Those, who were living to a comparatively recent period,
remembered
to have seen it, and they described St.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v8
Leiter from Very Rev.
Thomas Wakeman on the wood, engraved by Mrs.
Millard.
14 Such information was communicated to the writer, by Mr. Michael Donegan.
'5 It is shown, as containing 12,8830. *'• 7A ~ and Very Rev. Dr. Stokes, T. C. D.
" *° on the Ordnance Survey Townland Maps
for the County of Longford," Sheets, 12, 17, 18, 21, 22.
Such
his letter by Very Rev. Thomas Langan, D. D.
16 See "
land," vol. i. , p. 29.
Gazetteer of Ire-
2I See "Peerage of Ireland," Lodge's
vol. i. , p. 146.
" This is noted in the Annals of All
Saints.
Parliamentary
*» They have been lately repaired by the Board of Public Works, and are represented
D. D.
l8 Among those who maintain this opinion
are the Very Rev. John Canon Monaghan, D. D. , P. P. of Banagher, in his "Records relating to the Dioceses of Ardagh and Clon- macnoise," pp. 41, 42; as also, the Very Rev. Father Gilligan, P. P. of Newtown Cashel, within whose parish Inishboffin, All Saints' Island, and Inis—Cleraunn or
Rev.
,9 Such is the opinion of Rt. Rev. John Healy, D. D. , Assistant Bishop of Clonfert,
Quaker's Island are situated while
Father Geoghegan, of Kenagh, likewise
Langan, D. D. , Athlone, to the writer, and dated July 25th, 1890.
is the opinion expressed in
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
[August i,
by Augustine MacGraidin, a Canon of that house, and who was also Abbot. In the commencement of the fifteenth century, a. d. 1405, he died. 23 An abstract of those Annals is still to be found, among the manuscripts belonging
to Trinity College, Dublin,2* and we are informed, that the work itself is still 2
preserved in the Bodleian Library, Oxford. * After the suppression of religious houses, the Abbey and its possessions were granted to Sir Patrick
Barnwall. 26 The very old church ruins,
remaining
on All Saints' 2 ? show Island,
^^^2
Old Church on Island of All Saints, Lough Ree.
that Cyclopean masonry was used, and a square-headed door is yet to be
of a
28 In the Island is called Irish,
in that
Oilean na Naomh, 29 and it lies within the Parish of Cashel.
seen,
portion
gable remaining.
How long St. Rioch lived on that Island on which he had erected his
monastery is not known. It is generally presumed, however, that his mortal career closed in that house of his foundation. It is stated,30 likewise, that St. Rioch died and was buried in Kilkenny. Over the grave his disciples
23 On the Wednesday next after the Feast of All Saints in that year. He was buried
Townland Maps for the County of Long-
in that
" Writers of Ireland. "
illustration
from a
Abbey.
present
photo-
See Harris' vol. Ware, iii. ,
28 The
graph taken by J. T. Hoban, Atldone, and procured for the writer—through Very Rev. ThomasLangan,D. D. representsthestate of this ruined building as it now appears. The photograph has been copied and drawn by William F. Wakeman on the wood, en- graved by Mrs. Millard.
p. 87.
34 Sir James Ware had a part of those
Annals in manuscript, with some additions made after the death of Augustine Ma- graidain . See " De Scriptoribus Hiberniae,"
lib. i. , cap. xi. , p. 75.
25 Such is the statement of Archdall ; but,
I do not find his cited authority of Ware's "
Writers, p. 87, authenticated. See Mo- nasticon Hibernicum, p. 442 and n. (w. )
26
See Harris' Ware, vol. ii, "Anti-
quities of Ireland," chap, xxxviii. , p. 265. ''It is shown on the " Ordnance Survey
Book i. , chap, xii. ,
ford," Sheet 26.
—
29 See "Letters and Extracts containing
Information relative to the Antiquities of
the County of Longford, collected dining the Progress of the Ordnance Survey in
1837. " Letter of John O'Donovan, dated Longford, May 22nd, 1837, p. 53.
30 By Mr. John Hogan.
August i. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 13
had erected a church, which was dedicated to his memory. In process of time, that church became a ruin ; but, its site is indicated, on a map of the
1
supposed ancient Parish of St. Rioch. 3
Notwithstanding the year of our saint's death being uncertain, Colgan
infers from the Acts of St. Aedus, that it should appear, he lived after the year 530. 32 Dr. Lanigan supposes, that the St. Rioch, who was con- temporary of Bishop Aedus, and who died, a. d. 589, could not have been St. Mel's brother, nor his companion, when sailing to Ireland, as thought
about a. d, 454. 33
The Martyrology of Salisbury has placed the festival of St. Rioch, at the
6th of February, in common with that of his reputed brothers, Mel,
Melchus and Munis. As we have seen, Colgan publishes their acts at that
day. But, according to other Irish Martyrologists, our saint's festival is assigned to the 1st of August, la the Irish Calendars, our saint has the
of Mo, or "
published edition of the Martyrology of Tallagh, there is no mention of a festival instituted in honour of a saint bearing this name, at the 6th or viii. of the February Ides ; but, at the Kalends or 1st of August,34 we there find the feast of " Morioc, Innse Lugeni. " The Martyrology of Donegal,3s at the same date, records him as Moriog, Bishop, of Inis-Mac-Ualaing, as also the
more recent Calendar. 36 Under the head of Inis-Meic-Ualaing, Duald
8
endearing prefix
my,"
added to his name. In the original
Mac Firbis enters, Moriocc, bishop of Inis-maic-Ualaing,37 at August ist. 3
His name and feast occur, also, in the Scottish Kalendar of Drummond. 39 ""
parish,
called after his name. 4°
On this latter day, also it appears, this saint's patron was formerly
observed, at the site of his old church in Walkin's Green, City of Kil-
kenny. Down to a comparatively recent period, a special veneration was
paid to St. Rioch, as one of the tutelar saints, connected with St. Mary's
"
parish, in that city. His "patron day was observed on the first Sunday of
August, even to so late a period as 1830. It is probable, that observance had been some remnant of St. Rioch's ancient festival, in that old Kilkenny
31 Lithographed by Moore of Cork, de- signed by Mr. John Hogan, on a scale reduced from the Ordnance Survey Maps,
39 Thus at Kal. Augusti : "In Hibernia S—anctorum Confessorum Rioc et Mothuu. "
in Kalendarium Drummondiense, Bishop
""
Kalendars of Scottish Saints,"
and published in Transactions of the Kil- kenny and South-East of Ireland Archseo- logical Society," vol. ii. New Series, No-
Forbes' p. 20.
<° Mr. Hogan, who furnishes the foregoing information, also adds in a note: "The 32 See Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum Hi- parish festival was called the 'patron,' from the circumstances of the religious cere- monies being performed on that day in honour of the patron of the church or parish. The patron festival (to use a technical term of ecclesiastical phraseology) being always
vember, 1859, No. 24, opposite p. 475.
bemise," vi. Februarii. Vita S. Riochi, p.
268.
33 See Rev. Dr. Lanigan's
"
Irish Saints," &c, pp. xi v. , xxx.
35 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
208, 209.
36 In the Irish Calendar, at the Calends or
" 1st day of August, I find, "moruocc efp interne UAbAing. "—Ordnance Survey Office Copy, in the Royal Irish Academy. Com- mon Place Book, F, p. 67.
37 Another name for Inis-Bofin in Lough Ree.
Ecclesiastical History of Ireland," vol. i. , chap, viii. , sect.
xiii. , p. 419.
34 See Rev. Dr. Kelly's "Calendar of
'
a double of the first class with an octave/
38 See "
of the Royal Irish
Proceedings
Academy," Irish Manuscript Series, vol. i. ,
part i. , pp. 114, 115.
the public worship was accordingly per- formed with unusual solemnity, and in most
places the day was observed as a 'holiday. ' I have been informed by a native of the
place, that so late as twenty-five years since no person was known to work in the entire
''
parish of Mallardstown on the 25th July,
the patron day. Since the Reformation, the observances of the festival were trans-
'
Sunday within the Octave. ' After much enquiry, I cannot find, that these patrons have been observed elsewhere, than on the sites of ancient parish churches.
ferred to the
John Hogan.
42 It was situated in the High Town.
43
Tiie present parochial boundaries, ably illustrated and accurately pointed out by Mr. Hogan on his accompanying map, show in his opinion, the different compartments, as originally united, and forming one ecclesi-
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [August i.
The ancient parish of St. Rioch, in Kilkenny city, is supposed to have
been merged into the present parishes of St. Mary, St. Patrick, St. Canice
and St. 1 The former church of St. Rioch, in that is
John. * parish, supposed
to have been located within the churchyard, still called after him. *
2
It is
supposed, that a local complication and a peculiar dovetailing of modern parishes already designated afford sufficient evidence for showing~a com- paratively recent arrangement, and also the probable extent of St. Rioch's old parish. ** Whether the suppression of St. Rioch's church had been coeval with or subsequent to the abolition of his parish may be questioned ; but, the latter appears more probable, according to Mr. Hogan's opinion. ** When St. Mary's parish church passed out of the hands of Catholics, they shortly afterwards erected a chapel outside the town wall of Kilkenny city. To this modern structure, they carried the traditional observances and rites of their olden church ; and among these may be traced a special veneration for St. Rioch. A full-sized oil painting** of this saint had been preserved in James'-street Chapel, down to the year 1804.
Those, who were living to a comparatively recent period, remembered to have seen it, and they described St. Rioch as being represented, seated on a rock, in the midst of a forest and clothed in a loose scarlet robe, with a dog fawning and apparently engaged in licking the sores and bruises of his feet. *6 That painting has been super- seded by another of St. Rioch, and presenting greater artistic pretensions. *? From the description which Mr. Hogan received regarding the first-mentioned picture, he apprehended that the Irish St. Rioch, in the disturbance of the
There is no trace of any such observances at Jerpoint, Kells, Callan, Knocktopher, &g. ,
those being abbatial, not parochial, establish- ments. "—"TheJournal of the Kilkenny and South-East of Ireland Archaeological So- ciety," 1858-1859. New Series, vol. ii. , part ii. , p 478. \
''
the patron day crowds from remote and
neighbouring parishes visited the church,
*'
This is shown on a map traced by Mr.
found in the vicinity of nearly every ancient parish church. These institutions being
perverted from their original simplicity to purposes of superstition, profanity and dis- sipation, became public nuisances, and they w—ere in consequence generally suppressed. "
" note. Kilkenny," &c, part i. , p. 22,
45 So designated, in Rocque's map of Kil- kenny.
46 Nothing is at present known, regarding
astical district, which may safely be recog- the original history of this picture. It is ni-ed as this saint's ancient parish. The now impossible to determine, whether it
same w—riter allows, that i—t may be a difficult
if nol
may not have been transferred, with other
m Uter
to determine with
things that
have come down to our
impossible
any degree of certainty, the precise period
when . St. Rioch's ancient parish had been divided, or when his church had been
times, from St. Mary's Church to James'-street Chapel. From time immemorial, it had been suspended at the epistle side of the
suppressed. It is thought, however, that
the fust encroachment on St. Rioch's
ecclesiastical district took place nfter the
English obtained a settlement in Kilkenny,
and some time subsequent to the Anglo- decoration of an altar which had been Norman Inv. ision of Ireland. From the
premises, he seems to establish so satis- factorily, Mr. Hogan concludes, that the abolition of St. Rioch's parish must have
erected, and which still remains in the old chapel. The subjects were the Crucifixion ;
been accomplished, when Hugh Rufus, been dedicated ; aud a full-length painting
fiw Engluh bishop of Os^ory, governed of St. Rioch, patron of tue ancient parish*
that see.
This later painting stili exists, and it re- 44 The same writer has the following presents the saint in a pilgrim's garb, with remarks, on certain local observances pre- a flowing scarlet tunic over the habit of a
valent in the county of Kilkenny : "On religious,towhichthe scallop-shell isattached,
dressed the graves of their departed relations, *'
and performed pilgrimages or stations round the 'holy well,' one of which is to be
altar, until Bishop Lanigan's time.
47 Bishop Lanigan wrote to a gentleman, living in Portugal, and who was his friend, to order three pictures to be painted for the
the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin, to
represent the title by which the church had
August i. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. IS
8
of Montpellier; who died about the year 1327, and that, knowing nothing of our Irish patron, the foreign artist seems to have taken it for granted, that Roach of Montpellier,
was the saint required. Accordingly, it is surmised that he copied a picture for Kilkenny from some Continental original of the French pilgrim. «9 The old families s° of Kilkenny, were the principal benefactors of the former chapel ; its clergy were also natives of Kilkenny ; and, in consequence, the ecclesiastical traditions of the town were more directly transmitted and more faithfully preserved in the beginning of this century than since. During such period, the devout clients of St. Rioch assembled annually, to hold his festival day, and on the site of his old church. It seems evident, that their veneration is but the vestige of a more ancient and extensive practice. We are informed, by Mr. Hogan. tha' since his paper was written, the picture of St. Rioch has been purchased by the Rev. M. Birch, P. P. , for Muckalee parish chapel, so that the memory of this saint has almost perished, in the
1
very place where it was specially designed for preservation^
It may fairly be asserted, that sympathy with the motive power of a man's life is a real necessity for his biographer ; yet, even this cannot avail, in
many of the previous and subsequent notices, since a defective knowledge of his subject must obstruct the writer's treatment too frequently, although he should most desire elucidation from all extraneous sources. Accordingly, we may fairly state, that it was only possible here, as in various similar cases, to set down a few recorded events, regarding this faithful and holy missionary's career.
Article II. —The Three Sons of Luissen, — and viz. , Liber, Failbhe,
of In—
is-mor. Saints Liberius, Albeus and Falbeus
times, had been confounded with St. Roach,*
Oilbhe,
are Latinized were brothers. We find entered, in the Mattyrology of
1
Tallagh, at the 1st of August, a veneration paid to Tri meic Lussen of
with a girdle round the waist. This figure stands erect in a forest, with his left foot resting on a rock, whilst a pilgrim's staff is held in the left hand, a travelling wallet being suspended from a hook near the top of the staff. To the wallet he appears to point attention, with the fourth finger of his
right band. The great peculiarity of this painting is an Irish expression of the coun- tenance, which is homely and familiar. An
"
Eques Foschini, Ulissipon- ensis, Inv. et Pinxit, A. D. 1807," is to be found attached to those three pictures already
mentioned.
48 He has been honoured on the 16th
August, on both sides of the Alps, since the middle of the fourteenth century. It is related of him, that falling sick in one of his pilgrimages, he crawled into a neighbouring forest, where a dog used to lick his sores. See Rev. Alban Butler's "Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and other principal Saints," vol. viii. , August xvi.
49 The inscription already given should seem to imply, that Foschini was designer as well as the painter. This Mr. Hogan considered more than doubtful, as all the French engravings and modern lithographs
of St. Rioch invariably repres nt him as
precisely resembling the St. Rioch on the
inscription,
oil painting now existing in the old church, "
See Kilkenny," &c, parti. , pp. 23, 24. s° Such as the Langtons, Comerfords,
Maddens, Shees, and many others, 5t Mr. Ho^an observes, moreover
the sacrilege, founded an altar or chapel in St. Mary's Church, 'and dedicated it to
him,' where his memory was perpetuated and honoured, whence both were sub-
sequently transferred to St. Mary's Chapel, where unfortunately, they now no longer exist. " For the substance of the foregoing
information, and for these notices, the reader is referred to ** Topographical Illus- trations of the Southern and Western
" May we not safely infer, that the Bishop who abolished his parish, and suppressed his church (to use the sarcasm of Ledwich), 'to appease the tutelar saint, and to atone for
Suburbs of Kilkenny. " by Mr. John Hogan, "
in Proceedings and Papers of the Kilkenny and South -East of Ireland Archaeological Society," vol. ii. New Series, November,
1859, No. 24, pp. 468 to 480. 1
Article II. — Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xxxi,
as their names
:
'
1 6 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
[August i.
Innsi moir : i. e. , Liber and Failbe and Olbe. So they are called in this
Calendar. * AccordingtotheMartyrologiesofAengusandofMarianus,these were sons to Luscen or Luscin. Whether the latter was the real name of
their father, or only an appellation bestowed on him, may be questioned. An Irish Manuscript calls the former of these saints, Mac-an-daill or the son of Luscus. 3 TheyaresaidtohavebeenconnectedwithInismore. Theexact position of this island does not appear to have been correctly ascertained. However, it is thought to have been situated in some part of Southern or Western Munster. Another supposition makes it identical with the Island of Inismore, where St. Senan erected a Monastery/ A great number of our Islands went formerly by the name of Inis-more or Great Island. A St. Liberius is mentioned, as one of those disciples, left by St. Senan s in Inismore monastery, after his own departure from Inis-caorach. 6 From the circumstances of their place, and the date of their festival, Colgan is inclined to consider these saints, as disciples of St. Senan, when he lived at Inismore, and before he became Abbot over Iniscattery. If such were the case, we are furnished with a few meagre notices regarding St. Liberius, who is also called Libernus. It is stated,? that St. Senan was at Iniscarra, about a. d. 532, and he appears at no very remote period afterwards, to have founded his establishment at Inismore. That Inis-mor, however, in which Senan founded a monastery, lay far towards the West, and near the Atlantic. 8 A well or spring was found at Inismore, and it supplied the purest water for monastic purposes ; while, at the same time, water used in the celebration of the Divine Mysteries was always taken from that fountain. We are told, that while St. Liberius dwelt at Inismore with his disciples, a certain woman approached the fountain, to wash some garments belonging to her child. A saint, named Sedna or Sedonius,9 who was then or afterwards a Bishop, on seeing this desecration, gave vent to an exclamation, expressive of his anger. St. Liberius or Libernus asked him what had taken place, when his companion related the circumstance of the water being defiled, owing to that woman's action. The saints were moved to indignation, and with intemperate zeal, they invoked punishment upon the woman and her offspring. At this moment, the child, playing near the sea-margin, fell suddenly over a pre- cipitous bank, and was submerged in the waters. The distracted mother ran to St. Senan, and told him how her offspring had been deprived of life, through the imprecations of his disciples. On hearing this, the holy Abbot bitterly reproved his brethren, as being guilty of homicide. He ordered Liberius, who seemed to be a principal instrument in causing the child's death, to do penance on a certain rock, which overlooked the ocean, while
2
In the Book of Leinster copy they are thus entered : Uru rneic lurran Hip mopi i. e. bber* ocur- paloe ocur Olbe.
3 See " Acta Sanctorum Hi- Colgan's
n. 16 p. 539, {recti,) 535.
s See his Life, in the Third Volume of
this work, at the 8th of March, Art. i.
6 See
bernue," viii. Martii. Secunda Vita sive berniae," viii. Martii. Vita Secunda seu
Supplementum Vitae S. Senani, n. 18, p. 540. {recti,) 563.
4 Colgan does not consider Inismore to have been the same as that Island in the
Supplementum Vitae S. Senani, cap. xxvii. , p. 534, {recti,) 530.
Shannon—
name—
astical vol. ii. , History oflreland,''
chap, x. ,
bearing
a like
between sect, i. , 11. 10, p. 5.
the of Limerick and city
8
berniae," Martii viii. Secunda Vita sive
Supplementum Vitae S. Senani, n. 16, p.
539.
» See some notices of him in the
Third Volume of this work, at the 10th March, Art. i.
Iniscattery; but, he is under an impression, that it must have been another, near to or within the ancient territory of Corcobhaiscinn, in Killaloe Diocese. He remarks, moreover, that it may have been even a different Island, bearing the name of Inismore. See ibid. ,
See Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum Hi-
Colgan's
Acta Hi- Sanctorum
? By Rev. Dr. Lanigan, in his " Ecclesi-
August u] LIVES OE THE IRISH SAINTS. 17
he should there expect the judgment of God for his crime. Sednn, who co-operated in the act was then told, that he must not cease to seek for the drowned boy, in the midst of the waves, until the body should be found and restored to his mother. Both obeyed implicitly the command of their superior. Having left Liberius on the rock, according to orders, Sedna 10 proceeded to seek the boy in the midst of the waves. When that child had been submerged for twenty-four hours, he was found yet alive and safe, although tossed about on the water, which he was enabled to repel with opposing arms. Being thus miraculously rescued from what appeared to. have been inevitable death, the child was brought to St. Senan, who restored himtotheoverjoyedmother. AHthosewhowerepresent,werefilledwith astonishment,atwhattheyhadheardandseen. Theyextolledthosewonders, which God was pleased to work through his saints. Afterwards, St. Senan ordered Sidonius to bring Liberius from his position on the rock, saying that this latter disciple had obtained a favourable judge j since through His. favour and consideration, those waters which usually covered the rock, on which he stood, did not in the present instance encroach upon him, on any side, for the entire length of his staff. " Having returned to the monastery, Liberius complained to St. Senan regarding the inconvenience experienced, in using the water of a well, which was common to the brethren and to seculars. His disciple then requested the Abbot, through the bounty of God, to procure a fountain, which might specially serve for religious purposes. The holy man told him, such a favour would be granted to himself; and that if he wished to dig the' earth beneath his feet, through God's goodness, he should procure a fountain of limpid water. St. Liberius then began to dig the earth, with the end of his staff, Presently a rill of clear water burst forth. From him, it afterwards received the name Tibra-Libern, which means, the fountain of Libern or Libernus. 12 On a certain occasion, Bishop Dalan, who appears to have been an inhabitant of Innismore, complained that there was danger of the sea washing away some land, belonging to the monastery. This, he maintained, must cause destruction to the religious establishment of Inismore, ; 3 the land belonging to which was of a sandy and soluble nature. St. Liberius replied, that the remedy, which must ,be sought for this dreaded contingency, was to bury his body after death, on that part of the monastic land, which lay nearest to the encroaching waves, saying at the same time, he trusted in the Lord, the earth in that place should not afterwards be washed away, by any ebbing or flowing of the tide. According to this request, his body was deposited in the very spot designated by him, and the water was restrained from its former destructive ravages.
Millard.
14 Such information was communicated to the writer, by Mr. Michael Donegan.
'5 It is shown, as containing 12,8830. *'• 7A ~ and Very Rev. Dr. Stokes, T. C. D.
" *° on the Ordnance Survey Townland Maps
for the County of Longford," Sheets, 12, 17, 18, 21, 22.
Such
his letter by Very Rev. Thomas Langan, D. D.
16 See "
land," vol. i. , p. 29.
Gazetteer of Ire-
2I See "Peerage of Ireland," Lodge's
vol. i. , p. 146.
" This is noted in the Annals of All
Saints.
Parliamentary
*» They have been lately repaired by the Board of Public Works, and are represented
D. D.
l8 Among those who maintain this opinion
are the Very Rev. John Canon Monaghan, D. D. , P. P. of Banagher, in his "Records relating to the Dioceses of Ardagh and Clon- macnoise," pp. 41, 42; as also, the Very Rev. Father Gilligan, P. P. of Newtown Cashel, within whose parish Inishboffin, All Saints' Island, and Inis—Cleraunn or
Rev.
,9 Such is the opinion of Rt. Rev. John Healy, D. D. , Assistant Bishop of Clonfert,
Quaker's Island are situated while
Father Geoghegan, of Kenagh, likewise
Langan, D. D. , Athlone, to the writer, and dated July 25th, 1890.
is the opinion expressed in
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
[August i,
by Augustine MacGraidin, a Canon of that house, and who was also Abbot. In the commencement of the fifteenth century, a. d. 1405, he died. 23 An abstract of those Annals is still to be found, among the manuscripts belonging
to Trinity College, Dublin,2* and we are informed, that the work itself is still 2
preserved in the Bodleian Library, Oxford. * After the suppression of religious houses, the Abbey and its possessions were granted to Sir Patrick
Barnwall. 26 The very old church ruins,
remaining
on All Saints' 2 ? show Island,
^^^2
Old Church on Island of All Saints, Lough Ree.
that Cyclopean masonry was used, and a square-headed door is yet to be
of a
28 In the Island is called Irish,
in that
Oilean na Naomh, 29 and it lies within the Parish of Cashel.
seen,
portion
gable remaining.
How long St. Rioch lived on that Island on which he had erected his
monastery is not known. It is generally presumed, however, that his mortal career closed in that house of his foundation. It is stated,30 likewise, that St. Rioch died and was buried in Kilkenny. Over the grave his disciples
23 On the Wednesday next after the Feast of All Saints in that year. He was buried
Townland Maps for the County of Long-
in that
" Writers of Ireland. "
illustration
from a
Abbey.
present
photo-
See Harris' vol. Ware, iii. ,
28 The
graph taken by J. T. Hoban, Atldone, and procured for the writer—through Very Rev. ThomasLangan,D. D. representsthestate of this ruined building as it now appears. The photograph has been copied and drawn by William F. Wakeman on the wood, en- graved by Mrs. Millard.
p. 87.
34 Sir James Ware had a part of those
Annals in manuscript, with some additions made after the death of Augustine Ma- graidain . See " De Scriptoribus Hiberniae,"
lib. i. , cap. xi. , p. 75.
25 Such is the statement of Archdall ; but,
I do not find his cited authority of Ware's "
Writers, p. 87, authenticated. See Mo- nasticon Hibernicum, p. 442 and n. (w. )
26
See Harris' Ware, vol. ii, "Anti-
quities of Ireland," chap, xxxviii. , p. 265. ''It is shown on the " Ordnance Survey
Book i. , chap, xii. ,
ford," Sheet 26.
—
29 See "Letters and Extracts containing
Information relative to the Antiquities of
the County of Longford, collected dining the Progress of the Ordnance Survey in
1837. " Letter of John O'Donovan, dated Longford, May 22nd, 1837, p. 53.
30 By Mr. John Hogan.
August i. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 13
had erected a church, which was dedicated to his memory. In process of time, that church became a ruin ; but, its site is indicated, on a map of the
1
supposed ancient Parish of St. Rioch. 3
Notwithstanding the year of our saint's death being uncertain, Colgan
infers from the Acts of St. Aedus, that it should appear, he lived after the year 530. 32 Dr. Lanigan supposes, that the St. Rioch, who was con- temporary of Bishop Aedus, and who died, a. d. 589, could not have been St. Mel's brother, nor his companion, when sailing to Ireland, as thought
about a. d, 454. 33
The Martyrology of Salisbury has placed the festival of St. Rioch, at the
6th of February, in common with that of his reputed brothers, Mel,
Melchus and Munis. As we have seen, Colgan publishes their acts at that
day. But, according to other Irish Martyrologists, our saint's festival is assigned to the 1st of August, la the Irish Calendars, our saint has the
of Mo, or "
published edition of the Martyrology of Tallagh, there is no mention of a festival instituted in honour of a saint bearing this name, at the 6th or viii. of the February Ides ; but, at the Kalends or 1st of August,34 we there find the feast of " Morioc, Innse Lugeni. " The Martyrology of Donegal,3s at the same date, records him as Moriog, Bishop, of Inis-Mac-Ualaing, as also the
more recent Calendar. 36 Under the head of Inis-Meic-Ualaing, Duald
8
endearing prefix
my,"
added to his name. In the original
Mac Firbis enters, Moriocc, bishop of Inis-maic-Ualaing,37 at August ist. 3
His name and feast occur, also, in the Scottish Kalendar of Drummond. 39 ""
parish,
called after his name. 4°
On this latter day, also it appears, this saint's patron was formerly
observed, at the site of his old church in Walkin's Green, City of Kil-
kenny. Down to a comparatively recent period, a special veneration was
paid to St. Rioch, as one of the tutelar saints, connected with St. Mary's
"
parish, in that city. His "patron day was observed on the first Sunday of
August, even to so late a period as 1830. It is probable, that observance had been some remnant of St. Rioch's ancient festival, in that old Kilkenny
31 Lithographed by Moore of Cork, de- signed by Mr. John Hogan, on a scale reduced from the Ordnance Survey Maps,
39 Thus at Kal. Augusti : "In Hibernia S—anctorum Confessorum Rioc et Mothuu. "
in Kalendarium Drummondiense, Bishop
""
Kalendars of Scottish Saints,"
and published in Transactions of the Kil- kenny and South-East of Ireland Archseo- logical Society," vol. ii. New Series, No-
Forbes' p. 20.
<° Mr. Hogan, who furnishes the foregoing information, also adds in a note: "The 32 See Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum Hi- parish festival was called the 'patron,' from the circumstances of the religious cere- monies being performed on that day in honour of the patron of the church or parish. The patron festival (to use a technical term of ecclesiastical phraseology) being always
vember, 1859, No. 24, opposite p. 475.
bemise," vi. Februarii. Vita S. Riochi, p.
268.
33 See Rev. Dr. Lanigan's
"
Irish Saints," &c, pp. xi v. , xxx.
35 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
208, 209.
36 In the Irish Calendar, at the Calends or
" 1st day of August, I find, "moruocc efp interne UAbAing. "—Ordnance Survey Office Copy, in the Royal Irish Academy. Com- mon Place Book, F, p. 67.
37 Another name for Inis-Bofin in Lough Ree.
Ecclesiastical History of Ireland," vol. i. , chap, viii. , sect.
xiii. , p. 419.
34 See Rev. Dr. Kelly's "Calendar of
'
a double of the first class with an octave/
38 See "
of the Royal Irish
Proceedings
Academy," Irish Manuscript Series, vol. i. ,
part i. , pp. 114, 115.
the public worship was accordingly per- formed with unusual solemnity, and in most
places the day was observed as a 'holiday. ' I have been informed by a native of the
place, that so late as twenty-five years since no person was known to work in the entire
''
parish of Mallardstown on the 25th July,
the patron day. Since the Reformation, the observances of the festival were trans-
'
Sunday within the Octave. ' After much enquiry, I cannot find, that these patrons have been observed elsewhere, than on the sites of ancient parish churches.
ferred to the
John Hogan.
42 It was situated in the High Town.
43
Tiie present parochial boundaries, ably illustrated and accurately pointed out by Mr. Hogan on his accompanying map, show in his opinion, the different compartments, as originally united, and forming one ecclesi-
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [August i.
The ancient parish of St. Rioch, in Kilkenny city, is supposed to have
been merged into the present parishes of St. Mary, St. Patrick, St. Canice
and St. 1 The former church of St. Rioch, in that is
John. * parish, supposed
to have been located within the churchyard, still called after him. *
2
It is
supposed, that a local complication and a peculiar dovetailing of modern parishes already designated afford sufficient evidence for showing~a com- paratively recent arrangement, and also the probable extent of St. Rioch's old parish. ** Whether the suppression of St. Rioch's church had been coeval with or subsequent to the abolition of his parish may be questioned ; but, the latter appears more probable, according to Mr. Hogan's opinion. ** When St. Mary's parish church passed out of the hands of Catholics, they shortly afterwards erected a chapel outside the town wall of Kilkenny city. To this modern structure, they carried the traditional observances and rites of their olden church ; and among these may be traced a special veneration for St. Rioch. A full-sized oil painting** of this saint had been preserved in James'-street Chapel, down to the year 1804.
Those, who were living to a comparatively recent period, remembered to have seen it, and they described St. Rioch as being represented, seated on a rock, in the midst of a forest and clothed in a loose scarlet robe, with a dog fawning and apparently engaged in licking the sores and bruises of his feet. *6 That painting has been super- seded by another of St. Rioch, and presenting greater artistic pretensions. *? From the description which Mr. Hogan received regarding the first-mentioned picture, he apprehended that the Irish St. Rioch, in the disturbance of the
There is no trace of any such observances at Jerpoint, Kells, Callan, Knocktopher, &g. ,
those being abbatial, not parochial, establish- ments. "—"TheJournal of the Kilkenny and South-East of Ireland Archaeological So- ciety," 1858-1859. New Series, vol. ii. , part ii. , p 478. \
''
the patron day crowds from remote and
neighbouring parishes visited the church,
*'
This is shown on a map traced by Mr.
found in the vicinity of nearly every ancient parish church. These institutions being
perverted from their original simplicity to purposes of superstition, profanity and dis- sipation, became public nuisances, and they w—ere in consequence generally suppressed. "
" note. Kilkenny," &c, part i. , p. 22,
45 So designated, in Rocque's map of Kil- kenny.
46 Nothing is at present known, regarding
astical district, which may safely be recog- the original history of this picture. It is ni-ed as this saint's ancient parish. The now impossible to determine, whether it
same w—riter allows, that i—t may be a difficult
if nol
may not have been transferred, with other
m Uter
to determine with
things that
have come down to our
impossible
any degree of certainty, the precise period
when . St. Rioch's ancient parish had been divided, or when his church had been
times, from St. Mary's Church to James'-street Chapel. From time immemorial, it had been suspended at the epistle side of the
suppressed. It is thought, however, that
the fust encroachment on St. Rioch's
ecclesiastical district took place nfter the
English obtained a settlement in Kilkenny,
and some time subsequent to the Anglo- decoration of an altar which had been Norman Inv. ision of Ireland. From the
premises, he seems to establish so satis- factorily, Mr. Hogan concludes, that the abolition of St. Rioch's parish must have
erected, and which still remains in the old chapel. The subjects were the Crucifixion ;
been accomplished, when Hugh Rufus, been dedicated ; aud a full-length painting
fiw Engluh bishop of Os^ory, governed of St. Rioch, patron of tue ancient parish*
that see.
This later painting stili exists, and it re- 44 The same writer has the following presents the saint in a pilgrim's garb, with remarks, on certain local observances pre- a flowing scarlet tunic over the habit of a
valent in the county of Kilkenny : "On religious,towhichthe scallop-shell isattached,
dressed the graves of their departed relations, *'
and performed pilgrimages or stations round the 'holy well,' one of which is to be
altar, until Bishop Lanigan's time.
47 Bishop Lanigan wrote to a gentleman, living in Portugal, and who was his friend, to order three pictures to be painted for the
the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin, to
represent the title by which the church had
August i. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. IS
8
of Montpellier; who died about the year 1327, and that, knowing nothing of our Irish patron, the foreign artist seems to have taken it for granted, that Roach of Montpellier,
was the saint required. Accordingly, it is surmised that he copied a picture for Kilkenny from some Continental original of the French pilgrim. «9 The old families s° of Kilkenny, were the principal benefactors of the former chapel ; its clergy were also natives of Kilkenny ; and, in consequence, the ecclesiastical traditions of the town were more directly transmitted and more faithfully preserved in the beginning of this century than since. During such period, the devout clients of St. Rioch assembled annually, to hold his festival day, and on the site of his old church. It seems evident, that their veneration is but the vestige of a more ancient and extensive practice. We are informed, by Mr. Hogan. tha' since his paper was written, the picture of St. Rioch has been purchased by the Rev. M. Birch, P. P. , for Muckalee parish chapel, so that the memory of this saint has almost perished, in the
1
very place where it was specially designed for preservation^
It may fairly be asserted, that sympathy with the motive power of a man's life is a real necessity for his biographer ; yet, even this cannot avail, in
many of the previous and subsequent notices, since a defective knowledge of his subject must obstruct the writer's treatment too frequently, although he should most desire elucidation from all extraneous sources. Accordingly, we may fairly state, that it was only possible here, as in various similar cases, to set down a few recorded events, regarding this faithful and holy missionary's career.
Article II. —The Three Sons of Luissen, — and viz. , Liber, Failbhe,
of In—
is-mor. Saints Liberius, Albeus and Falbeus
times, had been confounded with St. Roach,*
Oilbhe,
are Latinized were brothers. We find entered, in the Mattyrology of
1
Tallagh, at the 1st of August, a veneration paid to Tri meic Lussen of
with a girdle round the waist. This figure stands erect in a forest, with his left foot resting on a rock, whilst a pilgrim's staff is held in the left hand, a travelling wallet being suspended from a hook near the top of the staff. To the wallet he appears to point attention, with the fourth finger of his
right band. The great peculiarity of this painting is an Irish expression of the coun- tenance, which is homely and familiar. An
"
Eques Foschini, Ulissipon- ensis, Inv. et Pinxit, A. D. 1807," is to be found attached to those three pictures already
mentioned.
48 He has been honoured on the 16th
August, on both sides of the Alps, since the middle of the fourteenth century. It is related of him, that falling sick in one of his pilgrimages, he crawled into a neighbouring forest, where a dog used to lick his sores. See Rev. Alban Butler's "Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and other principal Saints," vol. viii. , August xvi.
49 The inscription already given should seem to imply, that Foschini was designer as well as the painter. This Mr. Hogan considered more than doubtful, as all the French engravings and modern lithographs
of St. Rioch invariably repres nt him as
precisely resembling the St. Rioch on the
inscription,
oil painting now existing in the old church, "
See Kilkenny," &c, parti. , pp. 23, 24. s° Such as the Langtons, Comerfords,
Maddens, Shees, and many others, 5t Mr. Ho^an observes, moreover
the sacrilege, founded an altar or chapel in St. Mary's Church, 'and dedicated it to
him,' where his memory was perpetuated and honoured, whence both were sub-
sequently transferred to St. Mary's Chapel, where unfortunately, they now no longer exist. " For the substance of the foregoing
information, and for these notices, the reader is referred to ** Topographical Illus- trations of the Southern and Western
" May we not safely infer, that the Bishop who abolished his parish, and suppressed his church (to use the sarcasm of Ledwich), 'to appease the tutelar saint, and to atone for
Suburbs of Kilkenny. " by Mr. John Hogan, "
in Proceedings and Papers of the Kilkenny and South -East of Ireland Archaeological Society," vol. ii. New Series, November,
1859, No. 24, pp. 468 to 480. 1
Article II. — Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xxxi,
as their names
:
'
1 6 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
[August i.
Innsi moir : i. e. , Liber and Failbe and Olbe. So they are called in this
Calendar. * AccordingtotheMartyrologiesofAengusandofMarianus,these were sons to Luscen or Luscin. Whether the latter was the real name of
their father, or only an appellation bestowed on him, may be questioned. An Irish Manuscript calls the former of these saints, Mac-an-daill or the son of Luscus. 3 TheyaresaidtohavebeenconnectedwithInismore. Theexact position of this island does not appear to have been correctly ascertained. However, it is thought to have been situated in some part of Southern or Western Munster. Another supposition makes it identical with the Island of Inismore, where St. Senan erected a Monastery/ A great number of our Islands went formerly by the name of Inis-more or Great Island. A St. Liberius is mentioned, as one of those disciples, left by St. Senan s in Inismore monastery, after his own departure from Inis-caorach. 6 From the circumstances of their place, and the date of their festival, Colgan is inclined to consider these saints, as disciples of St. Senan, when he lived at Inismore, and before he became Abbot over Iniscattery. If such were the case, we are furnished with a few meagre notices regarding St. Liberius, who is also called Libernus. It is stated,? that St. Senan was at Iniscarra, about a. d. 532, and he appears at no very remote period afterwards, to have founded his establishment at Inismore. That Inis-mor, however, in which Senan founded a monastery, lay far towards the West, and near the Atlantic. 8 A well or spring was found at Inismore, and it supplied the purest water for monastic purposes ; while, at the same time, water used in the celebration of the Divine Mysteries was always taken from that fountain. We are told, that while St. Liberius dwelt at Inismore with his disciples, a certain woman approached the fountain, to wash some garments belonging to her child. A saint, named Sedna or Sedonius,9 who was then or afterwards a Bishop, on seeing this desecration, gave vent to an exclamation, expressive of his anger. St. Liberius or Libernus asked him what had taken place, when his companion related the circumstance of the water being defiled, owing to that woman's action. The saints were moved to indignation, and with intemperate zeal, they invoked punishment upon the woman and her offspring. At this moment, the child, playing near the sea-margin, fell suddenly over a pre- cipitous bank, and was submerged in the waters. The distracted mother ran to St. Senan, and told him how her offspring had been deprived of life, through the imprecations of his disciples. On hearing this, the holy Abbot bitterly reproved his brethren, as being guilty of homicide. He ordered Liberius, who seemed to be a principal instrument in causing the child's death, to do penance on a certain rock, which overlooked the ocean, while
2
In the Book of Leinster copy they are thus entered : Uru rneic lurran Hip mopi i. e. bber* ocur- paloe ocur Olbe.
3 See " Acta Sanctorum Hi- Colgan's
n. 16 p. 539, {recti,) 535.
s See his Life, in the Third Volume of
this work, at the 8th of March, Art. i.
6 See
bernue," viii. Martii. Secunda Vita sive berniae," viii. Martii. Vita Secunda seu
Supplementum Vitae S. Senani, n. 18, p. 540. {recti,) 563.
4 Colgan does not consider Inismore to have been the same as that Island in the
Supplementum Vitae S. Senani, cap. xxvii. , p. 534, {recti,) 530.
Shannon—
name—
astical vol. ii. , History oflreland,''
chap, x. ,
bearing
a like
between sect, i. , 11. 10, p. 5.
the of Limerick and city
8
berniae," Martii viii. Secunda Vita sive
Supplementum Vitae S. Senani, n. 16, p.
539.
» See some notices of him in the
Third Volume of this work, at the 10th March, Art. i.
Iniscattery; but, he is under an impression, that it must have been another, near to or within the ancient territory of Corcobhaiscinn, in Killaloe Diocese. He remarks, moreover, that it may have been even a different Island, bearing the name of Inismore. See ibid. ,
See Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum Hi-
Colgan's
Acta Hi- Sanctorum
? By Rev. Dr. Lanigan, in his " Ecclesi-
August u] LIVES OE THE IRISH SAINTS. 17
he should there expect the judgment of God for his crime. Sednn, who co-operated in the act was then told, that he must not cease to seek for the drowned boy, in the midst of the waves, until the body should be found and restored to his mother. Both obeyed implicitly the command of their superior. Having left Liberius on the rock, according to orders, Sedna 10 proceeded to seek the boy in the midst of the waves. When that child had been submerged for twenty-four hours, he was found yet alive and safe, although tossed about on the water, which he was enabled to repel with opposing arms. Being thus miraculously rescued from what appeared to. have been inevitable death, the child was brought to St. Senan, who restored himtotheoverjoyedmother. AHthosewhowerepresent,werefilledwith astonishment,atwhattheyhadheardandseen. Theyextolledthosewonders, which God was pleased to work through his saints. Afterwards, St. Senan ordered Sidonius to bring Liberius from his position on the rock, saying that this latter disciple had obtained a favourable judge j since through His. favour and consideration, those waters which usually covered the rock, on which he stood, did not in the present instance encroach upon him, on any side, for the entire length of his staff. " Having returned to the monastery, Liberius complained to St. Senan regarding the inconvenience experienced, in using the water of a well, which was common to the brethren and to seculars. His disciple then requested the Abbot, through the bounty of God, to procure a fountain, which might specially serve for religious purposes. The holy man told him, such a favour would be granted to himself; and that if he wished to dig the' earth beneath his feet, through God's goodness, he should procure a fountain of limpid water. St. Liberius then began to dig the earth, with the end of his staff, Presently a rill of clear water burst forth. From him, it afterwards received the name Tibra-Libern, which means, the fountain of Libern or Libernus. 12 On a certain occasion, Bishop Dalan, who appears to have been an inhabitant of Innismore, complained that there was danger of the sea washing away some land, belonging to the monastery. This, he maintained, must cause destruction to the religious establishment of Inismore, ; 3 the land belonging to which was of a sandy and soluble nature. St. Liberius replied, that the remedy, which must ,be sought for this dreaded contingency, was to bury his body after death, on that part of the monastic land, which lay nearest to the encroaching waves, saying at the same time, he trusted in the Lord, the earth in that place should not afterwards be washed away, by any ebbing or flowing of the tide. According to this request, his body was deposited in the very spot designated by him, and the water was restrained from its former destructive ravages.