1015, when supposing Whit Sunday to have been on
their calculations are righted.
their calculations are righted.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v6
" vol.
ii.
, book ii.
, chap.
iv.
.
p.
143 .
'•
Ecclesiastical History of Ireland, "vol ii. ,
chap, xii. , sect, xiv , \\ 225.
6S This cannot have been the Caah or
•' In this chamber there is a flat stone, six feet long, and one foot thick, no—w called St. Columb's peni- Ecclesiastical Architecture
Dr. George Petiie adds
:
3
In Adamnan's time, these objects were preserved as a monument, and exposed
" See Le Comte de Montalembert's Les
Moines d'Occident," tome iii, liv. xi. ,
chap. \
? 4 The Rev. Dr. Reeves remarks in a note :
73
June 9. ] LI VES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 541
rung for Matins, he at once arose, and going sooner than any of the company to the church, the holy Abbot fell down on his knees and prayed before the altar. Following slowly after him, Diarmit saw all the church illuminated with an angelic splendour, which covered the saint. ? 6 But, at his approach to the door, this light disappeared. It was also observed to vanish, by other monks, who stood apart. Entering thereupon into the church, Diarmit called
" O
Thus groping up and down in the dark, before his brethren came with the
lights, Diarmit found his Abbot lying prostrate in the front of that altar. Then, Diarmit sat down by the holy man and supported his saintly head upon his bosom. Inthemeantime,thechoirofmonkscamehastilywiththeirlights, and seeing their holy father ready to die, all began to lament. Even at that very instant, when the separation of his soul from the body was immediately impending, St. Columkille opened his eyes, looked above and about him, with a vivacious and an expressive countenance. n No doubt he was con- templating certain holy Angels, that came to conduct him to the true home ofeveryjustservantofGod. ThenDiarmittookuphisholyhand,tobless again his assembled monks ; and the saint himself did what he could to move this hand, in order to give them his blessing, with its motion, since he could not pronounce it with his voice. Afterwards, his sacred benediction being
bestowed in this manner, the saint yielded very suddenly his happy soul to the bosom of its God. The angelical vision had left such cheerfulness remaining on his countenance, that it seemed the sweet aspect of one cast into a rather than the
often to the with a mournful saint,
voice, saying:
father,
where are
you? "
placid slumber,
after death even appeared fresh and ruddy. 79
breath had left him, their whole church resounded with lamentations. 80 Such then was the end of this glorious patron's life ; such were the happy begin- nings of his merits, when admitted into the society of the glorious Patriarchs, of the holy Apostles, of the sacred Martyrs, and of the immaculate Virgins. In death, the illustrious Colamkille triumphed by the favour of our sweet Saviour Jesus, and his memory was ever afterwards celebrated in the Church.
82 who have
on a Sunday, and towards the close of the sixth century, the death of St.
It is allowed all by nearly
his that it was Acts,
composed
Columba occurred. Various dates, however, have been assigned for this
of a 8 His face corpse. ?
ghastly sight
When the monks found the
For thirty-four years did the holy man continue his labours in Scotland. 81
" The saint had previously attended at the vespertinalis Dominica noctis missa, an office
equivalent to the nocturnal vigil, and now, on the turn of midnight, the bell rings for matins, which were celebrated, according to ancient custom, a little before day-break. Farther on, the office is named in the ex- pression, hymnis matntinalibusfinitis. "
p. 323 ; Vita Secunda S. Columbse, cap. xxii. , xxiii. , xxiv. , xxv. , xxvi. , pp. 329, 330 ; Vita Tertia S. Columba? , cap. xl. , p. 335 ; Vita Quarta S. Columbse, lib. iii. , cap. xxii. , xxiii. , pp. 369, 370 ; Vita Quinta S. Co- lumbje, lib. iii , cap. xlvii. , xlviii. , xlix. , 1. , li. , Iii. , liii. , liv. , lv. , pp. 439 to 441.
78 See "Trias Colgan's
**TheeccentricThomas believe, the singular exception.
I
present
;
and this could
says: et duos ex
Thaumaturga," Vita Prima S. Columbse, cap. xviii. , xix. ,
Dempster is,
writers,
75 While Cummian has it "campana," land," vol. ii. , book ii. , chap, iv. , p. 142. Adamnan gives it as "clocca. " ^ See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's 76 See Father John Mabillon's " Annales "Life of St. Columba," lib. iii. , cap. 23,
Ordinis S. Benedicti," tomus i. , lib. ix. , sect,xix. ,p. 249.
77 These particulars Adamnan learned
pp. 228 to 235, with nn. (a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h,i,a,b,c,d,e,f, g,h,i,k,1,m,n,o,p, q, a, b, c, d).
"Post annos
from some who were
have been the case, for St. Columba died in 597, while Adamnan was born in 624, less than thirty years after the founder's de- cease.
8l Venerable Bede
79 See William F. Skene's
"
Celtic Scot-
circiter
tanniam pnedicaturus adiit. " Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum," lib. iii. , cap. iv. , p. 169.
triginta
— Bri- quo ipse
•'
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [June 9. Among the earliest we find on record, it is stated, that he departed
that his dea—th must be referred to some other 86 In early biographers, year.
542
event.
this
life,
year
6 and
seventy-seventh yearof
83 The consideration of St. Columba's birth-year, which we have already treated about, has of course relation also to the year
of his departure, and to the question of his exact age.
84 Father John Colgan has devoted eigh-
teen paragraphs, including a chronological table reaching from a. d. 591 to A. D. 606, to
investigate the exact day and year of St. Columba's death. See "Trias Thauma-
turga," Quarta Appendix ad Acta S. Columbse, cap. vi. , pp. 484 to 486.
85 See Dr. O'Donovan's edition, vol. i. ,
pp. 214 t0 2I 7> and n. (y).
86 Colgan seems to have laboured under
the false impression, that St. Columba de-
parted this life on a Saturday, and verging towards its close ; while it is evident Irom an attentive study of Cummian's and Adam- nan's narrative, Sunday morning after mid- night had come, when the holy Abbot had prepared to recite the Office of Matins and Lauds, which it seems was the established usage at Iona. The supposition, that Tighernach was right, in stating the night of Pentecost was that of St. Columba's depar- ture, caused the error of Colgan and of other writers who followed him as an authority on this matter.
8? See the Rev. Dr. O'Conor's " Rerum
Hibernicarum Scriptores," tomus iv. , An-
nales Ultonienses, whereat a. d. 594, they
state ° Quies Coluim cille v. Id. Jun. :
"
cille moritur," at p. 5.
92 "
There the entry is, Kal. iv. Quies of
Colum Cille, on the night of Whit Sunday, the 5th of the Ides ofJune, in the 35th year
of his peregrination, and the 77th, truly, of his age. See pp. 64, 65.
93 Edited by Rev. Joseph Rawson Lumby.
B. D. , vol. v. , pp. 394, 395.
94 See Rev. Dr. O'Conor's " Rerum Hiber-
nicarum Scriptores," tomus ii. , Tigernachi Annales, where at A. D. 596, we have the
anno etatis sue lxxvi.
B as the Sunday-letter, and indicates 595, the
very year in their margin.
89 A curious perversity prevails through
88 Their
signature
is vii. , which
gives
the Rev. Dr. and the chroni- Reeves,
of our Lord 8* to the Annals of Clonmac- 590, according
83 in the
noise; while it was in 592, according to the Annals of the Four Masters. 85 However, as the 9th of June fell on the Monday of this year, and as the festival of Easter fell on the 6th of April, while that of Pentecost Sunday was on the 25th of May, it may be inferred from the data given by St. Columba's
—he Annals of Ulster8?
594, t although they
seem to mean the
following
88 the rest of St. Coluim cille, at the place
of his
It appears to be evident, that this record of the event had been advisedly framed f$ but it is hard to conceive on what principle they refer to it so early a year. 9°Ina. d. 595,accordingtothe"AnnalesCambrias,"? 1 the"Chronicum Scotorum,"? 2 the Polychronicon Ranulphi Higden Monachi Cestrensis,? 3 the deathofSt. Columkilleoccurred. Intheyear596,accordingtoTigernach,? 4 and on the night of Pentecost Sunday,? 5 in the thirty-fifth year of his pilgrim-
year
age,?
age.
seventy-sixth year
his 7 St. Columkille'sdecease is
age,? recorded;
the Annals of Ulster to a. d.
1015, when supposing Whit Sunday to have been on
their calculations are righted.
9° " In it," remarks the Rev. Dr. Reeves,
" Easter fell on the 3rd of April, and Whit-
Sunday on the 22nd of May, and the 9th of
June was Thursday.
91 As edited by the Rev. John Williams
the 2nd, which it most probably was, the saint's decease was inside the week, and was thus within the octave of Whitsuntide ; for the festival of Trinity Sunday was not yet instituted, and Easter and Pentecost were the two great ecclesiastical seasons of the year. "
ab Ithel, M. A. , where it is noted
"
Colutn-
"
nocte Dominica Pentecostes v. Id. Junii,
anno peregrinacionis sue xxxv. , etatis vero lxxvii. ," p. 159.
95 In the year 596, Pentecost Sunday fell on the loth of June. If the Whitsun enter into this calculation, as the Rev. Dr. Reeves observes, the year of our saint's death must beassigned to a. d. 596, while Adamnan's mode of computation must be inverted. In such case, likewise, the midnight between Saturday and Sunday must be attracted to the former, in order to fit the obit into the 9th, while at the same time, an opposite pro- cess must be adopted, in order to identify that occurrence with the ensuing Pentecost of 597-
90 As Columba's removal to Britain is said
to have been at Whitsuntide, " Prima nox
ejus in Albain in Pentecosten," according to
the Annals of Innisfallen, at A. D. 555 ; it is
possible, an even period might have been
assigned to the term of his pilgrimage, sug-
following record :
Quies Coluimcille in
gests
cler was probably desirous of squaring the matter, by placing his obit at the same fes- tival. " It is further to be observed that,
June 9. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 543
Saturday
it he attended the nocturnal
day IQs that
authority,
of 108 which fell on a June,
of our Lord IO° This date 597.
literary
midnight
desiderata, no work is more r—
08
00
100 and Rev. Dr.
the Naemhsenchas,
the Martyrologium Anglicanum,
while an ancient Irish Life,
01
Hermannus Contractus,'
O'Conor,103 have followed that computation. However, as we learn on good
10* that was the last of St. Columba's and that on
life,
he rose for matins, which was the second serviceappertaining to the Dominical Office; that just as the brethren had assembled to recite the Vespertinal Mass of Sunday,106 and while it was still dark in the oratory, his attendant being obliged to feel after him was unable to discern his position and condition
until lanterns were brought ; that this portion of the twenty-four hours was !
vigils ;
shortly
after
midnight,
called the night of Sunday : °7 from all the foregoing considerations, the evidence is conclusive, that the holy Abbot died on a Sunday, on the 9th day
in the
Sunday,
agrees, also, with the chronological notices of his biographer Adamnan, who
year
inferentially places the birth of St. Columba in the year 52 1 ; while in his forty-
second 110 he over to Britain, a. d. and year, passed 563,
97 Tigernach assigns St. Columba's birth
to A. D. 520, and therefore it seems incon-
sistent with his date of death, at a. d. 596, to
allow him seventy-seven years of life. " It
has been very much the habit to extol this
chronicler as a most accurate chronologist,"
observes the Rev. Dr. Reeves, "but it is to
be remembered that the years printed in the
margin by O'Conor are 0' Conor's (nun, not
Tighernach's. He generally adjusts them missam ingreditur ecclesiam. " The meaning by adding one to the years set down for the here seems to be, that vespers had been at a parallel entries in the Annals of Ulster. very late hour on that Sunday (? Saturday) This is very often done in opposition to the evening, or that Matins and Lauds author's own notation. In the whole range for the—day following had then to be
of Irish
imperatively demanded than a faithful ex-
hibition of Tighernach's text. In O'Conor, Holy Sacrifice of the Mass afterwards,
it is so currupt, so interpolated, so blundered,
at an early hour. The Rev. Dr. Reeves re-
unsafe to trust the text, while it is certain mischief to follow the
translation. "
98 A copy of this is contained in the
:
marks " Adamnan reckons his from
that it is
extremely
day sunset to sunset, and thus we find him, on
fiepov, and making the night of a festival "Leabhar Breac," and in the "Book of precede the day. " Examples are given
Lismore," as also in a Manuscript of the
Advocates' Library. It has been literally
translated into English, by William Maun-
sell Hennessey, and this translation has
been published in William F. Skene's Rev. Dr. Reeves adds " Now the Regular
"
Celtic Scotland : a History of Ancient letter of the ninth of June is f ; therefore 1*"
Alban," vol. ii. See Appendix, No. i. , p. 507. 99 In this Manuscript, under the saint's name, we find Cr\i cetit;cAi'6ir' CoiAinciU/i : a gen, a bAcliif, a b&y, thus translated, " Three Pentecosts [quinquagesimas] of Colam-cille : his birth, his baptism, and his death. " According to the Calendar of Marianus O'Gorman, St. Columb was born
on the 7th of December.
100 See "Trias Thaumaturga," Quarta
Appendix ad Acta S. Columbae, cap. vi. , p. 486.
was the Sunday letter of the year. But 597 is the only year at this period to which F belongs, that is, whose first of January fell on Tuesday.
108 The feast of St. Columba's successor at Iona, the Abbot Baithen, occurs on this day, likewise, and Adamnan notes the co- incidence, in his " Life of St. Columba," lib. ii. , cap. 45, p. 182.
109 The Rev. Dr. Reeves has very ably de- monstrated this to have been the true year of the holy Abbot's death, in his edition of Adamnan's "Life of St. Columba," Addi- tional ; Notes L, pp. 309 to 312, with the accompanying notes.
110 And the second after the battle year
Cuildreibhne;
101 102
In his Chronicle, at A. D. 596.
At the 9th of June.
103 See " Rerum Hibernicarum Scripto-
tomus
,0* That of Adamnan, and from him the
res,"
i. , Prolegomina,p. 139.
"
106 It is thus expressed by Adamnan : Sanctus ad vespertinalem Doniinicae noctis
Father John Colgan, Ioa
succeeding proofs have been taken, while the particulars have been given in the pre- ceding part of the present chapter.
105 Adamnan relates the saying of St. Co- lumba on Saturday, "hac sequenti media venerabili Dominica nocte patrum gradier viam. "
ecited most after
having completed
probably
and with a view of celebrating the
more than one occasion, employing vuxOv-
from his "Life of St. Columba," lib. ii. , cap. 45, p. 181, lib. hi. , cap. 11, p. 210, cap. 12, p. 211, and cap. 23, pp. 230, 233.
107 In summing up these particulars, the :
544 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [June 9.
thirty-four years of his pilgrimage, it must be concluded, that he departed from life, a. d. 597, giving seventy-six years for his age. This calculation fairly accords, likewise, with the account of Venerable Bede,111 who placing St. Columba's removal to Scotland at 565, and who, giving him thirty-two years of pilgrimage there, brings his death to a. d. 597, when he was about
the uncertainty being in his estimation, as to whether it happened before or after the midnight of Sunday. "3 To this latter year, some of the best modern
writers, such as Sir James Ware" 4 Roderick O'Flaherty, 115 Bishop
6 11 II8 Challoner," Rev. Dr. Lanigan, ? the Rev. Alban Butler, Les Petits
112
as to the year of St. Columba's decease, he seems doubtful as to the day
of seventy-seven years age.
While the learned
Ussher — Archbishop agrees
1 '? Rev. Dr. and William F. Reeves,
120 the
Skene, assign departure
The year 598 is assigned by
Bollandistes,
of the holy founder of Iona from this life.
I2I
122
I23 and
Father
byMatthewof Paris,
12* for that of his death. In
by I25 have
very generally adopted, by writers who have
says : Quod si ineunte IX die Junii is decesserit, ad annum dxcvii. cum Beda ; rin desinente ad annum dxcvi. cum Her- manno mors ejus erit referenda : pro quo etiam Tigernaci faciunt Annales ; in quibus Quit's ColumcilU in nocte Do—minica: Pettte- COSttt c0ntij4is. se memoratur. " " Britannica- rum Eccle»iarum Antiquitates," cap. xv. , p. 363. See also his Index Chronologicus, at A. d. , dxcvii. , p. 534.
Scriptoribus Hiberniae," lib. i. , cap. ii. , p. 15.
"5 See •'
Ogygia,"
learnedly investigated the matter. 113He "
123
"4 See "De
Baert, S. J. ,
who edited the Acts of our
Scotia;
gus Chronologo-Genealogicus, pp. 474, 475.
116 See "A Memorial of British
p. 89.
Commentarius
"' See " Ecclesiastical of
History Ireland,"
vol. ii. , chap, xii. , sect, xiv. , p. 245, and nn. 230, 231, pp. 247, 248.
1,8
See "Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and other principal Saints," vol. vi. , June ix. The Rev. Alban Butler mistakes, how- ever, in making Saturday fall on the 9th of June, in A. D. 597.
"'See "Vies des Saints," tome vi. ,
120
Ancient Alban," vol.
194.
"; See Rev. Dr.
Lanigan's
ix de Jour
35 peregrinationis suae, aetatis 76 . " Codex Harleianus.
,2 "
9 Thus in Reran) Hibernicarum Scrip-
tores," tomus ii. , Annales Innisfallenses,
we have in the Bodleian " Nativitas copy,
Regum
ii. , Junii
Prxsbytero Abbate, Ad Yitam prolixiorem
byMatthewofWestminster,
Sigibert,
John Mabillon,
the illustrious Cenobiarch terminated his precious life. Most probably, how- ever, the truest calculation is, that Columba died very early on Sunday morn-
the
of
a. d.
120
At this
he should have been in the
9th
His death has been
597. 12
1. 1 *' See
June,
time,
? according to the Annals of Innisfallen,
ing,
eighty-sixth year of his age,
lished by Rev. Dr. O'Conor, 120 but in which we find no record of his demise.
Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum,"lib. iii. , cap. iv. , pp. 168, 169.
banus, doctor Scotorum et Pictorum, obiit, qui posteris suis multa sanctkatis documenta
1. 2
This computation seems to have been
—"Chronica edited reliquit. " Majora," by
Henry Richards Luard, M. A. , vol. i.
'•
Ecclesiastical History of Ireland, "vol ii. ,
chap, xii. , sect, xiv , \\ 225.
6S This cannot have been the Caah or
•' In this chamber there is a flat stone, six feet long, and one foot thick, no—w called St. Columb's peni- Ecclesiastical Architecture
Dr. George Petiie adds
:
3
In Adamnan's time, these objects were preserved as a monument, and exposed
" See Le Comte de Montalembert's Les
Moines d'Occident," tome iii, liv. xi. ,
chap. \
? 4 The Rev. Dr. Reeves remarks in a note :
73
June 9. ] LI VES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 541
rung for Matins, he at once arose, and going sooner than any of the company to the church, the holy Abbot fell down on his knees and prayed before the altar. Following slowly after him, Diarmit saw all the church illuminated with an angelic splendour, which covered the saint. ? 6 But, at his approach to the door, this light disappeared. It was also observed to vanish, by other monks, who stood apart. Entering thereupon into the church, Diarmit called
" O
Thus groping up and down in the dark, before his brethren came with the
lights, Diarmit found his Abbot lying prostrate in the front of that altar. Then, Diarmit sat down by the holy man and supported his saintly head upon his bosom. Inthemeantime,thechoirofmonkscamehastilywiththeirlights, and seeing their holy father ready to die, all began to lament. Even at that very instant, when the separation of his soul from the body was immediately impending, St. Columkille opened his eyes, looked above and about him, with a vivacious and an expressive countenance. n No doubt he was con- templating certain holy Angels, that came to conduct him to the true home ofeveryjustservantofGod. ThenDiarmittookuphisholyhand,tobless again his assembled monks ; and the saint himself did what he could to move this hand, in order to give them his blessing, with its motion, since he could not pronounce it with his voice. Afterwards, his sacred benediction being
bestowed in this manner, the saint yielded very suddenly his happy soul to the bosom of its God. The angelical vision had left such cheerfulness remaining on his countenance, that it seemed the sweet aspect of one cast into a rather than the
often to the with a mournful saint,
voice, saying:
father,
where are
you? "
placid slumber,
after death even appeared fresh and ruddy. 79
breath had left him, their whole church resounded with lamentations. 80 Such then was the end of this glorious patron's life ; such were the happy begin- nings of his merits, when admitted into the society of the glorious Patriarchs, of the holy Apostles, of the sacred Martyrs, and of the immaculate Virgins. In death, the illustrious Colamkille triumphed by the favour of our sweet Saviour Jesus, and his memory was ever afterwards celebrated in the Church.
82 who have
on a Sunday, and towards the close of the sixth century, the death of St.
It is allowed all by nearly
his that it was Acts,
composed
Columba occurred. Various dates, however, have been assigned for this
of a 8 His face corpse. ?
ghastly sight
When the monks found the
For thirty-four years did the holy man continue his labours in Scotland. 81
" The saint had previously attended at the vespertinalis Dominica noctis missa, an office
equivalent to the nocturnal vigil, and now, on the turn of midnight, the bell rings for matins, which were celebrated, according to ancient custom, a little before day-break. Farther on, the office is named in the ex- pression, hymnis matntinalibusfinitis. "
p. 323 ; Vita Secunda S. Columbse, cap. xxii. , xxiii. , xxiv. , xxv. , xxvi. , pp. 329, 330 ; Vita Tertia S. Columba? , cap. xl. , p. 335 ; Vita Quarta S. Columbse, lib. iii. , cap. xxii. , xxiii. , pp. 369, 370 ; Vita Quinta S. Co- lumbje, lib. iii , cap. xlvii. , xlviii. , xlix. , 1. , li. , Iii. , liii. , liv. , lv. , pp. 439 to 441.
78 See "Trias Colgan's
**TheeccentricThomas believe, the singular exception.
I
present
;
and this could
says: et duos ex
Thaumaturga," Vita Prima S. Columbse, cap. xviii. , xix. ,
Dempster is,
writers,
75 While Cummian has it "campana," land," vol. ii. , book ii. , chap, iv. , p. 142. Adamnan gives it as "clocca. " ^ See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's 76 See Father John Mabillon's " Annales "Life of St. Columba," lib. iii. , cap. 23,
Ordinis S. Benedicti," tomus i. , lib. ix. , sect,xix. ,p. 249.
77 These particulars Adamnan learned
pp. 228 to 235, with nn. (a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h,i,a,b,c,d,e,f, g,h,i,k,1,m,n,o,p, q, a, b, c, d).
"Post annos
from some who were
have been the case, for St. Columba died in 597, while Adamnan was born in 624, less than thirty years after the founder's de- cease.
8l Venerable Bede
79 See William F. Skene's
"
Celtic Scot-
circiter
tanniam pnedicaturus adiit. " Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum," lib. iii. , cap. iv. , p. 169.
triginta
— Bri- quo ipse
•'
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [June 9. Among the earliest we find on record, it is stated, that he departed
that his dea—th must be referred to some other 86 In early biographers, year.
542
event.
this
life,
year
6 and
seventy-seventh yearof
83 The consideration of St. Columba's birth-year, which we have already treated about, has of course relation also to the year
of his departure, and to the question of his exact age.
84 Father John Colgan has devoted eigh-
teen paragraphs, including a chronological table reaching from a. d. 591 to A. D. 606, to
investigate the exact day and year of St. Columba's death. See "Trias Thauma-
turga," Quarta Appendix ad Acta S. Columbse, cap. vi. , pp. 484 to 486.
85 See Dr. O'Donovan's edition, vol. i. ,
pp. 214 t0 2I 7> and n. (y).
86 Colgan seems to have laboured under
the false impression, that St. Columba de-
parted this life on a Saturday, and verging towards its close ; while it is evident Irom an attentive study of Cummian's and Adam- nan's narrative, Sunday morning after mid- night had come, when the holy Abbot had prepared to recite the Office of Matins and Lauds, which it seems was the established usage at Iona. The supposition, that Tighernach was right, in stating the night of Pentecost was that of St. Columba's depar- ture, caused the error of Colgan and of other writers who followed him as an authority on this matter.
8? See the Rev. Dr. O'Conor's " Rerum
Hibernicarum Scriptores," tomus iv. , An-
nales Ultonienses, whereat a. d. 594, they
state ° Quies Coluim cille v. Id. Jun. :
"
cille moritur," at p. 5.
92 "
There the entry is, Kal. iv. Quies of
Colum Cille, on the night of Whit Sunday, the 5th of the Ides ofJune, in the 35th year
of his peregrination, and the 77th, truly, of his age. See pp. 64, 65.
93 Edited by Rev. Joseph Rawson Lumby.
B. D. , vol. v. , pp. 394, 395.
94 See Rev. Dr. O'Conor's " Rerum Hiber-
nicarum Scriptores," tomus ii. , Tigernachi Annales, where at A. D. 596, we have the
anno etatis sue lxxvi.
B as the Sunday-letter, and indicates 595, the
very year in their margin.
89 A curious perversity prevails through
88 Their
signature
is vii. , which
gives
the Rev. Dr. and the chroni- Reeves,
of our Lord 8* to the Annals of Clonmac- 590, according
83 in the
noise; while it was in 592, according to the Annals of the Four Masters. 85 However, as the 9th of June fell on the Monday of this year, and as the festival of Easter fell on the 6th of April, while that of Pentecost Sunday was on the 25th of May, it may be inferred from the data given by St. Columba's
—he Annals of Ulster8?
594, t although they
seem to mean the
following
88 the rest of St. Coluim cille, at the place
of his
It appears to be evident, that this record of the event had been advisedly framed f$ but it is hard to conceive on what principle they refer to it so early a year. 9°Ina. d. 595,accordingtothe"AnnalesCambrias,"? 1 the"Chronicum Scotorum,"? 2 the Polychronicon Ranulphi Higden Monachi Cestrensis,? 3 the deathofSt. Columkilleoccurred. Intheyear596,accordingtoTigernach,? 4 and on the night of Pentecost Sunday,? 5 in the thirty-fifth year of his pilgrim-
year
age,?
age.
seventy-sixth year
his 7 St. Columkille'sdecease is
age,? recorded;
the Annals of Ulster to a. d.
1015, when supposing Whit Sunday to have been on
their calculations are righted.
9° " In it," remarks the Rev. Dr. Reeves,
" Easter fell on the 3rd of April, and Whit-
Sunday on the 22nd of May, and the 9th of
June was Thursday.
91 As edited by the Rev. John Williams
the 2nd, which it most probably was, the saint's decease was inside the week, and was thus within the octave of Whitsuntide ; for the festival of Trinity Sunday was not yet instituted, and Easter and Pentecost were the two great ecclesiastical seasons of the year. "
ab Ithel, M. A. , where it is noted
"
Colutn-
"
nocte Dominica Pentecostes v. Id. Junii,
anno peregrinacionis sue xxxv. , etatis vero lxxvii. ," p. 159.
95 In the year 596, Pentecost Sunday fell on the loth of June. If the Whitsun enter into this calculation, as the Rev. Dr. Reeves observes, the year of our saint's death must beassigned to a. d. 596, while Adamnan's mode of computation must be inverted. In such case, likewise, the midnight between Saturday and Sunday must be attracted to the former, in order to fit the obit into the 9th, while at the same time, an opposite pro- cess must be adopted, in order to identify that occurrence with the ensuing Pentecost of 597-
90 As Columba's removal to Britain is said
to have been at Whitsuntide, " Prima nox
ejus in Albain in Pentecosten," according to
the Annals of Innisfallen, at A. D. 555 ; it is
possible, an even period might have been
assigned to the term of his pilgrimage, sug-
following record :
Quies Coluimcille in
gests
cler was probably desirous of squaring the matter, by placing his obit at the same fes- tival. " It is further to be observed that,
June 9. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 543
Saturday
it he attended the nocturnal
day IQs that
authority,
of 108 which fell on a June,
of our Lord IO° This date 597.
literary
midnight
desiderata, no work is more r—
08
00
100 and Rev. Dr.
the Naemhsenchas,
the Martyrologium Anglicanum,
while an ancient Irish Life,
01
Hermannus Contractus,'
O'Conor,103 have followed that computation. However, as we learn on good
10* that was the last of St. Columba's and that on
life,
he rose for matins, which was the second serviceappertaining to the Dominical Office; that just as the brethren had assembled to recite the Vespertinal Mass of Sunday,106 and while it was still dark in the oratory, his attendant being obliged to feel after him was unable to discern his position and condition
until lanterns were brought ; that this portion of the twenty-four hours was !
vigils ;
shortly
after
midnight,
called the night of Sunday : °7 from all the foregoing considerations, the evidence is conclusive, that the holy Abbot died on a Sunday, on the 9th day
in the
Sunday,
agrees, also, with the chronological notices of his biographer Adamnan, who
year
inferentially places the birth of St. Columba in the year 52 1 ; while in his forty-
second 110 he over to Britain, a. d. and year, passed 563,
97 Tigernach assigns St. Columba's birth
to A. D. 520, and therefore it seems incon-
sistent with his date of death, at a. d. 596, to
allow him seventy-seven years of life. " It
has been very much the habit to extol this
chronicler as a most accurate chronologist,"
observes the Rev. Dr. Reeves, "but it is to
be remembered that the years printed in the
margin by O'Conor are 0' Conor's (nun, not
Tighernach's. He generally adjusts them missam ingreditur ecclesiam. " The meaning by adding one to the years set down for the here seems to be, that vespers had been at a parallel entries in the Annals of Ulster. very late hour on that Sunday (? Saturday) This is very often done in opposition to the evening, or that Matins and Lauds author's own notation. In the whole range for the—day following had then to be
of Irish
imperatively demanded than a faithful ex-
hibition of Tighernach's text. In O'Conor, Holy Sacrifice of the Mass afterwards,
it is so currupt, so interpolated, so blundered,
at an early hour. The Rev. Dr. Reeves re-
unsafe to trust the text, while it is certain mischief to follow the
translation. "
98 A copy of this is contained in the
:
marks " Adamnan reckons his from
that it is
extremely
day sunset to sunset, and thus we find him, on
fiepov, and making the night of a festival "Leabhar Breac," and in the "Book of precede the day. " Examples are given
Lismore," as also in a Manuscript of the
Advocates' Library. It has been literally
translated into English, by William Maun-
sell Hennessey, and this translation has
been published in William F. Skene's Rev. Dr. Reeves adds " Now the Regular
"
Celtic Scotland : a History of Ancient letter of the ninth of June is f ; therefore 1*"
Alban," vol. ii. See Appendix, No. i. , p. 507. 99 In this Manuscript, under the saint's name, we find Cr\i cetit;cAi'6ir' CoiAinciU/i : a gen, a bAcliif, a b&y, thus translated, " Three Pentecosts [quinquagesimas] of Colam-cille : his birth, his baptism, and his death. " According to the Calendar of Marianus O'Gorman, St. Columb was born
on the 7th of December.
100 See "Trias Thaumaturga," Quarta
Appendix ad Acta S. Columbae, cap. vi. , p. 486.
was the Sunday letter of the year. But 597 is the only year at this period to which F belongs, that is, whose first of January fell on Tuesday.
108 The feast of St. Columba's successor at Iona, the Abbot Baithen, occurs on this day, likewise, and Adamnan notes the co- incidence, in his " Life of St. Columba," lib. ii. , cap. 45, p. 182.
109 The Rev. Dr. Reeves has very ably de- monstrated this to have been the true year of the holy Abbot's death, in his edition of Adamnan's "Life of St. Columba," Addi- tional ; Notes L, pp. 309 to 312, with the accompanying notes.
110 And the second after the battle year
Cuildreibhne;
101 102
In his Chronicle, at A. D. 596.
At the 9th of June.
103 See " Rerum Hibernicarum Scripto-
tomus
,0* That of Adamnan, and from him the
res,"
i. , Prolegomina,p. 139.
"
106 It is thus expressed by Adamnan : Sanctus ad vespertinalem Doniinicae noctis
Father John Colgan, Ioa
succeeding proofs have been taken, while the particulars have been given in the pre- ceding part of the present chapter.
105 Adamnan relates the saying of St. Co- lumba on Saturday, "hac sequenti media venerabili Dominica nocte patrum gradier viam. "
ecited most after
having completed
probably
and with a view of celebrating the
more than one occasion, employing vuxOv-
from his "Life of St. Columba," lib. ii. , cap. 45, p. 181, lib. hi. , cap. 11, p. 210, cap. 12, p. 211, and cap. 23, pp. 230, 233.
107 In summing up these particulars, the :
544 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [June 9.
thirty-four years of his pilgrimage, it must be concluded, that he departed from life, a. d. 597, giving seventy-six years for his age. This calculation fairly accords, likewise, with the account of Venerable Bede,111 who placing St. Columba's removal to Scotland at 565, and who, giving him thirty-two years of pilgrimage there, brings his death to a. d. 597, when he was about
the uncertainty being in his estimation, as to whether it happened before or after the midnight of Sunday. "3 To this latter year, some of the best modern
writers, such as Sir James Ware" 4 Roderick O'Flaherty, 115 Bishop
6 11 II8 Challoner," Rev. Dr. Lanigan, ? the Rev. Alban Butler, Les Petits
112
as to the year of St. Columba's decease, he seems doubtful as to the day
of seventy-seven years age.
While the learned
Ussher — Archbishop agrees
1 '? Rev. Dr. and William F. Reeves,
120 the
Skene, assign departure
The year 598 is assigned by
Bollandistes,
of the holy founder of Iona from this life.
I2I
122
I23 and
Father
byMatthewof Paris,
12* for that of his death. In
by I25 have
very generally adopted, by writers who have
says : Quod si ineunte IX die Junii is decesserit, ad annum dxcvii. cum Beda ; rin desinente ad annum dxcvi. cum Her- manno mors ejus erit referenda : pro quo etiam Tigernaci faciunt Annales ; in quibus Quit's ColumcilU in nocte Do—minica: Pettte- COSttt c0ntij4is. se memoratur. " " Britannica- rum Eccle»iarum Antiquitates," cap. xv. , p. 363. See also his Index Chronologicus, at A. d. , dxcvii. , p. 534.
Scriptoribus Hiberniae," lib. i. , cap. ii. , p. 15.
"5 See •'
Ogygia,"
learnedly investigated the matter. 113He "
123
"4 See "De
Baert, S. J. ,
who edited the Acts of our
Scotia;
gus Chronologo-Genealogicus, pp. 474, 475.
116 See "A Memorial of British
p. 89.
Commentarius
"' See " Ecclesiastical of
History Ireland,"
vol. ii. , chap, xii. , sect, xiv. , p. 245, and nn. 230, 231, pp. 247, 248.
1,8
See "Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and other principal Saints," vol. vi. , June ix. The Rev. Alban Butler mistakes, how- ever, in making Saturday fall on the 9th of June, in A. D. 597.
"'See "Vies des Saints," tome vi. ,
120
Ancient Alban," vol.
194.
"; See Rev. Dr.
Lanigan's
ix de Jour
35 peregrinationis suae, aetatis 76 . " Codex Harleianus.
,2 "
9 Thus in Reran) Hibernicarum Scrip-
tores," tomus ii. , Annales Innisfallenses,
we have in the Bodleian " Nativitas copy,
Regum
ii. , Junii
Prxsbytero Abbate, Ad Yitam prolixiorem
byMatthewofWestminster,
Sigibert,
John Mabillon,
the illustrious Cenobiarch terminated his precious life. Most probably, how- ever, the truest calculation is, that Columba died very early on Sunday morn-
the
of
a. d.
120
At this
he should have been in the
9th
His death has been
597. 12
1. 1 *' See
June,
time,
? according to the Annals of Innisfallen,
ing,
eighty-sixth year of his age,
lished by Rev. Dr. O'Conor, 120 but in which we find no record of his demise.
Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum,"lib. iii. , cap. iv. , pp. 168, 169.
banus, doctor Scotorum et Pictorum, obiit, qui posteris suis multa sanctkatis documenta
1. 2
This computation seems to have been
—"Chronica edited reliquit. " Majora," by
Henry Richards Luard, M. A. , vol. i.