Oilill
Oluim permitted them to acquire any territory in Munster by force of arms ; or if they preferred it, he allowed them to wage war against the Connacians, 84 or against the Lagenians, or against their native Meathian province.
Oluim permitted them to acquire any territory in Munster by force of arms ; or if they preferred it, he allowed them to wage war against the Connacians, 84 or against the Lagenians, or against their native Meathian province.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v7
In Annals of the Four Masters, state, that
the Sanctilogium Genealogicum he is called, " FelhlemidiusLegifer," which latter epithet is Latin for the Irish word " Reachtmear," as Colgan observes, in " Trias Thauma-
turga," Quarta Vita S. Brigidoe, n. 3, P- 563-
53 St. Declan belonged to the race of this
Fedhlimidh Rectmhar, King of Erin. See
" ofthe Irish Proceedings Royal Academy,"
Irish Manuscript Series, vol. i. , part i. , p. 83. s« This king, variously styled Feidhlimidh, Feidhlim or Felix, began his reign in the year A. D. in, and died A. D. 119, "after
having been nine years in the sovereignty of Ireland. "—Dr. O'Donovan's " Annals of
the Four Masters," vol. i. , pp. 102, 103.
ss His name is also written Conn Ketcha- tach, meaning of the Hundred Battles or Victories, because he was reputed the con- queror in so many different engagements. He is styled by other writers, Constans,
Constantinus and Conon.
s6
Constantine was killed in the thirty-fifth year of his reign, A. D. 157. But, in this account, the Four Masters contradict them- selves, as also the writer of St. Declan's Acts. For the Four Masters state, that
Fethlemid died A. D. 119 ; while, thirty-five years added to this period should bring us
only to A. D. 154.
60 The author of our saint's Acts observes
respecting this prince : "Hujus nomen in Themoria perpetuo regnat. " See, likewise, Dr. O'Donovan's "Annals of the Four
Masters," vol. i. , pp. 104, 105.
61 His name has been Latinized " Centima-
chus. "
63
Echaidh, surnamed Fionn, or the Fair,
is named variously Eachdius, Euchadius, Tybraide Tireach. "
Ultorum,
Eochadius and Euthichius. Not less cor- rectly, he is frequently denominated in Latin Equitius ; for the word Each or Eck has the same meaning in Irish as Eqnus in Latin. And, as from the Irish word Each, he is called Eachaidh or Eochaidh ; so in Latin, heis properlynamedEquitius.
64 The Manuscript of St. Isidore has Eochidh Fionn," which is the same in sense ; for, the first epithet is correctly ren-
"
dered by the Latin word Equitius," as
already observed, and "Candidus" corre-
"
sponds with the Irish word Fionn. " See
Colgan's"TriasThaumaturga,"QuartaVita 57 See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," S. Brigidse, n. 4, p. 563.
Quarta Vita S. Brigidte, cap. i. , p. 546, and n. 4, p. 563.
s8 Or as he is called in the Sanctilogium
Genealogicum, Constantinus Cedchathaig. 59 Alone of the three brothers, is he said to have held the Irish sceptre, after the death of Fethlemid. According to the author of oursaint'sActs,heissaidtohavebeenthe o}dest son ; yet, not according to the author of St. Brigid's Fourth Life, nor according to the author of Vita S. Itae siveMidre, as may be seen in Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum
6s The Acts of St. Declan remark, that in Leinster "habitant nepotes ejus semper in diversis locis, de quibus comites ct viri poten-
This appears from the Catalogues and Genealogies of our native Kings. For an account of Conn Cedhcahach's reign, the reader is referred to Roderick O'Flaherty's "
"
Og**ia," pars hi. , cap. lx. , pp. 313 to 316. 6i The same event is related in St. Ita's
Acts, written by Colgan ; but, there Con-
is "rex stantine's slayer called,
tes sunt, qui inter Lageniensesnumerantur. " See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus v. , Julii xxiv. De S. DeclanoEpiscopo Ardmoriae in Hiber- nia, cap. i. , sects. I, 2, p. 593, and nn. (a, b, c,d,e,f,g,h,i,k,1,m,n,o,p,q,r), P- 595-
w See Roderick O'Flaherty's "Ogygia," pars iii. , cap. lxiv. , pp. 324, 325.
"7 Theysettledprincipallyinthepresent
July 24. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 313
sons. From Fiacha's posterity issued the renowned race of the Desii, at first having their settlement near Tara, in Meath, but who were obliged afterwards to remove and seek lands in the southern part of Ireland. They settled at length in the present Waterford, and gave name to the territory of the Decies.
The legendary and rather imaginative character of the Life of St. Declan 69 must be apparent, from the following narrative, which is to be found in it. However, in some particulars, the account corresponds with what is related by many of our chroniclers. ? Fiachu Suighde dwelt in a territory,
2
with whom this latter wished to be at peace,TM would not agree to the monarch's proposals, unless King Cormac surrendered to him ^Eneas or
^ngus, and his brothers, who were his constant life-guards. At first, the king felt unwilling to agree to these terms ; but, at length, he consented to them ; when JEngus and his brothers, having been delivered to the chief, this latter personage came to the monarch, and then concluded a peace with him. Yet, after some days, Cenllach/s son to King Cormac, apprehended this chief, and without his father's consent, deprived his unfortunate captive of sight, by barbarously putting out his eyes. When afCneas heard of this cruel and treacherous action, being fired with resentment, he ran towards Temoria, where the culprit resided with his father. On seeing the multitude of armed men that accompanied ^Eneas before Tara, the king ordered all
: entrancesintothefortresstobeclosed,saying "TrulyyEneasisbeforehis
brothers, wishing to avenge upon us the wrong done to their keeper. " Having heard their king pronouncing these words, his followers' hearts began to fail them, for they knew and feared the courage and daring of that invading chief.
counties of Carlow and Wexford. From them murdered his own brothers Conlai and the baronies named Forth have been named. Crionni. See Gratianus Lucius' "Cam- See John O'Donovan's teAbhan na brensis Eversus," vol. i. , cap. viii. , pp. 472 gCeanc, or Book of Rights. Index sub voce. to 475. Rev. Dr. Kelly's edition.
68 This Fiach is likewise called Fiecus, 72 According to Roderick O'Flaherty, he Fiachus and Fiacus, by various writers. He had four sons, and they are thus named,
lying
Temoria,
enjoying
the of Ireland. 7 r sceptre
is said to have been the ancestor of the Desii inMeathandWaterford. See"TheIrish Version of the Historia Britonum of Nen- nius," edited by Rev. Dr. Todd and the Hon. Algernon Herbert, p. 254, n. (z).
69 As published by the Bollandists.
7° The account, following in the text, is substantially, but more briefly, found in
"
Roderick O'Flaherty's
cap. lxix. , pp. 338 to 340; as likewise, in Dr. Charles Smith's "Ancient and Present
Fiach Raide, Rossius Righ-fhoda, Eugenius and Artcorbus.
? 3 King Cormac is stated to have suc-
ceeded a. d. 254, after his father, to the king-
dom of his grandfather. However, it must be observed, that the transactions alluded to in this narrative are generally allowed to have taken place, not under Cormac, but during the reign of Art, father to Cormac. See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Quarta Vita S. Brigidse, cap. i. , p. 546.
State of the and County City
chap,i. , pp. 3to6.
7 1
of Waterford,"
? 4 At this " volens rex expression,
pacem
with the account hereafter given, Airt, father to Cormac, and holding the sceptre of Ireland for thirty years, banished his uncles Eochaidh Fionnfuath and Fiacha Suidhi from the territory about Tara for having treacherously betrayed his father Conn to the Ultonians, and fur having
cum illo inire," in the Acts, the editor ob-
that the nominative is used serve? , frequently
for the ablative absolute. See "Acta Sanc-
torum," tomus v. , Julii xxiv. De S. Declaim
Episcopo in Hibernia, cap. i. , n. (t), p. 595. 75 Elsewhere in this same narrative, his
name is written Ceallach.
? 6 It must be observed, here, that the
Disagreeing
but he died without
around
Fiachuhadthreerenownedsons,? namedRossa,^EngusandEoghan,who were great warriors and skilled in military exercises. But, ^ngus distin- guished himself more than his brothers, being a hero of an ungovernable temper and of remarkable bravery. Therefore, when Cormac, ? 3 son to Airt, and grandson to Conn Chadchaidhe, assumed the government of this king- dom, a certain noble and powerful man, who was an enemy to the king, and
Ogygia," pars iii. ,
3M LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 24.
Seeing the approaches closed against him, the passions of ^Eneas became excited the more, and with incredible boldness, he rushed towards another
rampart, and lie sprung with a swift bound upon its topmost part. Then, leaping over the interior fortifications or trenches, he reached the palace of Temoria itself. The king was there present, and the warrior now sought his son Cenllach, as doomed to an instantaneous death. The following almost
incredible story is then told. ?
6
While his guards fled in every direction, the
king's son rushed before his father, intending to defend both Cormac and
himself. At the same time, the governor of Tara citadel," who was a brave
man, ran to protect the king and his son, by placing himself in a dangerous
post. But, little regarding these obstacles opposed to his arms, Eneas
brandished his spear on coming up, and then planted it in the breast of Ceal-
8
lach,? the king's son. Through his body, it entered the governor's breast,
then through his back again it passed, and lodged in the eye of King Cormac. We are told, that the prince and governor immediately fell forward on the earth, and if they had not fallen against the spear, it must have penetrated even through the king's brain. Thus, with a single stroke, ^Eneas is related to have taken the lives of the Temorian prince and governor, and to have deprived King Cormac of sights He again made an attack on King Cormac, intending to kill him ; but, on coming up, the monarch adjured him by the
8°
gods, and by ties of consanguinity, to spare him.
and the brave governor of Tara had been slain, ^Engus allowed his passion to cool. Moved also by the appeal of a kinsman, he spared the monarch, and then he returned from Themoria, in great triumph. We are next informed, that Cormac, King of Ireland, had reigned forty-two years at this time. Being afflicted at the death of his son, and of the governor over Tara, as likewise at the loss of his own sight, Cormac collected a considerable force, with which he expelled yEneas and his brothers from the territory of Temoria, to that which was called Nan Desi. 81 He would not even suffer them to remain in northern territory, for he feared them greatly, as the kingdom rightly devolved on them, and they having as just a claim to it as himself. What might be expected from their high birth and military spirit happened ; since, those chiefs resisted their attempted expulsion for some time, and they fought seven battles, in which ^Eneas and his brothers slaughtered a multitude of their enemies. They were finally overpowered, and with the loss of a great number of their adherents. In fine, not being able to oppose the monarch's numerous armies, in various parts of Ireland, they left the lands of their native country Meath, and entered the Leinster province. Thence, after a year's delay, they went towards Munster. The people of Ossory, who lived on the western bounds of the Leinster province, and adjoining that of Munster, inflicted some injury on them, while passing through their territories. At this time, Oilill
genuine facts of our ancient history have been grcatly obscured by the wild and tasteless inventions of the bards and shenachies, who have drawn largely on the credulity of their patrons, and whose accounts have been too frequently incorporated in our books of an- nals, and into the acts of many among our . ^aints.
7? The epithet applied to this man in our saint's Acts is " Comes civitatis Themo- riae. "
in a previous passage it is written Cenl- lach.
79 According to Roderick O'Flaherty, this happened to King Cormac when lie had reigned twenty-three years at Tara. See "Ogygia," pars iii. , cap. lxix. , p. 340.
78 The Bollandist
passage, observes, thut the prince's name, in this instance, is written Ceallach, although
of the Desies " enim ilia : gens
editor,
in a note at this
8o
The writer of St. Declan's Life here "
Finding that the prince
any
adds: ipsi enim tunc gentiles erant, colentes deos, imo idola, secundum velle snum. "
' ' Na nDesi has the
English signification
tunc et
hodie vocatur gens Desiorum. "—Colgan's
"
ActaSanctorumHibernise. " VitaS. Itre
July 24. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 315 Oluim,82 King of Munster, had been married to an excellent and a beautiful
named 8* toCuinnCedchath. Hewasuncletothe Soidhb, daughter
wife,
tive brothers, and they were received by him with distinguished honour.
Oilill
Oluim permitted them to acquire any territory in Munster by force of arms ; or if they preferred it, he allowed them to wage war against the Connacians, 84 or against the Lagenians, or against their native Meathian province. He even allowed them, to acquire a part of Munster, and a part of any other dis- trict they could obtain. The brothers would not receive any territory, how- ever, but that in which they might be enabled to draw their swords with some semblance of justice. Whereupon, they selected the Ossorian people as meet subjects for their vengance, because they had carelessly inflicted injury upon
two against the people of Munster, and two against the Ossorians, who dwelt within the Leinster province. ^Eneas was victorious in these battles. We are ;then told, that the people of Ossory were driven from the middle of
88 8
formerly called Tyrfene, but afterwards called Firmuighe, 9 towards a small
plain, in which a city, denominated Brighdband,9° was situated. After having
1 conquered them in war, the people dwelling in Liuthuin district,? were
2
expelled from the river, which was formerly called Nemh,9 but when our
saint's Acts had been written, it was named Obhann Mhor. They were driven to the River Kille Cobhtuig which ran along the confines of Na n Desi and Traliathuin. 93 After those four battles, the brothers thus acquired a great and fertile country, in the interior and on the coast. 94 From north to south, it reached from the River Luase 9S to the sea ; from east to west, it extended from Cill Cobhtuig 96 towards a strait 97 separating the Na n Desi people
and fertile
on the confines of Munster and Leinster in which they fought four battles ;
fugitives.
There was a
great
territory, adjoining
86 towards the and as far as the River Cinnan. 8? At the east,
Femhyn plain,
time St. Declan's Acts were written, this river constituted a boundary line between Leinster and Munster in that part, where the Na n Desii and Ossory territories were separated. With the strong hand uppermost, those brothers destroyed the inhabitants of a country extending from the midst of that plain,
alias Midae Virginis et Abbat. ex Codice Kilkenniensi, n. 7, p. 71.
82 The son of Mogh Nuadhat, and progeni- tor of the chief Iberian families of Munster.
8g At the time when St. Declan's Life had been written. NowFermoy.
9° Not identified.
See Roderick O'Flaherty's Ogygia," pars iii. , cap. lxv. , p. 326.
from the Irish word 1/iAch, meaning gray. " Their territory was nearly co-extensive with the modern barony of Barrymore, in the
the
present
9<5 This place must be sought for in the western part of Waterford county ; but, at present, it seems to be unknown,
97 Apparently, the present entrance to the harbour of Waterford city is meant.
9I This may probably have been so called ""
83 She is also called Saba, the sister of
King Airt, and who at first married Magnet, county of Cork. It probably reached even son to Lughaidh. After the death of her first to the coast in the south-west part of that husband, she married Oilill Oluim. See county.
Gratianus Lucius' "Cambrensis Eversus,"
vol. i. , cap. viii. , pp. 474, 475. Rev. Dr. Kelly's edition.
84 Those people, who inhabited the pro- vince of Connaught, and who lived on the northern boundaries of Munster.
85 Called Suirus by Camden. It joins the River Barrow and afterwards enters the sea at the port of Waterford city, and in the same county.
86 That which now surrounds Cashel, in
the county of Tipperary.
8? This was probably an ancient name for
small River Nier, which joins the Suir, a few miles west of Clonmel.
88 The English equivalent should be the territory of Fene, evidently intended to express that in which lay Magh Femhyn.
92 An ancient name for the Blackwater.
93 At the time, when those old Acts of St. Declan had been composed.
94 A people called Menapii, it is thought, originally inhabited the districts now known as the counties of Waterford and Wexford. See some interesting remarks concerning
"
Present State of the County and City of
them, in Dr. Charles Smith's
Ancient and
Waterford," chap, i. , pp. 1 to 3.
95 This name appears now to be obsolete,
Possibly, it was the present River Mahon otherwise, the Suir must have been meant,
;
the River 8 s Suir,
fugi-
3 i6 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 24.
8 as also the inhabitants of Munster, from those of Leinster,99 at the time our saint's Acts were written. The three brothers,
101
from those of
Firgulrun,?
mutual
tains, and woods, of their newly acquired territory, into three distinct parts.
and
From their ancient name, the Nan n Desi,
Ross, Eogan,
^Engus, by
agreement,
bore as their title chiefs of the Nan n Desi territory. They were descended
from the posterity of Locan, son to Fiachuidh, son to Fedlimidh Reacht
mair. From the latter was born Carbricus Rigreudh,103 the powerful Nan
Desii chief, who was father to Conru Cathbhudhach, thus named on account
of his warlike prowess. Conru begot Cranu Comb Readhach, who was an
unjust judge. To him was born Mesfore, who begot Mosgrui, of whom Mos-
corp was born. The latter begot Ardcorp, of whom the second Eogan was
born. From him proceeded Brian, from whom Niut, from whom Luaghiudh,
from whom Trer descended. This latter begot Erc,J°4 the father of St.
Declan. 10* The foregoing are said to have been the Nan Desii chiefs, after
that time, when the three brothers fled from Tara, to the period of St. Declan's
106
birth.
Before the birth of St. Declan, for many generations, his family seems to
have dwelt near Ardmore. 10? On account of the tribe to which that territory
formerly belonged, even to a modern period, it had been called the Lordship
—one called Decies within Drum, and the other Decies without Drum. Ardmore is situated in the county of Waterford and in the province of Munster. A port is there to be found, between the towns of Dungarvan and of
9* The word Fir has the meaning "men,"
and the addition is not clearly ascertainable; but, probably, it has reference to a tribe in
the western part of the present county of Wexford.
w "The present boundary between the diocese of Cashel and that of Lismore is the bestride to go by for finding out the northern limits of the territory of the Desii, which, in the ecclesiastical division, has been placed under Declan of Ardmore. This See became united to that of Lismore, and is now com-
prised under its name. These united dioceses extend northwards to about midway be- tween Cashel and Clonmel, and there also ended the country of the Desii in which lay
Rev. Dr. "Eccle- Magh-femyn. "— Lanigan's
siastical History of Ireland," vol. i. , chap. vi. , sect, vi. , n. 61, pp. 281, 282.
100
At the time our saint's Acts had been compiled, their divisions retained the names of those brothers, who appear to have lived in harmony among themselves.
oftheDecies and,atthepresenttime,therearetwodistinctbaroniesthere ;
108 In olden
a
the present Ardmore. 100 An earlier name it seems to have received, for it
Voughal.
times,
the Desii clan
occupied
territory surrounding
Eogan, son of Fiachad-Suidhe, begot Carbry, surnamed Righ-ruadh, Rufus or Red King, who was father to Corny- Bello-
victor, or the Warlike, who begot Cuan- Cainbrethach, father to Mesfore, father to Moscegra, father to Moscorb, father to Ath- Corb, father to Eogain II. , father to Brian, who begot Niath, father to Ludhoich, father to Trene, who begot Ere, the father of St. Declan. See chap, i. , p. 6.
10* In the Bollandists' copy, the name is written Ectus, but this is evidently an error of the copyist ; as afterwards the father of St. Declan is called Ercus, as also in the copy of St. Declan's Life found in the St. Isidore Manuscript.
,0S He and St. Patroness of Ire- Brigid,
land, were descended from a common an-
cestor, Feidhlimid Reachtmar, and it may be seen from whom these saints respectively
branch, in Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Appendix Quarta ad Acta S. Brigidse, cap. 3, p. 613.
,o6 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus v. , Julii xxiv. De S. Declano Episcopo Ard- moriae in Ilibernia, cap. i. , sects. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,8,9,pp. 593to595,withnotes(u,x,y,z, aa, bb, cc, dd, ee).
,0? Mr. Joseph Hansard of Dungarvan has
Present State of the County and City of
Waterford," we find this descent of Ardmore, contained in his History of the our saint more briefly recorded. Thus, County and City of Waterford. "
101 Afterwards known as the Desies.
102
By this they were known at Tara.
would seem, that the baronies of Upper and
Tower Decse, in the county of Meath, trace
their names from them.
103 In Dr. Charles Smith's "Ancient and
It
102
the chiefs of this new district
100 divided the moun- plains,
published the most recent description of "
July 24. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 3i7
first is mentioned as Ard-na-Geaorach, Latinized Altitudo Ovium, or the Hill of the Sheep. A tall and well preserved Round Tower 1JO and several eccle- siastical ruins 111 now mark the site of a place, which in the early ages of Christianity attained much celebrity.
The mother of St. Declan is called Dethidin,
112
Dethein, Deiefthion or
Dechiden. In the Acts of our saint, the various forms of this name are ren-
" 11 11 11 dered by the Latin word Cura. " * We are informed, * that Ere or Ercus, *
large stone,
108
11? which
lay
Round Tower and old Church, at Ardmore, County Waterford.
there. "8 Atatime, whentheauthor ofoursaint's
Ardmore is rather nearer to this latter town than to the former.
109 This is mentioned in St. Declan 's Acts.
110 An illustration of the Round Tower and of the ecclesiastical remains at Ardmore has already appeared in the Third Volume of this work, at March 7th, Art. i.
113 " See Rev. Dr. Lanigan's
111
the RoundTower and old church was drawn
sect, xii. , p. 25.
Xl* In the Life of St. Declan.
"S Dr. Meredith Hanmer calls him, "the
first Christian which I find upon record in Ireland. "—*' Chronicle of Ireland," p. 67.
116 "
not yet published, calls the father of Declan,
' Ercus, dux Desiorum, i. e. , Ercus, duke or
chieftaineof Decies,' then a territory, now a
barony in the county of Waterford, of which
the descendants of that Ercus continued
on the
spot by
William F. Wakeman, and it
The accompanying representation of
The author of the Life of St. Declan,
presents a different view of these objects,
and of the surrounding scenery from what
had been already given. It has been trans- ferred by Mr. Wakeman to the wood, en- graved by Mrs. Millard.
112 By Ussher, she—is named " Dethidin
petty kings until the arrival of the English. "
"
clesiarum Antiquitates," cap. xvi. , p. 409.
Harris' History Antiquities City of Dublin," chap, ix. , p. 159.
(id est, Cura), &c. "
Britannicarum Ec-
"J We are how the infant's tender told,
head having fallen upon this hard stone, the
invited to the house of a relative, called Dob-
father to St. Declan,"6
ranus or Dobhran, besides many other companions, was accompanied by his wife Dethein. At this period, she was pregnant and carried the unborn infant Declan in her womb. The time for her delivery having arrived, it is said, that owing to her child's destined sanctity, Dethein did not experience the usual pains of childbirth. It is also stated, at the time of our saint's nativity, that on her wishing to rise, the head of her newly-born infant fell upon a
being
Ecclesiasti- cal History of Ireland," vol. i. , chap, i. ,
—" and ofthe
3i8 LIVES 01 THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 24.
Acts wrote, this stone on which his birth took place, was called the " Stone
11 of St. Declan. " *
It has been very fairly and reasonably supposed, that our saint was not
born at the most early period,
120
his birth
That place in which
generally stated; have taken place before the death of the Irish Apostle.
might
u Atrium Dobrani," but it was afterwards called '. ' Atrium Declani. " The fosterer of this child, Dobran, offered his habitation to St. Declan, and removed his own
residence to another station. 122 The place itself was situated in the southern
12 ]2 partofaplain,calledbytheScots, ^MaghSceithiorPlainoftheBuckler. " <
This was not far distant from that renowned spot
our saint was born, at first went the name, as by
Latinized,
city nowknownasLismore. ThegraceofGodappearedtomanifestitselfinthis
child's favour, even from his birth j for, signs and miracles were wrought,
" I have sanctified thee from the womb, and I havegiven thee a prophet amongst the Gentiles. " Indeed, the holy
Declan appeared already, as God's inspired prophet among the people, many
of whom he afterwards converted to Christ from the errors of
On the night of oursaint's birth, anothervery remarkable miracle is recorded, as having taken place. Many persons, living near the house where the infant was born, observed a globe of fire blazing on the roof-top, and extending itself towards Heaven. Like the ladder, which appeared to the Patriarch Joseph in his sleep, angels were seen congregated around that globe, and ascending with it, while singing harmonious strains. On seeing and hearing such prodigies, those gentiles rejoiced much, at the mystical revelation ; but, they were ignorant regarding the omnipotence of a Deity, thus manifesting
according
to that written the
by Prophet,
child escaped without injury, although a concave impression of the cranium remained embedded in the stone. Those who were present and witnessed that miracle, were filled with admiration at such an unwonted occurrence.
126 paganism.
"Trias Thaumaturga," at p. 269. Dr. Lanigan thinks it probable, that St. Declan
did not live at a sufficiently early period to have been a disciple of St.
the Sanctilogium Genealogicum he is called, " FelhlemidiusLegifer," which latter epithet is Latin for the Irish word " Reachtmear," as Colgan observes, in " Trias Thauma-
turga," Quarta Vita S. Brigidoe, n. 3, P- 563-
53 St. Declan belonged to the race of this
Fedhlimidh Rectmhar, King of Erin. See
" ofthe Irish Proceedings Royal Academy,"
Irish Manuscript Series, vol. i. , part i. , p. 83. s« This king, variously styled Feidhlimidh, Feidhlim or Felix, began his reign in the year A. D. in, and died A. D. 119, "after
having been nine years in the sovereignty of Ireland. "—Dr. O'Donovan's " Annals of
the Four Masters," vol. i. , pp. 102, 103.
ss His name is also written Conn Ketcha- tach, meaning of the Hundred Battles or Victories, because he was reputed the con- queror in so many different engagements. He is styled by other writers, Constans,
Constantinus and Conon.
s6
Constantine was killed in the thirty-fifth year of his reign, A. D. 157. But, in this account, the Four Masters contradict them- selves, as also the writer of St. Declan's Acts. For the Four Masters state, that
Fethlemid died A. D. 119 ; while, thirty-five years added to this period should bring us
only to A. D. 154.
60 The author of our saint's Acts observes
respecting this prince : "Hujus nomen in Themoria perpetuo regnat. " See, likewise, Dr. O'Donovan's "Annals of the Four
Masters," vol. i. , pp. 104, 105.
61 His name has been Latinized " Centima-
chus. "
63
Echaidh, surnamed Fionn, or the Fair,
is named variously Eachdius, Euchadius, Tybraide Tireach. "
Ultorum,
Eochadius and Euthichius. Not less cor- rectly, he is frequently denominated in Latin Equitius ; for the word Each or Eck has the same meaning in Irish as Eqnus in Latin. And, as from the Irish word Each, he is called Eachaidh or Eochaidh ; so in Latin, heis properlynamedEquitius.
64 The Manuscript of St. Isidore has Eochidh Fionn," which is the same in sense ; for, the first epithet is correctly ren-
"
dered by the Latin word Equitius," as
already observed, and "Candidus" corre-
"
sponds with the Irish word Fionn. " See
Colgan's"TriasThaumaturga,"QuartaVita 57 See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," S. Brigidse, n. 4, p. 563.
Quarta Vita S. Brigidte, cap. i. , p. 546, and n. 4, p. 563.
s8 Or as he is called in the Sanctilogium
Genealogicum, Constantinus Cedchathaig. 59 Alone of the three brothers, is he said to have held the Irish sceptre, after the death of Fethlemid. According to the author of oursaint'sActs,heissaidtohavebeenthe o}dest son ; yet, not according to the author of St. Brigid's Fourth Life, nor according to the author of Vita S. Itae siveMidre, as may be seen in Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum
6s The Acts of St. Declan remark, that in Leinster "habitant nepotes ejus semper in diversis locis, de quibus comites ct viri poten-
This appears from the Catalogues and Genealogies of our native Kings. For an account of Conn Cedhcahach's reign, the reader is referred to Roderick O'Flaherty's "
"
Og**ia," pars hi. , cap. lx. , pp. 313 to 316. 6i The same event is related in St. Ita's
Acts, written by Colgan ; but, there Con-
is "rex stantine's slayer called,
tes sunt, qui inter Lageniensesnumerantur. " See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus v. , Julii xxiv. De S. DeclanoEpiscopo Ardmoriae in Hiber- nia, cap. i. , sects. I, 2, p. 593, and nn. (a, b, c,d,e,f,g,h,i,k,1,m,n,o,p,q,r), P- 595-
w See Roderick O'Flaherty's "Ogygia," pars iii. , cap. lxiv. , pp. 324, 325.
"7 Theysettledprincipallyinthepresent
July 24. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 313
sons. From Fiacha's posterity issued the renowned race of the Desii, at first having their settlement near Tara, in Meath, but who were obliged afterwards to remove and seek lands in the southern part of Ireland. They settled at length in the present Waterford, and gave name to the territory of the Decies.
The legendary and rather imaginative character of the Life of St. Declan 69 must be apparent, from the following narrative, which is to be found in it. However, in some particulars, the account corresponds with what is related by many of our chroniclers. ? Fiachu Suighde dwelt in a territory,
2
with whom this latter wished to be at peace,TM would not agree to the monarch's proposals, unless King Cormac surrendered to him ^Eneas or
^ngus, and his brothers, who were his constant life-guards. At first, the king felt unwilling to agree to these terms ; but, at length, he consented to them ; when JEngus and his brothers, having been delivered to the chief, this latter personage came to the monarch, and then concluded a peace with him. Yet, after some days, Cenllach/s son to King Cormac, apprehended this chief, and without his father's consent, deprived his unfortunate captive of sight, by barbarously putting out his eyes. When afCneas heard of this cruel and treacherous action, being fired with resentment, he ran towards Temoria, where the culprit resided with his father. On seeing the multitude of armed men that accompanied ^Eneas before Tara, the king ordered all
: entrancesintothefortresstobeclosed,saying "TrulyyEneasisbeforehis
brothers, wishing to avenge upon us the wrong done to their keeper. " Having heard their king pronouncing these words, his followers' hearts began to fail them, for they knew and feared the courage and daring of that invading chief.
counties of Carlow and Wexford. From them murdered his own brothers Conlai and the baronies named Forth have been named. Crionni. See Gratianus Lucius' "Cam- See John O'Donovan's teAbhan na brensis Eversus," vol. i. , cap. viii. , pp. 472 gCeanc, or Book of Rights. Index sub voce. to 475. Rev. Dr. Kelly's edition.
68 This Fiach is likewise called Fiecus, 72 According to Roderick O'Flaherty, he Fiachus and Fiacus, by various writers. He had four sons, and they are thus named,
lying
Temoria,
enjoying
the of Ireland. 7 r sceptre
is said to have been the ancestor of the Desii inMeathandWaterford. See"TheIrish Version of the Historia Britonum of Nen- nius," edited by Rev. Dr. Todd and the Hon. Algernon Herbert, p. 254, n. (z).
69 As published by the Bollandists.
7° The account, following in the text, is substantially, but more briefly, found in
"
Roderick O'Flaherty's
cap. lxix. , pp. 338 to 340; as likewise, in Dr. Charles Smith's "Ancient and Present
Fiach Raide, Rossius Righ-fhoda, Eugenius and Artcorbus.
? 3 King Cormac is stated to have suc-
ceeded a. d. 254, after his father, to the king-
dom of his grandfather. However, it must be observed, that the transactions alluded to in this narrative are generally allowed to have taken place, not under Cormac, but during the reign of Art, father to Cormac. See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Quarta Vita S. Brigidse, cap. i. , p. 546.
State of the and County City
chap,i. , pp. 3to6.
7 1
of Waterford,"
? 4 At this " volens rex expression,
pacem
with the account hereafter given, Airt, father to Cormac, and holding the sceptre of Ireland for thirty years, banished his uncles Eochaidh Fionnfuath and Fiacha Suidhi from the territory about Tara for having treacherously betrayed his father Conn to the Ultonians, and fur having
cum illo inire," in the Acts, the editor ob-
that the nominative is used serve? , frequently
for the ablative absolute. See "Acta Sanc-
torum," tomus v. , Julii xxiv. De S. Declaim
Episcopo in Hibernia, cap. i. , n. (t), p. 595. 75 Elsewhere in this same narrative, his
name is written Ceallach.
? 6 It must be observed, here, that the
Disagreeing
but he died without
around
Fiachuhadthreerenownedsons,? namedRossa,^EngusandEoghan,who were great warriors and skilled in military exercises. But, ^ngus distin- guished himself more than his brothers, being a hero of an ungovernable temper and of remarkable bravery. Therefore, when Cormac, ? 3 son to Airt, and grandson to Conn Chadchaidhe, assumed the government of this king- dom, a certain noble and powerful man, who was an enemy to the king, and
Ogygia," pars iii. ,
3M LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 24.
Seeing the approaches closed against him, the passions of ^Eneas became excited the more, and with incredible boldness, he rushed towards another
rampart, and lie sprung with a swift bound upon its topmost part. Then, leaping over the interior fortifications or trenches, he reached the palace of Temoria itself. The king was there present, and the warrior now sought his son Cenllach, as doomed to an instantaneous death. The following almost
incredible story is then told. ?
6
While his guards fled in every direction, the
king's son rushed before his father, intending to defend both Cormac and
himself. At the same time, the governor of Tara citadel," who was a brave
man, ran to protect the king and his son, by placing himself in a dangerous
post. But, little regarding these obstacles opposed to his arms, Eneas
brandished his spear on coming up, and then planted it in the breast of Ceal-
8
lach,? the king's son. Through his body, it entered the governor's breast,
then through his back again it passed, and lodged in the eye of King Cormac. We are told, that the prince and governor immediately fell forward on the earth, and if they had not fallen against the spear, it must have penetrated even through the king's brain. Thus, with a single stroke, ^Eneas is related to have taken the lives of the Temorian prince and governor, and to have deprived King Cormac of sights He again made an attack on King Cormac, intending to kill him ; but, on coming up, the monarch adjured him by the
8°
gods, and by ties of consanguinity, to spare him.
and the brave governor of Tara had been slain, ^Engus allowed his passion to cool. Moved also by the appeal of a kinsman, he spared the monarch, and then he returned from Themoria, in great triumph. We are next informed, that Cormac, King of Ireland, had reigned forty-two years at this time. Being afflicted at the death of his son, and of the governor over Tara, as likewise at the loss of his own sight, Cormac collected a considerable force, with which he expelled yEneas and his brothers from the territory of Temoria, to that which was called Nan Desi. 81 He would not even suffer them to remain in northern territory, for he feared them greatly, as the kingdom rightly devolved on them, and they having as just a claim to it as himself. What might be expected from their high birth and military spirit happened ; since, those chiefs resisted their attempted expulsion for some time, and they fought seven battles, in which ^Eneas and his brothers slaughtered a multitude of their enemies. They were finally overpowered, and with the loss of a great number of their adherents. In fine, not being able to oppose the monarch's numerous armies, in various parts of Ireland, they left the lands of their native country Meath, and entered the Leinster province. Thence, after a year's delay, they went towards Munster. The people of Ossory, who lived on the western bounds of the Leinster province, and adjoining that of Munster, inflicted some injury on them, while passing through their territories. At this time, Oilill
genuine facts of our ancient history have been grcatly obscured by the wild and tasteless inventions of the bards and shenachies, who have drawn largely on the credulity of their patrons, and whose accounts have been too frequently incorporated in our books of an- nals, and into the acts of many among our . ^aints.
7? The epithet applied to this man in our saint's Acts is " Comes civitatis Themo- riae. "
in a previous passage it is written Cenl- lach.
79 According to Roderick O'Flaherty, this happened to King Cormac when lie had reigned twenty-three years at Tara. See "Ogygia," pars iii. , cap. lxix. , p. 340.
78 The Bollandist
passage, observes, thut the prince's name, in this instance, is written Ceallach, although
of the Desies " enim ilia : gens
editor,
in a note at this
8o
The writer of St. Declan's Life here "
Finding that the prince
any
adds: ipsi enim tunc gentiles erant, colentes deos, imo idola, secundum velle snum. "
' ' Na nDesi has the
English signification
tunc et
hodie vocatur gens Desiorum. "—Colgan's
"
ActaSanctorumHibernise. " VitaS. Itre
July 24. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 315 Oluim,82 King of Munster, had been married to an excellent and a beautiful
named 8* toCuinnCedchath. Hewasuncletothe Soidhb, daughter
wife,
tive brothers, and they were received by him with distinguished honour.
Oilill
Oluim permitted them to acquire any territory in Munster by force of arms ; or if they preferred it, he allowed them to wage war against the Connacians, 84 or against the Lagenians, or against their native Meathian province. He even allowed them, to acquire a part of Munster, and a part of any other dis- trict they could obtain. The brothers would not receive any territory, how- ever, but that in which they might be enabled to draw their swords with some semblance of justice. Whereupon, they selected the Ossorian people as meet subjects for their vengance, because they had carelessly inflicted injury upon
two against the people of Munster, and two against the Ossorians, who dwelt within the Leinster province. ^Eneas was victorious in these battles. We are ;then told, that the people of Ossory were driven from the middle of
88 8
formerly called Tyrfene, but afterwards called Firmuighe, 9 towards a small
plain, in which a city, denominated Brighdband,9° was situated. After having
1 conquered them in war, the people dwelling in Liuthuin district,? were
2
expelled from the river, which was formerly called Nemh,9 but when our
saint's Acts had been written, it was named Obhann Mhor. They were driven to the River Kille Cobhtuig which ran along the confines of Na n Desi and Traliathuin. 93 After those four battles, the brothers thus acquired a great and fertile country, in the interior and on the coast. 94 From north to south, it reached from the River Luase 9S to the sea ; from east to west, it extended from Cill Cobhtuig 96 towards a strait 97 separating the Na n Desi people
and fertile
on the confines of Munster and Leinster in which they fought four battles ;
fugitives.
There was a
great
territory, adjoining
86 towards the and as far as the River Cinnan. 8? At the east,
Femhyn plain,
time St. Declan's Acts were written, this river constituted a boundary line between Leinster and Munster in that part, where the Na n Desii and Ossory territories were separated. With the strong hand uppermost, those brothers destroyed the inhabitants of a country extending from the midst of that plain,
alias Midae Virginis et Abbat. ex Codice Kilkenniensi, n. 7, p. 71.
82 The son of Mogh Nuadhat, and progeni- tor of the chief Iberian families of Munster.
8g At the time when St. Declan's Life had been written. NowFermoy.
9° Not identified.
See Roderick O'Flaherty's Ogygia," pars iii. , cap. lxv. , p. 326.
from the Irish word 1/iAch, meaning gray. " Their territory was nearly co-extensive with the modern barony of Barrymore, in the
the
present
9<5 This place must be sought for in the western part of Waterford county ; but, at present, it seems to be unknown,
97 Apparently, the present entrance to the harbour of Waterford city is meant.
9I This may probably have been so called ""
83 She is also called Saba, the sister of
King Airt, and who at first married Magnet, county of Cork. It probably reached even son to Lughaidh. After the death of her first to the coast in the south-west part of that husband, she married Oilill Oluim. See county.
Gratianus Lucius' "Cambrensis Eversus,"
vol. i. , cap. viii. , pp. 474, 475. Rev. Dr. Kelly's edition.
84 Those people, who inhabited the pro- vince of Connaught, and who lived on the northern boundaries of Munster.
85 Called Suirus by Camden. It joins the River Barrow and afterwards enters the sea at the port of Waterford city, and in the same county.
86 That which now surrounds Cashel, in
the county of Tipperary.
8? This was probably an ancient name for
small River Nier, which joins the Suir, a few miles west of Clonmel.
88 The English equivalent should be the territory of Fene, evidently intended to express that in which lay Magh Femhyn.
92 An ancient name for the Blackwater.
93 At the time, when those old Acts of St. Declan had been composed.
94 A people called Menapii, it is thought, originally inhabited the districts now known as the counties of Waterford and Wexford. See some interesting remarks concerning
"
Present State of the County and City of
them, in Dr. Charles Smith's
Ancient and
Waterford," chap, i. , pp. 1 to 3.
95 This name appears now to be obsolete,
Possibly, it was the present River Mahon otherwise, the Suir must have been meant,
;
the River 8 s Suir,
fugi-
3 i6 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 24.
8 as also the inhabitants of Munster, from those of Leinster,99 at the time our saint's Acts were written. The three brothers,
101
from those of
Firgulrun,?
mutual
tains, and woods, of their newly acquired territory, into three distinct parts.
and
From their ancient name, the Nan n Desi,
Ross, Eogan,
^Engus, by
agreement,
bore as their title chiefs of the Nan n Desi territory. They were descended
from the posterity of Locan, son to Fiachuidh, son to Fedlimidh Reacht
mair. From the latter was born Carbricus Rigreudh,103 the powerful Nan
Desii chief, who was father to Conru Cathbhudhach, thus named on account
of his warlike prowess. Conru begot Cranu Comb Readhach, who was an
unjust judge. To him was born Mesfore, who begot Mosgrui, of whom Mos-
corp was born. The latter begot Ardcorp, of whom the second Eogan was
born. From him proceeded Brian, from whom Niut, from whom Luaghiudh,
from whom Trer descended. This latter begot Erc,J°4 the father of St.
Declan. 10* The foregoing are said to have been the Nan Desii chiefs, after
that time, when the three brothers fled from Tara, to the period of St. Declan's
106
birth.
Before the birth of St. Declan, for many generations, his family seems to
have dwelt near Ardmore. 10? On account of the tribe to which that territory
formerly belonged, even to a modern period, it had been called the Lordship
—one called Decies within Drum, and the other Decies without Drum. Ardmore is situated in the county of Waterford and in the province of Munster. A port is there to be found, between the towns of Dungarvan and of
9* The word Fir has the meaning "men,"
and the addition is not clearly ascertainable; but, probably, it has reference to a tribe in
the western part of the present county of Wexford.
w "The present boundary between the diocese of Cashel and that of Lismore is the bestride to go by for finding out the northern limits of the territory of the Desii, which, in the ecclesiastical division, has been placed under Declan of Ardmore. This See became united to that of Lismore, and is now com-
prised under its name. These united dioceses extend northwards to about midway be- tween Cashel and Clonmel, and there also ended the country of the Desii in which lay
Rev. Dr. "Eccle- Magh-femyn. "— Lanigan's
siastical History of Ireland," vol. i. , chap. vi. , sect, vi. , n. 61, pp. 281, 282.
100
At the time our saint's Acts had been compiled, their divisions retained the names of those brothers, who appear to have lived in harmony among themselves.
oftheDecies and,atthepresenttime,therearetwodistinctbaroniesthere ;
108 In olden
a
the present Ardmore. 100 An earlier name it seems to have received, for it
Voughal.
times,
the Desii clan
occupied
territory surrounding
Eogan, son of Fiachad-Suidhe, begot Carbry, surnamed Righ-ruadh, Rufus or Red King, who was father to Corny- Bello-
victor, or the Warlike, who begot Cuan- Cainbrethach, father to Mesfore, father to Moscegra, father to Moscorb, father to Ath- Corb, father to Eogain II. , father to Brian, who begot Niath, father to Ludhoich, father to Trene, who begot Ere, the father of St. Declan. See chap, i. , p. 6.
10* In the Bollandists' copy, the name is written Ectus, but this is evidently an error of the copyist ; as afterwards the father of St. Declan is called Ercus, as also in the copy of St. Declan's Life found in the St. Isidore Manuscript.
,0S He and St. Patroness of Ire- Brigid,
land, were descended from a common an-
cestor, Feidhlimid Reachtmar, and it may be seen from whom these saints respectively
branch, in Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Appendix Quarta ad Acta S. Brigidse, cap. 3, p. 613.
,o6 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus v. , Julii xxiv. De S. Declano Episcopo Ard- moriae in Ilibernia, cap. i. , sects. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,8,9,pp. 593to595,withnotes(u,x,y,z, aa, bb, cc, dd, ee).
,0? Mr. Joseph Hansard of Dungarvan has
Present State of the County and City of
Waterford," we find this descent of Ardmore, contained in his History of the our saint more briefly recorded. Thus, County and City of Waterford. "
101 Afterwards known as the Desies.
102
By this they were known at Tara.
would seem, that the baronies of Upper and
Tower Decse, in the county of Meath, trace
their names from them.
103 In Dr. Charles Smith's "Ancient and
It
102
the chiefs of this new district
100 divided the moun- plains,
published the most recent description of "
July 24. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 3i7
first is mentioned as Ard-na-Geaorach, Latinized Altitudo Ovium, or the Hill of the Sheep. A tall and well preserved Round Tower 1JO and several eccle- siastical ruins 111 now mark the site of a place, which in the early ages of Christianity attained much celebrity.
The mother of St. Declan is called Dethidin,
112
Dethein, Deiefthion or
Dechiden. In the Acts of our saint, the various forms of this name are ren-
" 11 11 11 dered by the Latin word Cura. " * We are informed, * that Ere or Ercus, *
large stone,
108
11? which
lay
Round Tower and old Church, at Ardmore, County Waterford.
there. "8 Atatime, whentheauthor ofoursaint's
Ardmore is rather nearer to this latter town than to the former.
109 This is mentioned in St. Declan 's Acts.
110 An illustration of the Round Tower and of the ecclesiastical remains at Ardmore has already appeared in the Third Volume of this work, at March 7th, Art. i.
113 " See Rev. Dr. Lanigan's
111
the RoundTower and old church was drawn
sect, xii. , p. 25.
Xl* In the Life of St. Declan.
"S Dr. Meredith Hanmer calls him, "the
first Christian which I find upon record in Ireland. "—*' Chronicle of Ireland," p. 67.
116 "
not yet published, calls the father of Declan,
' Ercus, dux Desiorum, i. e. , Ercus, duke or
chieftaineof Decies,' then a territory, now a
barony in the county of Waterford, of which
the descendants of that Ercus continued
on the
spot by
William F. Wakeman, and it
The accompanying representation of
The author of the Life of St. Declan,
presents a different view of these objects,
and of the surrounding scenery from what
had been already given. It has been trans- ferred by Mr. Wakeman to the wood, en- graved by Mrs. Millard.
112 By Ussher, she—is named " Dethidin
petty kings until the arrival of the English. "
"
clesiarum Antiquitates," cap. xvi. , p. 409.
Harris' History Antiquities City of Dublin," chap, ix. , p. 159.
(id est, Cura), &c. "
Britannicarum Ec-
"J We are how the infant's tender told,
head having fallen upon this hard stone, the
invited to the house of a relative, called Dob-
father to St. Declan,"6
ranus or Dobhran, besides many other companions, was accompanied by his wife Dethein. At this period, she was pregnant and carried the unborn infant Declan in her womb. The time for her delivery having arrived, it is said, that owing to her child's destined sanctity, Dethein did not experience the usual pains of childbirth. It is also stated, at the time of our saint's nativity, that on her wishing to rise, the head of her newly-born infant fell upon a
being
Ecclesiasti- cal History of Ireland," vol. i. , chap, i. ,
—" and ofthe
3i8 LIVES 01 THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 24.
Acts wrote, this stone on which his birth took place, was called the " Stone
11 of St. Declan. " *
It has been very fairly and reasonably supposed, that our saint was not
born at the most early period,
120
his birth
That place in which
generally stated; have taken place before the death of the Irish Apostle.
might
u Atrium Dobrani," but it was afterwards called '. ' Atrium Declani. " The fosterer of this child, Dobran, offered his habitation to St. Declan, and removed his own
residence to another station. 122 The place itself was situated in the southern
12 ]2 partofaplain,calledbytheScots, ^MaghSceithiorPlainoftheBuckler. " <
This was not far distant from that renowned spot
our saint was born, at first went the name, as by
Latinized,
city nowknownasLismore. ThegraceofGodappearedtomanifestitselfinthis
child's favour, even from his birth j for, signs and miracles were wrought,
" I have sanctified thee from the womb, and I havegiven thee a prophet amongst the Gentiles. " Indeed, the holy
Declan appeared already, as God's inspired prophet among the people, many
of whom he afterwards converted to Christ from the errors of
On the night of oursaint's birth, anothervery remarkable miracle is recorded, as having taken place. Many persons, living near the house where the infant was born, observed a globe of fire blazing on the roof-top, and extending itself towards Heaven. Like the ladder, which appeared to the Patriarch Joseph in his sleep, angels were seen congregated around that globe, and ascending with it, while singing harmonious strains. On seeing and hearing such prodigies, those gentiles rejoiced much, at the mystical revelation ; but, they were ignorant regarding the omnipotence of a Deity, thus manifesting
according
to that written the
by Prophet,
child escaped without injury, although a concave impression of the cranium remained embedded in the stone. Those who were present and witnessed that miracle, were filled with admiration at such an unwonted occurrence.
126 paganism.
"Trias Thaumaturga," at p. 269. Dr. Lanigan thinks it probable, that St. Declan
did not live at a sufficiently early period to have been a disciple of St.
