing and pronouncing his name. Although Sirin remarks, that the Breviary of Aberdeen is sufficiently filled with errors, we are obliged to give what it states respecting our saint. We are told, towards the end, that the bones of this holy confessor, Drostan, were buried at Aberdeen, in a stone tomb ; and that there, many, who were afflicted with divers kinds of diseases, had been restored to health through his merits.
Thus,
by John Lesley
John Major,
him. When St. Columbanus? and St. Gaul 8 went on their
into Switzerland, Sigisbert is said to have accompanied them, forming one of
8 9
See his Life, at the 16th of October. This is stated, by an old writer of St.
apostolic
mission
[July
24 whomheis by
July 1 1• ] LIVESOFTHEIRISHSAINTS. 2 5
the twelve missionaries, who then left their native country. 9 According to some accounts, St. Sigisbert was a disciple of St.