See " Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and
other principal Saints," vol.
other principal Saints," vol.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v7
his feast is entered.
In certain additions to the Martyrology of Venerable Bede, this feast of St.
Vincent's
T
xiv. De S.
is set down for the of 8 other
14th July/ Among Martyrologists,
Deposition
Greven,49 Molanus,s° and Wion,s celebrate this festival. Again, Dorgan,
41 This is thought to have had its origin confessoris et conjugis beatae Waldetrudis in Tartary about the year 1346. Soon it Castrilocensis, neptis beatae Gudilae. Qui
spread through Asia, Europe and Africa.
42 Le Fort has given an account of this, in
his French Life of St. Vincent, at p. 262.
43 See Rev ; S. Baring-Gould's "Lives of
the Saints, vol. vii. , July 14, p. 322.
44 See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus hi. , Julii
sect. ii. , p. 663.
45 In a Codex Lobiensis, in the margin, but
sanctorum Autberti et Gisleni abbatis exhor- tatione, factus ex Comite monachus Christo in omnibus suis actibus servire studebat. " The inaccuracyof statement, that Waldetrude had been niece to St. Gudule, may be dis- missed without further comment.
48 Thus " villa dicitur : Ipso die, quae
Somnias depositio B. Vincentii ; qui moni-
tis B. Autberti pontificis mundum relinquens, in factis bonae conversationis sese exer- cuit. "
4? Thus : "Vincentii Comitis Hanoniae confessoris. "
s° Thus : "Apud Sonegias, depositio B. Vincentii confessoris Christi ; qui in monas-
terio, quod Altus Mons dicitur, tonso capite vixit plurimis annis sub sancta regula, ser- vata caritate, separatus a S. Waldetrude con.
alias Madelgario, &c. Commentarius Praevius,
Vincentio, Confessore,
also in a handwriting coeval, is this entry :
"
AltumMontemconstruxit. " Thereisastill
Sonegias, sancti Vincenti confessoris, qui
fuller entry regarding him, in a Codex S. Laurentii Leodii.
46 Thus: "Vincentii confessoris Hao- niae. "
"7 Thus : "Apud Senogias sancti Vincentii
i 3 4 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 14.
Menard. Bucelin, Constantinus Ghinius, Ferrarius, and Castellanus, notice
him. This holy man is commemorated, likewise, in the Martyrologies of Saussay and of Mirseus. At the 14th of July, a festival is entered in the
2
Martyrology of Donegal,* in honour of Maelceadar,53 the Victorious, first
EarloftheHanoine. Hisnameanddesignationarefoundwithinbrackets, in this Calendar. This is probably the Irish form of his name ; but, on the Continent, it assumes a different denomination. In Father Henry Fitzsimon's Calendar of our saints, we meet with Vincentius, alias Waldegarius, for the same date. 54 Father Stephen White 55 commemorates this saint, at the pre- sent date. In C—onvseus' list, we find St. Vincentius—called the companion
of Maldeigarius in the Irish language identical with Mac Guer, and
his festival is placed at the 14th of July. In the anonymous list of our national saints, published by O'Sullevan Beare, 56 the name Vincentius is entered, at the 14th of July. He was venerated at Cambray, a city of Hainault, on the River Scheld, in the Low Countries. Formerly, in the church of Cambrai, an office of St. Vincent had been celebrated with nine Lessons, and a Mass waslikewiseoffered. Thesearethoughttohavehadanancientorigin,and to date back probably to a period, soon after the invasion of the Normans, to which allusion has been already made. In Hautmont and Soignies, likewise, In a — to
reverence was special paid
to his
there is an office for St. Vincent, and various —
Count ofllannonia.
s* Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
io4» *95-
pro Hibernia," cap. ii. , p. 15. Also, see
cap. v. , pp. 65, 66.
i6 See "Historiae Catholicse Iberniae'
memory. Manuscript belonging extracts from it such
Soignies,
as antiphons, hymns, capitulum and proper prayer in the Bollandists' work. 57
Devotions offered by religious communities, or any prayer said in common, especially with united fervour, must always be found very powerful with God.
"
If two of you," said our Lord, "shall consent upon earth concerning any- thing, whatsoever they shall ask, it shall be done to them by my Father who is in heaven. " Therefore, we may infer, that the continuous prayers, labours and self-sacrifices of religious persons, who retire from high stations in this world, to serve God solely, are most acceptable in his sight ; and the more so, when in the monastic state, a holy violence is offered by a large association of pious inmates, urged by the example of a holy superior, and animated by
his exhortations.
Article II. —St. Id, Bishop of Ath-Fhadhat, now Ahade or Aghade, County of Carlow. [Said to have lived in the Fifth Century. '] If what is generally accepted in relation to this holy man be correct, he must have flourished at a very early period in the Irish Church. The present saint, called Id or Idus, is said to have been one of St. Patrick's disciples, and to have been invoked in the old Irish metrical prayer, which bears the nameofSt. Moling. ThereferencetoColgan'sManuscriptsisreliedonfor
juge sua. " 55 « Ad 14 Julii, S. Vincentium (ante die-
s' In his " Lignum Vitcc," where lie is re- turn Malitegaium) filium regis Iberniae et
presented as being King of Ireland and patronum muhis Belgis. '' See "Apologia
53 A note by Dr. Todd says, at Maelcea- Compendium," tomus i. , lib. iv. , cap. xi. ,
" :
M See O'Sullevan Beare's " Historiae xiv. De S. Vincentio, Confessore, alias Catholicse Iberniae Compendium," tomus i. , Madelgario. Commentarius Praevius, sect. lib. iv. , cap. x. , xii. , pp. 49, 57. iii. , pp. 664 to 666.
dar
more recent hand. " 57 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii
This entry, within brackets, is in the p. 50.
July 14. LIVES OF THE IRISH SA1MS. 235
the
foregoing
statement. 1 Unless the name can be resolved into Aed or
Aedus, we do not find any such person in the published Acts of St. Patrick. 2
The Martyrology of Donegal 3 registers a festival to honour Id, Bishop of
Ath Fhadhat, in Leinster, at the 14th of July. That place to which he belonged is said to be situated in the barony of Forth, and it gives name to
the present parish of Aghade,* in the county of Carlow. However, if the traditional accounts regarding it, as found in the romantic literature of ancient Erinn, be founded on anything approaching truth, the denomination of his place ought rather be called Ahade. s There can hardly be a question,
Aghade Church, County of Carlow.
butthattheoriginalnameofAhadewasAthFadat,orFadat'sFord. 6 There is a legendary Dindscanchas or nomenclature history of its situation, in theBook
8
ofLeinster,7 the substance of which is given by Professor Eugene O'Curry.
Article II. —x See Rev. Alban Butler's Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and other
or of the Red Head, with his household, fought Liath of Doire Leith, with his son Fadad and his two daughters Doe and Caichne, at Loch Lurcan, for the right of fishing in the Barrow. Liath was killed in this battle. Some time, afterwards, Fadad, the son of Liath, with his two sisters, Doe and Caichne, mustered their friends, and another battlewasfoughtinthesameplace. There,on the banks of the Slaney, Fadad waskilled. In commemoration of this event, the place was afterwards called Ath Fadad or the Fort of Fadad, a name which it retains to the present day, under the slightly Anglicized form of Ahade.
7 See the fine folio edition, edited by Dr.
Robert Atkinson, at pp. 195, 196.
8 See " On the Manners and Customs of
the Ancient Irish. " A series of Lectures. Edited with an Introduction, Appendices, etc. , by W. K. Sullivan, Ph. D. , &c, vol.
"
principal Saints," vol. vii. , July xiv.
2
See his Life, in the Third Volnme of this
work, at March 17th, Art. i. , chap, xxiv. , for an enumeration of his disciples and officials.
3 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
194, 195.
4 It is marked on the " Ordnance Survey
Townland Maps for the County of Carlow," sheets 13, 17, 18. The townland proper is on sheet 13.
s The legendary accounts of this place may
be found in "Letters relating to the Antiqui-
ties of the County of Carlow, containing in- formation collected during the Progress of the Ordnance Survey in 1839. " Letter of Eugene O'Curry, dated Tulach O'Faidhlim,
8th August, 1839, pp. 399 to 402.
6 The stoiy goes, that Etan Cend Derg
236 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 14.
The Protestant church of the union of Ballon and Aghade stands on the site of one much older,9 and the foundations have been utilized for the erection of the more modern building, which is said to have been so old, that the date and cost of its erection are unascertainable. 10 The church is prettily situated, on a gently elevated ground, and in the midst of a highly cultivated district. A rivulet running close to the churchyard adds greatly to the beauty of this tranquil scene. Some interesting tombs and their inscriptions are to be found there. " It has been stated, that about the middle of the twelfth century, by Dermod Mac Murchad, King of Leinster, a nunnery had
13
been here founded, for nuns of the order of St. Augustine,
attached to the nunnery of St. Mary de Hogges, in the city of Dublin. * There is now no remembrance of the nunnery in this locality. A blessed well—but without a name—is there, while other antiquities exist, and numerous human remains have been turned up, between Ahade and the town of
Article III. —St. Onchu, or Onchuo, Priest, of Kildare, County
ofKildare. ThefeastofSt. Onchuo,apriest,ofKidare,waskeptonthe
of 1 In the of 2 at this same is entered 14th July. Martyrology Tallagh, date,
Onchon Mic Blaithmic. This shows a later entry in the Martyrology of Tallagh—at least in the published copy—than Colgan supposed ; for, he
thought St. Corpre, Abbot of Clonmacnoise, who died a. d. 899, was the
latest person inserted in that Calendar, whereas from what we find recorded,
the present holy priest flourished in the tenth century, He is called the
blessed Onchuo, presbyter of Kildare. 3 About him, little happens to be
known. In what particular capacity he figured, in that episcopal city, does
not appear from our Annals. It is probable, he had been attached to its
cathedral, in some official position. Veneration was given to Onchu,* son
of Blathmac, at the 14th of July, according to the Martyrology of Donegal. s
This patronymic seems to identify him with that St. Onchu, commemorated
Tullow. 14 Under the head of Ath
nameId, bishop of Ath-Fadat,16 in Leinster, for this day. At the 14th of July, St. Idus, Bishop of Ath-Fada, in Leinster, is set down by Rev. Alban Butler. 1 ? In the " Circle of the Seasons," 18 at this same date, he is simply called a bishop in Leinster. Little of a reliable character can be gleaned regarding him.
at the 9th of July.
6
In this sense, too, the present entry has been accepted
iii. , Lecture xxxviii. , p. 404.
9 The accompanying illustration is from a
sketch by the author on the spot in Septem- bcr, 1889. It was copied by William F. Wakeman and drawn on the wood, engraved by Mis. Millard.
part i. , pp. 88, 89.
l6 Ath Fadat, Aghade or Ahade, barony
of Forth, county of Carlow. William M.
Hennessy's note.
'?
See " Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and
other principal Saints," vol. vii. , July xiv.
10" ,8 See Parliamentary Gazetteer of Ire-
land," vol. i. , p. 15.
"See " and of Ryan's History Antiquities
the County of Carlow," p. 326.
12 " 2
See Archdall's Monasticon Hiberni-
cum," p. 35.
13 See also Rev. Dr. Lanigan's " Ecclesi-
astical History of Ireland," vol. iv. , chap. xxviii. , pp. 185, 187.
14 Such is the account left us by Eugene O'Curry.
15 See "Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy," Irish Manuscript Series, vol. i. ,
Brigidu. -, cap. ii. , p . 630.
Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xxix.
Fadat,
"
4 Dr. Todd, in a note, says at Onchu :
Duald Mac Firbis j s enters the
See p. 196. — Article III.
See " Trias Colgan's
adActaS.
3 See Archdall's "Monasticon Hiberni-
cum," p. 327.
Thaumaturga," Appendix Quinta
This is also added by the more recent hand, with the authorities Mar. , M. Tarn. "
s Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
194. 195.
6
See the present volume of this work, at
but it was then 1
July 14. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 237
by the Bollandists,? on the authority of Father O'Sheerin, who remarks, that on the 9th of July, his feast had been celebrated in the Martyrologies of
Marianus O'Gorman, of Cathal Maguire and of Donegal. Still it is possible they had been different persons. The present saint is said to have died, in
the year 929. 8
Article IV. —St. Colman, Son of Aingen. In the Martyrology of
Tallagh,
1 the name of Colman Mac
Andgein appears,
at the
14th
of
July.
The patronymic furnishes little clue to his family or descent, much less to his
locality. He probably lived in or before the eighth century. In the Martyr-
2 we have entered, likewise, Colman, the son of
On the authority of Father O'Sheerin, the Bollandists 3 have inserted his festival at the present date.
Article V. —Feast of the Dormition or Rest of St. Cormac, of Ath-Truim, or Trim, County of Meath. According to Duald Mac
Truim,
Article VI. —Translation of two Heads of the Ursuline Virgins and Martyrs. In the edition of that Martyrology, published at Lubeck and Cologne, a feast for the Translation of two Heads of the Ursuline
of
ology Donegal,
Aingen.
1 the orRestof ofAth Dormitatio, Cormac, bishop
now 2 Trim,
Firbis,
occurs at the 14th of July. The year of his demise was 741, according to the Annals of the Four Masters. 3 The Annals of Ulster place his death, at a. d. 645.
Martyrs and Virgins from Cologne into Dacia is set down, at the 14th of July. 1
Notingthisfestival,atthissamedate,theBollandists referfurtherconsidera- tion of the circumstance to the 21st of October.
Article VII. —St. Faghna. In the anonymous Catalogue of Irish
1
Saints published by O'Sullevan Beare, a St. Faghna is mentioned, at the
14th
of
July.
date,
doubtingly
At this
the Bollandists 2
enter 3 Fagna.
In the early Irish Church was commemorated the festival of Bishop Jacob, with a devout
Series, vol. i. , parti. , pp. 88, 89.
2 Ath Truim, now Trim, in the county of
Article VIII. —Feast of the Bishop Jacob.
that particular day, Art. ii. "
7 See Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. ,
xiv. Among the pretermitted saints, p. Meath. See William M. Hennessy's
627.
8 See Dr. O'Donovan's " Annals of the
Four Masters," v— ol. i. ,
note.
3 See Dr. O'Donovan's edition, vol. i. ArticleVI. —' See"ActaSanctorum,"
Article IV.
the
Article v. — ' See
of the Royal Irish Academy," Irish Manuscript
6j~.
3 Thus :
"Proceedings
p.
"
Julii
pp. 624, 625.
Edited by Rev. Dr. tomus iii. , Julii xiv. Among preter-
«
Kelly, p. xxix.
2 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
I94> I 95-
3 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii.
Julii xiv. Among the pretermitted saints, p. 627.
mitted saints, p. —628. "
Article vii. ' See Historic Catho-
lie* Ibernise Compendium," tomus i. , lib.
2
p. 50.
See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. ,
iv. , xi. , cap.
Julii xiv. Among the pretermitted saints,
Fagna alicubi inter Sanctos
238 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 14.
invocation in the u Feilire"1 of St. ^ngus, at the 14th of July. Elsewhere, we find no account of this Bishop Jacob, at the present date.
Article IX. —Reputed Feast of St. Dentelinus, Patron of Rees,
Duchy of Cleves. At this {Seventh Century. ']
z is venerated,
St. Denain, Dentelinus, or Dentlin, the son of St. Maelceadar and St. Walde- trude. He was their youngest son, and he died according to some writers, while an infant, or as others state, at a very early age, and not exceeding seven years. The Bollandists 2 have his Acts, in ten paragraphs. In the earlier part of the seventh century, he must have been born, as the previous Lifeofhissaintedparentseemstoshow; but,unlesshisbirthtookplacein Ireland, we do not understand why he should have been classed among the saints of our country. Some contend, that after receiving the holy Sacrament of Baptism, his regenerated soul was immediately received into Heaven ; so
that thus, from the mouth of babes and sucklings the Lord Himself received
praise. His noble parents took care to have him honourably interred, as has been supposed at Rees, in the Duchy of Cleves, now in Rhenish Prussia. There, the canons of that church were accustomed to celebrate his memory on each recurring 14th day of July. They had an office with proper Lessons, and at Matins, whil—e allusion is made to Dentelinus— yet his life could not have been very eventful praise is chiefly bestowed on his sanctified parents. The popular tradition, that while an infant he passed to the rewards of eternal life, is recorded in it. According to one statement, Dentelinus died on the 16th day of March, but where is not known. After his death, the people seem to have entertained a great devotion for the angelic being that went to Heaven, and while invoking his intercession, miracles are said to have been wrought at Rees, in favour of the infirm and afflicted. Subsequently, the relics of St. Dentelin were conveyed to Soignies and kept in a shrine, beside those Of his sainted father Madelgarius. Some were kept, however, in the church of Rees; and in the year 1040, St. Irmgrade, daughter to the Count of Zutphen, had a beautiful church erected in honour of the Blessed Virgin. It is certain, that there, in a very special manner, St. Dentelinus has been venerated, and he is regarded as patron of the place. His office has been celebrated there on the 14th of July, as also weekly, on Mondays and Wednesdays, not pre- occupied by a festival of higher degree. Moreover, the parish of St. Alde- gundeatEmbrichadachoralofficeforhim,onthe16thdayofMarch. In Hannonia, no special honours seem to have been accorded to this holy infant. On his father's shrine, he is represented as a boy, with a hawk on his wrist. 3 The Belgian and Cologne Martyrologies enter his feast at the 14th of July. Among these records are to be classed, the Manuscript Florarius
computata, mihi necdum nota est. " the Royal Irish Academy, vol. i. , parti. On Article VIII. —* In the "Leabhar the Calendar of Oengus, p. ex. The
"
Breac
and translated into English, by Whitley cio quis iacop. " —See p. cxviii.
copy, the following rami is found, scholiast in a comment adds : "iacop. ne [s]
Stokes, LL. D.
nopA-oeAmcepfop 1x\cob ipnoemem AceochAm nonailetn
, oen.
"May the bishop Jacob, who is most holy, protect us! we beseech,—we entreat him.
Article ix. See Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum Hiberniae," iii. Februarii, n. 3, p. 249. Also, Februarii xxv. , n. 4, p. 412.
2 See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii xiv. De S. Denti lino Puero Confess. Resse,
in Clivia, pp. 689 to 691. The editor is Father John Baptist Soller.
3 See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's "Lives of
Com>eichenbo|\noei
with a decade of infants. '*
"Transactions of
the vol.
T
xiv. De S.
is set down for the of 8 other
14th July/ Among Martyrologists,
Deposition
Greven,49 Molanus,s° and Wion,s celebrate this festival. Again, Dorgan,
41 This is thought to have had its origin confessoris et conjugis beatae Waldetrudis in Tartary about the year 1346. Soon it Castrilocensis, neptis beatae Gudilae. Qui
spread through Asia, Europe and Africa.
42 Le Fort has given an account of this, in
his French Life of St. Vincent, at p. 262.
43 See Rev ; S. Baring-Gould's "Lives of
the Saints, vol. vii. , July 14, p. 322.
44 See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus hi. , Julii
sect. ii. , p. 663.
45 In a Codex Lobiensis, in the margin, but
sanctorum Autberti et Gisleni abbatis exhor- tatione, factus ex Comite monachus Christo in omnibus suis actibus servire studebat. " The inaccuracyof statement, that Waldetrude had been niece to St. Gudule, may be dis- missed without further comment.
48 Thus " villa dicitur : Ipso die, quae
Somnias depositio B. Vincentii ; qui moni-
tis B. Autberti pontificis mundum relinquens, in factis bonae conversationis sese exer- cuit. "
4? Thus : "Vincentii Comitis Hanoniae confessoris. "
s° Thus : "Apud Sonegias, depositio B. Vincentii confessoris Christi ; qui in monas-
terio, quod Altus Mons dicitur, tonso capite vixit plurimis annis sub sancta regula, ser- vata caritate, separatus a S. Waldetrude con.
alias Madelgario, &c. Commentarius Praevius,
Vincentio, Confessore,
also in a handwriting coeval, is this entry :
"
AltumMontemconstruxit. " Thereisastill
Sonegias, sancti Vincenti confessoris, qui
fuller entry regarding him, in a Codex S. Laurentii Leodii.
46 Thus: "Vincentii confessoris Hao- niae. "
"7 Thus : "Apud Senogias sancti Vincentii
i 3 4 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 14.
Menard. Bucelin, Constantinus Ghinius, Ferrarius, and Castellanus, notice
him. This holy man is commemorated, likewise, in the Martyrologies of Saussay and of Mirseus. At the 14th of July, a festival is entered in the
2
Martyrology of Donegal,* in honour of Maelceadar,53 the Victorious, first
EarloftheHanoine. Hisnameanddesignationarefoundwithinbrackets, in this Calendar. This is probably the Irish form of his name ; but, on the Continent, it assumes a different denomination. In Father Henry Fitzsimon's Calendar of our saints, we meet with Vincentius, alias Waldegarius, for the same date. 54 Father Stephen White 55 commemorates this saint, at the pre- sent date. In C—onvseus' list, we find St. Vincentius—called the companion
of Maldeigarius in the Irish language identical with Mac Guer, and
his festival is placed at the 14th of July. In the anonymous list of our national saints, published by O'Sullevan Beare, 56 the name Vincentius is entered, at the 14th of July. He was venerated at Cambray, a city of Hainault, on the River Scheld, in the Low Countries. Formerly, in the church of Cambrai, an office of St. Vincent had been celebrated with nine Lessons, and a Mass waslikewiseoffered. Thesearethoughttohavehadanancientorigin,and to date back probably to a period, soon after the invasion of the Normans, to which allusion has been already made. In Hautmont and Soignies, likewise, In a — to
reverence was special paid
to his
there is an office for St. Vincent, and various —
Count ofllannonia.
s* Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
io4» *95-
pro Hibernia," cap. ii. , p. 15. Also, see
cap. v. , pp. 65, 66.
i6 See "Historiae Catholicse Iberniae'
memory. Manuscript belonging extracts from it such
Soignies,
as antiphons, hymns, capitulum and proper prayer in the Bollandists' work. 57
Devotions offered by religious communities, or any prayer said in common, especially with united fervour, must always be found very powerful with God.
"
If two of you," said our Lord, "shall consent upon earth concerning any- thing, whatsoever they shall ask, it shall be done to them by my Father who is in heaven. " Therefore, we may infer, that the continuous prayers, labours and self-sacrifices of religious persons, who retire from high stations in this world, to serve God solely, are most acceptable in his sight ; and the more so, when in the monastic state, a holy violence is offered by a large association of pious inmates, urged by the example of a holy superior, and animated by
his exhortations.
Article II. —St. Id, Bishop of Ath-Fhadhat, now Ahade or Aghade, County of Carlow. [Said to have lived in the Fifth Century. '] If what is generally accepted in relation to this holy man be correct, he must have flourished at a very early period in the Irish Church. The present saint, called Id or Idus, is said to have been one of St. Patrick's disciples, and to have been invoked in the old Irish metrical prayer, which bears the nameofSt. Moling. ThereferencetoColgan'sManuscriptsisreliedonfor
juge sua. " 55 « Ad 14 Julii, S. Vincentium (ante die-
s' In his " Lignum Vitcc," where lie is re- turn Malitegaium) filium regis Iberniae et
presented as being King of Ireland and patronum muhis Belgis. '' See "Apologia
53 A note by Dr. Todd says, at Maelcea- Compendium," tomus i. , lib. iv. , cap. xi. ,
" :
M See O'Sullevan Beare's " Historiae xiv. De S. Vincentio, Confessore, alias Catholicse Iberniae Compendium," tomus i. , Madelgario. Commentarius Praevius, sect. lib. iv. , cap. x. , xii. , pp. 49, 57. iii. , pp. 664 to 666.
dar
more recent hand. " 57 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii
This entry, within brackets, is in the p. 50.
July 14. LIVES OF THE IRISH SA1MS. 235
the
foregoing
statement. 1 Unless the name can be resolved into Aed or
Aedus, we do not find any such person in the published Acts of St. Patrick. 2
The Martyrology of Donegal 3 registers a festival to honour Id, Bishop of
Ath Fhadhat, in Leinster, at the 14th of July. That place to which he belonged is said to be situated in the barony of Forth, and it gives name to
the present parish of Aghade,* in the county of Carlow. However, if the traditional accounts regarding it, as found in the romantic literature of ancient Erinn, be founded on anything approaching truth, the denomination of his place ought rather be called Ahade. s There can hardly be a question,
Aghade Church, County of Carlow.
butthattheoriginalnameofAhadewasAthFadat,orFadat'sFord. 6 There is a legendary Dindscanchas or nomenclature history of its situation, in theBook
8
ofLeinster,7 the substance of which is given by Professor Eugene O'Curry.
Article II. —x See Rev. Alban Butler's Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and other
or of the Red Head, with his household, fought Liath of Doire Leith, with his son Fadad and his two daughters Doe and Caichne, at Loch Lurcan, for the right of fishing in the Barrow. Liath was killed in this battle. Some time, afterwards, Fadad, the son of Liath, with his two sisters, Doe and Caichne, mustered their friends, and another battlewasfoughtinthesameplace. There,on the banks of the Slaney, Fadad waskilled. In commemoration of this event, the place was afterwards called Ath Fadad or the Fort of Fadad, a name which it retains to the present day, under the slightly Anglicized form of Ahade.
7 See the fine folio edition, edited by Dr.
Robert Atkinson, at pp. 195, 196.
8 See " On the Manners and Customs of
the Ancient Irish. " A series of Lectures. Edited with an Introduction, Appendices, etc. , by W. K. Sullivan, Ph. D. , &c, vol.
"
principal Saints," vol. vii. , July xiv.
2
See his Life, in the Third Volnme of this
work, at March 17th, Art. i. , chap, xxiv. , for an enumeration of his disciples and officials.
3 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
194, 195.
4 It is marked on the " Ordnance Survey
Townland Maps for the County of Carlow," sheets 13, 17, 18. The townland proper is on sheet 13.
s The legendary accounts of this place may
be found in "Letters relating to the Antiqui-
ties of the County of Carlow, containing in- formation collected during the Progress of the Ordnance Survey in 1839. " Letter of Eugene O'Curry, dated Tulach O'Faidhlim,
8th August, 1839, pp. 399 to 402.
6 The stoiy goes, that Etan Cend Derg
236 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 14.
The Protestant church of the union of Ballon and Aghade stands on the site of one much older,9 and the foundations have been utilized for the erection of the more modern building, which is said to have been so old, that the date and cost of its erection are unascertainable. 10 The church is prettily situated, on a gently elevated ground, and in the midst of a highly cultivated district. A rivulet running close to the churchyard adds greatly to the beauty of this tranquil scene. Some interesting tombs and their inscriptions are to be found there. " It has been stated, that about the middle of the twelfth century, by Dermod Mac Murchad, King of Leinster, a nunnery had
13
been here founded, for nuns of the order of St. Augustine,
attached to the nunnery of St. Mary de Hogges, in the city of Dublin. * There is now no remembrance of the nunnery in this locality. A blessed well—but without a name—is there, while other antiquities exist, and numerous human remains have been turned up, between Ahade and the town of
Article III. —St. Onchu, or Onchuo, Priest, of Kildare, County
ofKildare. ThefeastofSt. Onchuo,apriest,ofKidare,waskeptonthe
of 1 In the of 2 at this same is entered 14th July. Martyrology Tallagh, date,
Onchon Mic Blaithmic. This shows a later entry in the Martyrology of Tallagh—at least in the published copy—than Colgan supposed ; for, he
thought St. Corpre, Abbot of Clonmacnoise, who died a. d. 899, was the
latest person inserted in that Calendar, whereas from what we find recorded,
the present holy priest flourished in the tenth century, He is called the
blessed Onchuo, presbyter of Kildare. 3 About him, little happens to be
known. In what particular capacity he figured, in that episcopal city, does
not appear from our Annals. It is probable, he had been attached to its
cathedral, in some official position. Veneration was given to Onchu,* son
of Blathmac, at the 14th of July, according to the Martyrology of Donegal. s
This patronymic seems to identify him with that St. Onchu, commemorated
Tullow. 14 Under the head of Ath
nameId, bishop of Ath-Fadat,16 in Leinster, for this day. At the 14th of July, St. Idus, Bishop of Ath-Fada, in Leinster, is set down by Rev. Alban Butler. 1 ? In the " Circle of the Seasons," 18 at this same date, he is simply called a bishop in Leinster. Little of a reliable character can be gleaned regarding him.
at the 9th of July.
6
In this sense, too, the present entry has been accepted
iii. , Lecture xxxviii. , p. 404.
9 The accompanying illustration is from a
sketch by the author on the spot in Septem- bcr, 1889. It was copied by William F. Wakeman and drawn on the wood, engraved by Mis. Millard.
part i. , pp. 88, 89.
l6 Ath Fadat, Aghade or Ahade, barony
of Forth, county of Carlow. William M.
Hennessy's note.
'?
See " Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and
other principal Saints," vol. vii. , July xiv.
10" ,8 See Parliamentary Gazetteer of Ire-
land," vol. i. , p. 15.
"See " and of Ryan's History Antiquities
the County of Carlow," p. 326.
12 " 2
See Archdall's Monasticon Hiberni-
cum," p. 35.
13 See also Rev. Dr. Lanigan's " Ecclesi-
astical History of Ireland," vol. iv. , chap. xxviii. , pp. 185, 187.
14 Such is the account left us by Eugene O'Curry.
15 See "Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy," Irish Manuscript Series, vol. i. ,
Brigidu. -, cap. ii. , p . 630.
Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xxix.
Fadat,
"
4 Dr. Todd, in a note, says at Onchu :
Duald Mac Firbis j s enters the
See p. 196. — Article III.
See " Trias Colgan's
adActaS.
3 See Archdall's "Monasticon Hiberni-
cum," p. 327.
Thaumaturga," Appendix Quinta
This is also added by the more recent hand, with the authorities Mar. , M. Tarn. "
s Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
194. 195.
6
See the present volume of this work, at
but it was then 1
July 14. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 237
by the Bollandists,? on the authority of Father O'Sheerin, who remarks, that on the 9th of July, his feast had been celebrated in the Martyrologies of
Marianus O'Gorman, of Cathal Maguire and of Donegal. Still it is possible they had been different persons. The present saint is said to have died, in
the year 929. 8
Article IV. —St. Colman, Son of Aingen. In the Martyrology of
Tallagh,
1 the name of Colman Mac
Andgein appears,
at the
14th
of
July.
The patronymic furnishes little clue to his family or descent, much less to his
locality. He probably lived in or before the eighth century. In the Martyr-
2 we have entered, likewise, Colman, the son of
On the authority of Father O'Sheerin, the Bollandists 3 have inserted his festival at the present date.
Article V. —Feast of the Dormition or Rest of St. Cormac, of Ath-Truim, or Trim, County of Meath. According to Duald Mac
Truim,
Article VI. —Translation of two Heads of the Ursuline Virgins and Martyrs. In the edition of that Martyrology, published at Lubeck and Cologne, a feast for the Translation of two Heads of the Ursuline
of
ology Donegal,
Aingen.
1 the orRestof ofAth Dormitatio, Cormac, bishop
now 2 Trim,
Firbis,
occurs at the 14th of July. The year of his demise was 741, according to the Annals of the Four Masters. 3 The Annals of Ulster place his death, at a. d. 645.
Martyrs and Virgins from Cologne into Dacia is set down, at the 14th of July. 1
Notingthisfestival,atthissamedate,theBollandists referfurtherconsidera- tion of the circumstance to the 21st of October.
Article VII. —St. Faghna. In the anonymous Catalogue of Irish
1
Saints published by O'Sullevan Beare, a St. Faghna is mentioned, at the
14th
of
July.
date,
doubtingly
At this
the Bollandists 2
enter 3 Fagna.
In the early Irish Church was commemorated the festival of Bishop Jacob, with a devout
Series, vol. i. , parti. , pp. 88, 89.
2 Ath Truim, now Trim, in the county of
Article VIII. —Feast of the Bishop Jacob.
that particular day, Art. ii. "
7 See Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. ,
xiv. Among the pretermitted saints, p. Meath. See William M. Hennessy's
627.
8 See Dr. O'Donovan's " Annals of the
Four Masters," v— ol. i. ,
note.
3 See Dr. O'Donovan's edition, vol. i. ArticleVI. —' See"ActaSanctorum,"
Article IV.
the
Article v. — ' See
of the Royal Irish Academy," Irish Manuscript
6j~.
3 Thus :
"Proceedings
p.
"
Julii
pp. 624, 625.
Edited by Rev. Dr. tomus iii. , Julii xiv. Among preter-
«
Kelly, p. xxix.
2 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
I94> I 95-
3 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii.
Julii xiv. Among the pretermitted saints, p. 627.
mitted saints, p. —628. "
Article vii. ' See Historic Catho-
lie* Ibernise Compendium," tomus i. , lib.
2
p. 50.
See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. ,
iv. , xi. , cap.
Julii xiv. Among the pretermitted saints,
Fagna alicubi inter Sanctos
238 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 14.
invocation in the u Feilire"1 of St. ^ngus, at the 14th of July. Elsewhere, we find no account of this Bishop Jacob, at the present date.
Article IX. —Reputed Feast of St. Dentelinus, Patron of Rees,
Duchy of Cleves. At this {Seventh Century. ']
z is venerated,
St. Denain, Dentelinus, or Dentlin, the son of St. Maelceadar and St. Walde- trude. He was their youngest son, and he died according to some writers, while an infant, or as others state, at a very early age, and not exceeding seven years. The Bollandists 2 have his Acts, in ten paragraphs. In the earlier part of the seventh century, he must have been born, as the previous Lifeofhissaintedparentseemstoshow; but,unlesshisbirthtookplacein Ireland, we do not understand why he should have been classed among the saints of our country. Some contend, that after receiving the holy Sacrament of Baptism, his regenerated soul was immediately received into Heaven ; so
that thus, from the mouth of babes and sucklings the Lord Himself received
praise. His noble parents took care to have him honourably interred, as has been supposed at Rees, in the Duchy of Cleves, now in Rhenish Prussia. There, the canons of that church were accustomed to celebrate his memory on each recurring 14th day of July. They had an office with proper Lessons, and at Matins, whil—e allusion is made to Dentelinus— yet his life could not have been very eventful praise is chiefly bestowed on his sanctified parents. The popular tradition, that while an infant he passed to the rewards of eternal life, is recorded in it. According to one statement, Dentelinus died on the 16th day of March, but where is not known. After his death, the people seem to have entertained a great devotion for the angelic being that went to Heaven, and while invoking his intercession, miracles are said to have been wrought at Rees, in favour of the infirm and afflicted. Subsequently, the relics of St. Dentelin were conveyed to Soignies and kept in a shrine, beside those Of his sainted father Madelgarius. Some were kept, however, in the church of Rees; and in the year 1040, St. Irmgrade, daughter to the Count of Zutphen, had a beautiful church erected in honour of the Blessed Virgin. It is certain, that there, in a very special manner, St. Dentelinus has been venerated, and he is regarded as patron of the place. His office has been celebrated there on the 14th of July, as also weekly, on Mondays and Wednesdays, not pre- occupied by a festival of higher degree. Moreover, the parish of St. Alde- gundeatEmbrichadachoralofficeforhim,onthe16thdayofMarch. In Hannonia, no special honours seem to have been accorded to this holy infant. On his father's shrine, he is represented as a boy, with a hawk on his wrist. 3 The Belgian and Cologne Martyrologies enter his feast at the 14th of July. Among these records are to be classed, the Manuscript Florarius
computata, mihi necdum nota est. " the Royal Irish Academy, vol. i. , parti. On Article VIII. —* In the "Leabhar the Calendar of Oengus, p. ex. The
"
Breac
and translated into English, by Whitley cio quis iacop. " —See p. cxviii.
copy, the following rami is found, scholiast in a comment adds : "iacop. ne [s]
Stokes, LL. D.
nopA-oeAmcepfop 1x\cob ipnoemem AceochAm nonailetn
, oen.
"May the bishop Jacob, who is most holy, protect us! we beseech,—we entreat him.
Article ix. See Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum Hiberniae," iii. Februarii, n. 3, p. 249. Also, Februarii xxv. , n. 4, p. 412.
2 See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii xiv. De S. Denti lino Puero Confess. Resse,
in Clivia, pp. 689 to 691. The editor is Father John Baptist Soller.
3 See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's "Lives of
Com>eichenbo|\noei
with a decade of infants. '*
"Transactions of
the vol.