A
representation
of it has been drawn on the wood, and engraved by Gregor Grey.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v9
Edward O'Reilly had in his of St.
Columba.
" Appendix to Preface, pp.
possession a copy of this poem, comprising xlviii.
, xlix.
defeat of Finachta Fleadhach is assigned to the year 693.
verses. See "
Account of nearly Four Hundred Irish Four Masters," vol. i. , pp. 296, 297, this
fifty-two
Writers," p. 1.
3 In this Adamnan calls Finnachta, in
ftij cjtm Iia£ ceti x>ecu, "'the old grey king without teeth. " The bard indulges in
"
—
" Were I a King of reddened spears
the following sentiments
:
p. This is the date also given, in the Annals
Chronological
of Tighernach and in those of Ulster.
7 The Breviary of Aberdeen relates, that a child was found, who " ante Dei virum See the Book of Lecan at fol. 310 b ; Book ductus multa ei probleumata praeposuit. of Invasions, fol. 94 a. Tunc sanctus facto signaculo crucis 4 See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's " Life inimicum effugavit, qui in specie infantis
I would humble mine enemies,
" I would exalt my high places,
" My combats should be frequent. "
* In Dr. O'Donovan's " Annals of the
6
Additional Notes to Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's "Life of St. Columba," 378.
See the Chronicon Hyense, in the
5o6 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [September 23
says an ingenious writer, consists in their having arisen during an imagina- tive age, out of a prevailing and well-founded belief in Adamnan's learning
and mental acquirements. Diligence in his sacred calling was one of his
many virtues. With true modesty, he apologises for his literary deficiencies,
in one of his works. 8 He that he was and states, daily occupied by great
almost insurmountable labours, and by a pressure of ecclesiastical business, for the due discharge of which, he felt no ordinary solicitude. His rare humility and genuine piety are manifest, from this and many other passages
foundinhisworks. Alegendalreadygiven,inapreviouspartofthisbiography, and the title of his reputed Feilire, or Festilogy,9 appear to have grown out of his character for filial affection. The energy of his physical and mental powers has left its impress on our insular traditions, as likewise the many journeys which he undertook, and various synods which he convoked.
The death of Bruide, son to Bile, King of Fortrenn, is recorded to have
taken a. d. place
693.
,0 He a contem- reigned twenty-one years," being
porary with Adamnan. This prince was the most valiant of the Pictish
Kings, since the reign of his namesake, who was Maelcom's son. We are 12
that the body of Bruide, son to Bile, King over the Cruthnigh, was
told,
brought to Hy, and that his death was grievous and sorrowful to Adamnan. The latter desired Bruide's corpse should be brought to him into the house that night, when Adamnan watched by it until morning. Next day, when the body began to move and its eyes opened, a certain pious man came to the door of that house. He said: "If Adamnan's object be to raise the dead, I say he should not do so, for it will be a degradation to every cleric,
who shall succeed to his
place,
if he too cannot raise the " There departed. "
is something reasonable in that," said Adamnan " ;
therefore,
as it is more
proper,letusgiveourblessingtoBuidhe'ssoulandtohisbody. " Then,as
we are told, Buidhe resigned his spirit to Heaven again, with the blessing
of Adamnan and of the congregation at Ia. *3 Were we to attach any degree
beatum virum temptare voluit. "—Lect. iii.
The Irish Life states, that the demon came in human form to converse with Adamnan, for the men of Munster com- pelled him by force to come to Adamnan. And he came with many hard questions.
declaravi. llorum ego lectorem admono
experimentorum, ut pro me misello pecatore eorundem craxatore Christum judicem secu- lorum exorare non neglegat. "—Mabillon's " Acta Sanctorum Ordinis S. Benedicti. " ssec. iii. , parsii.
9 Incipit Feilire Adamnain x>\& n)&zh&\\\
(Propr. s. s. , Part. Estiv. , fol. 114. bb). '*
One of the
questions
was, ' Was
it in
[for I0
his hie. mother]
At this year the Annals of Tighernac
"
shape or without shape that the devil
worshipped, and was it through know-
ledge or in ignorance that the devil
worshipped'? " They also relate how the devil was brought to Hy in the shape of a corpse, to be buried, and how it rose up
Bruidhe mac Bile Rex Fortrend
and spoke, putting, as the Life says,
"
many
state :
moritur. "—William F. Skene's '* Chronicles of the Picts, Chronicles of "the Scots, and other early Memorials of Scottish History," p. 73.
"According to the Chronicle in the
wonderful
all of which Adamnan resolved. "
Mr. Reeves' Adamnan's " Life of St.
of St. Andrew's.
In the Irish Life of St. Adamnan.
to the — questions congregation,
Registry ,a
lvii lviii
" heWh° Towards' the close of his Treatise, De Lf
Tf
°f Mafy
'
Locis Sanctis,'' Adamnan says: Obsecro
itaque eos quicumque breves legerint libellos, ut pro eodem sancto sacerdote Arculfo
divinam precenter clementiam, qui h*c de Sanctis experimenta locis eorum frequentator libentissime nobis dictavit. Quae et ego quamlibet inter laboriosas et prope insustentabiles sollicitudines consti- utus, vili quamvis sermone discribens
fjJ? ***? „•, eath of Bruide mac Bile,
Rev.
,3 Afterwards Adamnan said : —
Columba. " Appendix to Preface, n. (o), ,,. ,. . . ,^, ,—
" eke
^wonders doth he
Many perform,
^d°maf rul'n aKindom
^f5f£,. 1 hat a ho low stick of withered oak
*s about *« son of the KinS of Alciuaite.
—See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's "Life of St. Columba. " Appendix to Preface &c, p. xliv. , and n. n. (c, d. )
September 23. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 507
of credit to the foregoing legend, in connection with the recorded date of King Bruide's death ; it should seem, that scarcely more than the interval of a year ought be allowed for Adamnan's visit to Ireland. However, the account is too absurd to merit any place in historic investigation.
It is supposed, that after his return to Iona, Adamnan wrote his Life of St. Columba. This instructive biography he intended for the edification of his society. It was probably written before another voyage undertaken in the year 696^ or 697,15 when once more he returned to Ireland. He makes no reference to any difference of sentiment between himself and his com- munity regarding Roman observances, in this work ; but he has allusions in it to the Paschal question, when he speaks of a prophecy attributed to St. Columkille at Clonmacnoise, in which it was predicted, that after some time discord should arise Ireland's ecclesiastics on that 16 A
among very subject. writer1 ? of our Saint's memoirs supposes, that he may have referred to the
same matter, where speaking about those, who foolishly and ungratefully abused God's patience among the Picts and Scots of Britain. 18 Yet, the Bollandist editor, Baert, conjectures, that St. Columba's Life had been written, during Adamnan's sojourn in Ireland. He also supposes the brethren at whose instance this Life had been written were not the refractory monks of Hy, but those more docile inmates belonging to Durrow, and to
other houses of his institute in Ireland. : 9 The Life itself,
the fullest internal evidence, that it had been written at Hy, and by a member of that insular community. 20 It is thought to have been composed
and 21 697.
site of that well has been ascertained, and it is near one of the city gates still remaining in Derry. *3 On the 9th of June, 1897 and 1898, a grand
14 According to the Annals of Ulster, at 2° The writer speaks of " nostrum monas-
the interval between Adamnan's visits to Ireland in
Especially in the north-western districts of Ireland, popular traditions were most rife, that Adamnan had sojourned for a time in various localities ; and memorials with which his name has been associated seem to lend probability to those accounts. That he spent some time in Derry, so dear to Columkille, is almost certain, especially as in it had been already established a great monastery of his order. Moreover, in Derry there was formerly a well dedicated to St. Adamnan and we learn how the town had been
during
692
;
burned from it to the burial-ground of St. Martin, in the year 1203. " The
this " Adamnanus ad Hiberniam terium," year :
(lib. "
i. , cap.
30, 37,
lib.
ii. , cap.
pergit, —et dedit Legem Innocentium 45), and of nostra insula," (lib. i. , cap. i. ,
"
populis. " Dr. O'Conor's Rerum Hiberni- lib. ii,, cap. 45). He says, that the fame of St.
carum Ultonienses.
tomus iv.
Annales
Columba was not known " in hac exclusively
parva et extrema oceani Britannici commo-
"
19 M This, however," observes Dr. Reeves, is a conclusion drawn from unsound
Scots of Britain. He mentions " Iova
insula," (lib. ii. , cap. 45), without, however,
our being enabled to infer with certainty
from those two particular passages, whether the Life in question was there written,
2I
See Leslie Stephen's "Dictionary of National Biography," vol. i. , Art. Adamnan
or Adomnan, by John T. Gilbert, p. 92.
22 See " Memoir of the and North City
Western Liberties of Londonderry," part ii. , History, sect. i. , p. 23.
Scriptores,"
ratus insula," (lib. hi. , cap. 23). When x6 "
15 According to the Annals of Tighernach. See "Vita S. Columbse," lib. i. , cap. 3.
17 The Rev. Wm. Reeves.
18 See "Vita S. Columbse," lib. ii. , cap. 46.
writing, in his nostris insulis," (lib. ii. ,
premises, for it supposes, as some Irish accounts have done, that Adamnan quarrelled with his people; also that the Irish Columbans yielded, while the Hyen- sian ones held out. The one Adamnan to have been expelled from his pastoral cha—rge; the other is contradicted by Bede. " Adamnan's "Life of St. Columba. " Appendix to Preface, &c, p. 1.
supposes
cap. 46)
he alludes to those of the Picts and
23
William O'Doherty, C. C. , St. Colum's
Owing to the kindness of the Rev.
however,
bears
So8 LIVES OP THE IRISH SAINTS. [September i$.
ceremonial had been carried out at the Long Tower Catholic Church, specially dedicated to St. Columba, in that city, and temporary arches had —been erected at different places along the line of procession through the streets
one of those, the Howard-street Arch, indicating a spot near St. Eunan's Well. ** Our Irish historians inform us, that a convention was assembled in Ireland, at which Adamnan, with the principal part of the Irish clergy,
attended. ** The Acts of that con- vention are said to have been extant in the old Book of Raphoe 6 and that
been taken*? and are
supposed, however,* to have been a dif-
ferent synod from that held at Tara, most probably in the year 697,3* when,
to the Annals of Tigher- nach, Adamnan brought a law with him into Ireland. Flann Febhla, Abbot of Armagh, presided over this synod. 33 Thirty-nine ecclesiastics were present at it ; among
Site of St. Adamnan s Well, Derry.
Church, Derry, a photograph of the adjoin- ing street-site has been obtained by the writer.
A representation of it has been drawn on the wood, and engraved by Gregor Grey.
34 A full account of those celebrations
has been compiled by the Rev. William
O'Dohety, C. C. , and issued in an elegantly illustrated volume, intituled " Derry Columbkille ;" and the peculiar device caused that near St. Eunan's Well to be called the Shamrock Arch. It is pictorially
"
and described at
8 It is remarkable, that the Rev. Geoffry
represented
pp. 169, 170.
Keating's
;*
copies of it have
still preserved in Bruxelles*8 and in Dublin. ** It is pro- bable, they were iden- tical with the eight Canons Adamnan's name, and which have been printedbyMartene. 30 It is
1
generally thought that synod was held in a. d. 695. It was attended by or This is
forty bishops
abbots. 3
according
History of Ireland" has no mention of this Synod.
96 The title is, Incipit Cain Adamnain a\i fticc fen tebAifi Raca bochAe, according to this old Book of Raphoe.
37 Oneof these by Brother Michael O'Clery.
28 In the Burgundian Library, the MS. alluded to is classed, No. 2324. The Acts of this Synod were entitled the Cain Adham- nain, or the "Canons of Adamnan," accord*
ing to Colgan.
2» In a belonging to Marsh's manuscript
Library, Dublin, and called Precedents of
bearing
September 23. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 5«9 these was Ichtbrocht,34 or Egbert^ supposed to have been the individual,
who the brought
Hyensians
to Paschal
in
6 and
conformity
the presidency of Abbot Dunchadh, who governed their community in
quality of Abbot, from 710 to 7 17. 37 Also there were present Murchon or Murchu Mac Ua Maichtene,38 who wrote a portion of St. Patrick's Memoirs, as contained in the Book of Armagh. 39 It is remarked, that with the excep- tion of Flann Febhla, Abbot over Armagh, and Cennfaeladh,40 Abbot over Bangor, the remainder of the clergy, attending this synod, came from Leinster and the south. Loingsech,41 son to Aengus, monarch of Ireland, and forty- seven chiefs connected with various territories, represented the laity in this great assembly. Bruide mac Derile,42 King over the Pictish region/3 is last named among the latter class. These sy nodical enactments were afterwards
the See of Armagh, at p. 395 there are Canones Adomnani, copied from a MS. once possessed by Sir R. Cotton.
30 In his "Thesaurus Novus Anecdo-
torum," tomusiv. , col. 18.
31 Colgan declares, he had the Acts of
it, in his possession, under the title, Cain
the Sixth Volume of this work, Art. v. , vi. The Calendar of Cashel, as cited by Colgan, places their commemoration at Kill- Murchon, in the territory of Hi-Garrchon, in the eastern part of the County of Wicklow, and near the town bearing the same name. See "Acta Sanctorum Hibernise," v. Martii. Vita S. Kierani, n. 31, p. 465.
39 The entry of this name in the Acts of Adamnan's Synod is of importance in the History of the Book of Armagh, as it seems to fix the date of Muirchu Maccumachtheni, whose name is attached to a portion of the Memoirs of St. Patrick in that volume, in
:
thesewords "HsecpaucadeSanctiPatricii
peritia et virtutibus Muirchu Maccumach-
theni, dictante Aiduo Slebtiensis civitatis "
episcopo, conscripsit. (fol. 20, ba). The name of this informant also occurs in the
"
See " Acta Sanctorum Hibernise," v. Martii.
Vita S. Kierani. Appendix, cap. iv. , p. 473. 32 The Annals of Ulster have a. d. 696, for Adamnan's visit to Ireland, when he pro- mulgated the Law of the Innocents among
the people.
33 It is strange that Colgan, in one passage
of his work, should have confounded the Synod at Tara with the Convention at Drumceatt, held in the time of St. Columb- kille. See " Trias Thaumaturga," n. 36, p. 384.
34 The Rev. Mr. Reeves states, that the name is thus written in the original, which he had examined. Colgan understands it of Ecbertus Anglus.
35 See an account of him, at the 24th of April, in the Fourth Volume of this work, Art. i.
36 Venerable Bede tells us, that the last occasion on which the old Easter had been observed was at the festival of 715, after a duration of 150 years. The Roman tonsure was introduced among the Columban monks about the same time. This reformation was effected through the zealous exertions of a Northumbrian priest, named Egbert or
Adhmnain, or the
Canon of Adamnan. "
Ecgberet,
long
time was in living
42 Called mac bjiume
who for a
Appendix to Preface, n. (e), p. li.
40 See notices of this Saint, at the 8th of
April, in the Fourth Volume of this work, Art. i.
41 According to Dr. O'Donovan's "Annals of the Four Masters," this monarch reigned eight years ; from a. d. 693, when Finachta Fleadhach was slain, to the year 791, when he and his three sons also were killed in battle. See vol. i. , pp. 296 to 303, with notes, ibid.
this Synod as Aidan, son of Gabhean, did at Drumceatt. "—Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adam- nan's " Life of St. Columba. " Appendix to Preface, n. (h). , p. li.
Skene's "Celtic Scotland : A History of Ancient Alban," vol ii. , book ii. , chap. Jvi. , p. 231.
Ireland, to which country he exiled himself, "
-oefiili fii CfiuitencuAice. He died in 706, in the eleventh year of his reign. The introduc- tion of his name into the Acts is suspicious, unless we suppose him to have attended at
for the sake of Christ. See Historia Eccle- siastica Gentis Anglorum," lib. v. , cap. xxii. 37 See Chronicon Hyense. in the Additional Notes to Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's "Life of St. Columba," pp. 379 to 381. The Acts of St. Dunnchadh will be found, at the 25th of May, in the Fifth Volume of this work,
Art. i.
38 Murchu mac Ua Maichtene and his predecessor of Nectan. See William F
brother Meadhran, are noticed in the Irish
Calendars, at June 8th, and at that date, their respective festivals may be found in
7i6,3
during
acts of the Synod, in the form Aedh epscop Sleibte, whose day is Feb. 7, and whose obit is entered in Tighernach a—t 700, and in the Annals of Ulster at 699. "
Rev. Mr. Reeves' Adamnan's " Life of St. Columba. "
43 He was the brother and immediate
5io LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [September 23.
called Lex Adamnani, or Cain Adhamhnain," which means M Tribute of Adamnan" ; because from it, a privilege devolved on him and on his succes- sors of levying pecuniary contributions under certain conditions. At a subsequent period, when this assessment became a matter of consideration, an officer or agents was appointed for its collection. 40 It is much to be regretted, however, that we have not a more authentic account than the foregoing. It is possible, that the question regarding the proper mode for celebrating Easter had been discussed at this synod, and that usages recom- mendedbyAdamnanhadbeenadopted. Theeightcanons,"whichbear Adamnan's name were also probably promulgated, during its session. These canons do not seem, however, to have had any connexion with the Cain Adhamhnain. *8 Although Colgan says, nevertheless, that the Acts of this synodonlycontainedtheCainAdhamnanorCanonsofAdamnan;«° yet, the Rev. Dr. Lanigan is of the opinion, that matters of greater consequence were promulgated in its decrees. These Canons* are eight in number, and comprise some regulations with regard to fasting, as also a prohibition to eat the flesh of animals, which had fed upon carrion, or of beasts that died of themselves. They contain, also, a provision in the eighth Canon, whereby the owner of a horse or other animal grazing in land annexed to a town is obliged to pay a fine to any person, belonging to said town who may have been injured by such animal. s1
A well-informed writer of our saint's Acts says, that if ecclesiastical topics were entertained at this synod, these were not considered of sufficient impor- tance in Irish estimation to merit entry in a journal. The absorbing subject is said to have been, that civil enactment, which afterwards became a source of profit, and for this reason had special claims upon recorded acts. The same writer adds, that in the mystified Irish style, it is sometimes dangerous, and always difficult, to deal with their statements as historical records. 52 Nevertheless, it must be observed, that many of its canons are still extant 5 '
; and of these, some refer immediately to the priesthood, others have a reference
44 The Brehon Laws make frequent men- tion of this Cain. But its particulars were not known, until the Brussels MS. , contain- ing an account of this Synod, had been
"
in Martene a detached canon is to be found under the title, Item Adompnanus (ibid. , col. 11). It is of the same purport as the others, namely, relating to unclean food. It exists also in the Cotton MS. , but without Adamnan's name. (Otho. E. xiii. , fol. 126. b).
49See uActa Sanctorum Hibernise,"
History and 45 He was the C&r\& Ax>avc\
discovered. In Dr. Petrie's
Antiquities of Tara," various kinds of Cain are mentioned. See pp. 173, 174.
xx. Februarii. Vita S.
s° They are published in Martene's" The-
saurus Novus Anecdotarum," tomus iv. , col. 18.
s' Dr. Lanigan laments, that Colgan had not published those Acts, without appearing to be conscious at the time of a fact, that
are elsewhere, as he himself they published
Canons, but with considerable variations, chap, xviii. , sec. xiv. , notes, 186, 187, pp. under the title, Incipiunt Canones Adam- 139, 140.
nani, fol. 155 b. s* See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's
48 Martene printed the Canones Adam- "Life of St. Columba. " Appendix to Pre-
"
styled, mAOft Steward of Adamnan's Law. ''
Colgae, p. 382.
nAin,
46 At the year a. d. 927, in Dr. O'Dono-
"
van's Annals of the Four Masters," we
have a record concerning the death of
"
and Bishop of Daire-Chalgaigh, and
Caencomhrac, son of Maeluidhir, Abbot
Steward of Adamnan's Law. "—
Vol.
ii. ,
pp. , 620, 621.
47 These exist in the Cotton MS. of " Ecclesiastical History of Ireland," vol. iii. ,
nani with other Irish Canons, from a MS. of the Bigot Library at Rotterdam, and which formerly belonged to the Monastery
"
of Fescamp, in Normandy. See Thesaurus
Novus Anecdotarum," tomus iv. , col 18, Lutecia? Parisiorum, 1717. Besides these,
face, p. Ii.
defeat of Finachta Fleadhach is assigned to the year 693.
verses. See "
Account of nearly Four Hundred Irish Four Masters," vol. i. , pp. 296, 297, this
fifty-two
Writers," p. 1.
3 In this Adamnan calls Finnachta, in
ftij cjtm Iia£ ceti x>ecu, "'the old grey king without teeth. " The bard indulges in
"
—
" Were I a King of reddened spears
the following sentiments
:
p. This is the date also given, in the Annals
Chronological
of Tighernach and in those of Ulster.
7 The Breviary of Aberdeen relates, that a child was found, who " ante Dei virum See the Book of Lecan at fol. 310 b ; Book ductus multa ei probleumata praeposuit. of Invasions, fol. 94 a. Tunc sanctus facto signaculo crucis 4 See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's " Life inimicum effugavit, qui in specie infantis
I would humble mine enemies,
" I would exalt my high places,
" My combats should be frequent. "
* In Dr. O'Donovan's " Annals of the
6
Additional Notes to Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's "Life of St. Columba," 378.
See the Chronicon Hyense, in the
5o6 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [September 23
says an ingenious writer, consists in their having arisen during an imagina- tive age, out of a prevailing and well-founded belief in Adamnan's learning
and mental acquirements. Diligence in his sacred calling was one of his
many virtues. With true modesty, he apologises for his literary deficiencies,
in one of his works. 8 He that he was and states, daily occupied by great
almost insurmountable labours, and by a pressure of ecclesiastical business, for the due discharge of which, he felt no ordinary solicitude. His rare humility and genuine piety are manifest, from this and many other passages
foundinhisworks. Alegendalreadygiven,inapreviouspartofthisbiography, and the title of his reputed Feilire, or Festilogy,9 appear to have grown out of his character for filial affection. The energy of his physical and mental powers has left its impress on our insular traditions, as likewise the many journeys which he undertook, and various synods which he convoked.
The death of Bruide, son to Bile, King of Fortrenn, is recorded to have
taken a. d. place
693.
,0 He a contem- reigned twenty-one years," being
porary with Adamnan. This prince was the most valiant of the Pictish
Kings, since the reign of his namesake, who was Maelcom's son. We are 12
that the body of Bruide, son to Bile, King over the Cruthnigh, was
told,
brought to Hy, and that his death was grievous and sorrowful to Adamnan. The latter desired Bruide's corpse should be brought to him into the house that night, when Adamnan watched by it until morning. Next day, when the body began to move and its eyes opened, a certain pious man came to the door of that house. He said: "If Adamnan's object be to raise the dead, I say he should not do so, for it will be a degradation to every cleric,
who shall succeed to his
place,
if he too cannot raise the " There departed. "
is something reasonable in that," said Adamnan " ;
therefore,
as it is more
proper,letusgiveourblessingtoBuidhe'ssoulandtohisbody. " Then,as
we are told, Buidhe resigned his spirit to Heaven again, with the blessing
of Adamnan and of the congregation at Ia. *3 Were we to attach any degree
beatum virum temptare voluit. "—Lect. iii.
The Irish Life states, that the demon came in human form to converse with Adamnan, for the men of Munster com- pelled him by force to come to Adamnan. And he came with many hard questions.
declaravi. llorum ego lectorem admono
experimentorum, ut pro me misello pecatore eorundem craxatore Christum judicem secu- lorum exorare non neglegat. "—Mabillon's " Acta Sanctorum Ordinis S. Benedicti. " ssec. iii. , parsii.
9 Incipit Feilire Adamnain x>\& n)&zh&\\\
(Propr. s. s. , Part. Estiv. , fol. 114. bb). '*
One of the
questions
was, ' Was
it in
[for I0
his hie. mother]
At this year the Annals of Tighernac
"
shape or without shape that the devil
worshipped, and was it through know-
ledge or in ignorance that the devil
worshipped'? " They also relate how the devil was brought to Hy in the shape of a corpse, to be buried, and how it rose up
Bruidhe mac Bile Rex Fortrend
and spoke, putting, as the Life says,
"
many
state :
moritur. "—William F. Skene's '* Chronicles of the Picts, Chronicles of "the Scots, and other early Memorials of Scottish History," p. 73.
"According to the Chronicle in the
wonderful
all of which Adamnan resolved. "
Mr. Reeves' Adamnan's " Life of St.
of St. Andrew's.
In the Irish Life of St. Adamnan.
to the — questions congregation,
Registry ,a
lvii lviii
" heWh° Towards' the close of his Treatise, De Lf
Tf
°f Mafy
'
Locis Sanctis,'' Adamnan says: Obsecro
itaque eos quicumque breves legerint libellos, ut pro eodem sancto sacerdote Arculfo
divinam precenter clementiam, qui h*c de Sanctis experimenta locis eorum frequentator libentissime nobis dictavit. Quae et ego quamlibet inter laboriosas et prope insustentabiles sollicitudines consti- utus, vili quamvis sermone discribens
fjJ? ***? „•, eath of Bruide mac Bile,
Rev.
,3 Afterwards Adamnan said : —
Columba. " Appendix to Preface, n. (o), ,,. ,. . . ,^, ,—
" eke
^wonders doth he
Many perform,
^d°maf rul'n aKindom
^f5f£,. 1 hat a ho low stick of withered oak
*s about *« son of the KinS of Alciuaite.
—See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's "Life of St. Columba. " Appendix to Preface &c, p. xliv. , and n. n. (c, d. )
September 23. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 507
of credit to the foregoing legend, in connection with the recorded date of King Bruide's death ; it should seem, that scarcely more than the interval of a year ought be allowed for Adamnan's visit to Ireland. However, the account is too absurd to merit any place in historic investigation.
It is supposed, that after his return to Iona, Adamnan wrote his Life of St. Columba. This instructive biography he intended for the edification of his society. It was probably written before another voyage undertaken in the year 696^ or 697,15 when once more he returned to Ireland. He makes no reference to any difference of sentiment between himself and his com- munity regarding Roman observances, in this work ; but he has allusions in it to the Paschal question, when he speaks of a prophecy attributed to St. Columkille at Clonmacnoise, in which it was predicted, that after some time discord should arise Ireland's ecclesiastics on that 16 A
among very subject. writer1 ? of our Saint's memoirs supposes, that he may have referred to the
same matter, where speaking about those, who foolishly and ungratefully abused God's patience among the Picts and Scots of Britain. 18 Yet, the Bollandist editor, Baert, conjectures, that St. Columba's Life had been written, during Adamnan's sojourn in Ireland. He also supposes the brethren at whose instance this Life had been written were not the refractory monks of Hy, but those more docile inmates belonging to Durrow, and to
other houses of his institute in Ireland. : 9 The Life itself,
the fullest internal evidence, that it had been written at Hy, and by a member of that insular community. 20 It is thought to have been composed
and 21 697.
site of that well has been ascertained, and it is near one of the city gates still remaining in Derry. *3 On the 9th of June, 1897 and 1898, a grand
14 According to the Annals of Ulster, at 2° The writer speaks of " nostrum monas-
the interval between Adamnan's visits to Ireland in
Especially in the north-western districts of Ireland, popular traditions were most rife, that Adamnan had sojourned for a time in various localities ; and memorials with which his name has been associated seem to lend probability to those accounts. That he spent some time in Derry, so dear to Columkille, is almost certain, especially as in it had been already established a great monastery of his order. Moreover, in Derry there was formerly a well dedicated to St. Adamnan and we learn how the town had been
during
692
;
burned from it to the burial-ground of St. Martin, in the year 1203. " The
this " Adamnanus ad Hiberniam terium," year :
(lib. "
i. , cap.
30, 37,
lib.
ii. , cap.
pergit, —et dedit Legem Innocentium 45), and of nostra insula," (lib. i. , cap. i. ,
"
populis. " Dr. O'Conor's Rerum Hiberni- lib. ii,, cap. 45). He says, that the fame of St.
carum Ultonienses.
tomus iv.
Annales
Columba was not known " in hac exclusively
parva et extrema oceani Britannici commo-
"
19 M This, however," observes Dr. Reeves, is a conclusion drawn from unsound
Scots of Britain. He mentions " Iova
insula," (lib. ii. , cap. 45), without, however,
our being enabled to infer with certainty
from those two particular passages, whether the Life in question was there written,
2I
See Leslie Stephen's "Dictionary of National Biography," vol. i. , Art. Adamnan
or Adomnan, by John T. Gilbert, p. 92.
22 See " Memoir of the and North City
Western Liberties of Londonderry," part ii. , History, sect. i. , p. 23.
Scriptores,"
ratus insula," (lib. hi. , cap. 23). When x6 "
15 According to the Annals of Tighernach. See "Vita S. Columbse," lib. i. , cap. 3.
17 The Rev. Wm. Reeves.
18 See "Vita S. Columbse," lib. ii. , cap. 46.
writing, in his nostris insulis," (lib. ii. ,
premises, for it supposes, as some Irish accounts have done, that Adamnan quarrelled with his people; also that the Irish Columbans yielded, while the Hyen- sian ones held out. The one Adamnan to have been expelled from his pastoral cha—rge; the other is contradicted by Bede. " Adamnan's "Life of St. Columba. " Appendix to Preface, &c, p. 1.
supposes
cap. 46)
he alludes to those of the Picts and
23
William O'Doherty, C. C. , St. Colum's
Owing to the kindness of the Rev.
however,
bears
So8 LIVES OP THE IRISH SAINTS. [September i$.
ceremonial had been carried out at the Long Tower Catholic Church, specially dedicated to St. Columba, in that city, and temporary arches had —been erected at different places along the line of procession through the streets
one of those, the Howard-street Arch, indicating a spot near St. Eunan's Well. ** Our Irish historians inform us, that a convention was assembled in Ireland, at which Adamnan, with the principal part of the Irish clergy,
attended. ** The Acts of that con- vention are said to have been extant in the old Book of Raphoe 6 and that
been taken*? and are
supposed, however,* to have been a dif-
ferent synod from that held at Tara, most probably in the year 697,3* when,
to the Annals of Tigher- nach, Adamnan brought a law with him into Ireland. Flann Febhla, Abbot of Armagh, presided over this synod. 33 Thirty-nine ecclesiastics were present at it ; among
Site of St. Adamnan s Well, Derry.
Church, Derry, a photograph of the adjoin- ing street-site has been obtained by the writer.
A representation of it has been drawn on the wood, and engraved by Gregor Grey.
34 A full account of those celebrations
has been compiled by the Rev. William
O'Dohety, C. C. , and issued in an elegantly illustrated volume, intituled " Derry Columbkille ;" and the peculiar device caused that near St. Eunan's Well to be called the Shamrock Arch. It is pictorially
"
and described at
8 It is remarkable, that the Rev. Geoffry
represented
pp. 169, 170.
Keating's
;*
copies of it have
still preserved in Bruxelles*8 and in Dublin. ** It is pro- bable, they were iden- tical with the eight Canons Adamnan's name, and which have been printedbyMartene. 30 It is
1
generally thought that synod was held in a. d. 695. It was attended by or This is
forty bishops
abbots. 3
according
History of Ireland" has no mention of this Synod.
96 The title is, Incipit Cain Adamnain a\i fticc fen tebAifi Raca bochAe, according to this old Book of Raphoe.
37 Oneof these by Brother Michael O'Clery.
28 In the Burgundian Library, the MS. alluded to is classed, No. 2324. The Acts of this Synod were entitled the Cain Adham- nain, or the "Canons of Adamnan," accord*
ing to Colgan.
2» In a belonging to Marsh's manuscript
Library, Dublin, and called Precedents of
bearing
September 23. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 5«9 these was Ichtbrocht,34 or Egbert^ supposed to have been the individual,
who the brought
Hyensians
to Paschal
in
6 and
conformity
the presidency of Abbot Dunchadh, who governed their community in
quality of Abbot, from 710 to 7 17. 37 Also there were present Murchon or Murchu Mac Ua Maichtene,38 who wrote a portion of St. Patrick's Memoirs, as contained in the Book of Armagh. 39 It is remarked, that with the excep- tion of Flann Febhla, Abbot over Armagh, and Cennfaeladh,40 Abbot over Bangor, the remainder of the clergy, attending this synod, came from Leinster and the south. Loingsech,41 son to Aengus, monarch of Ireland, and forty- seven chiefs connected with various territories, represented the laity in this great assembly. Bruide mac Derile,42 King over the Pictish region/3 is last named among the latter class. These sy nodical enactments were afterwards
the See of Armagh, at p. 395 there are Canones Adomnani, copied from a MS. once possessed by Sir R. Cotton.
30 In his "Thesaurus Novus Anecdo-
torum," tomusiv. , col. 18.
31 Colgan declares, he had the Acts of
it, in his possession, under the title, Cain
the Sixth Volume of this work, Art. v. , vi. The Calendar of Cashel, as cited by Colgan, places their commemoration at Kill- Murchon, in the territory of Hi-Garrchon, in the eastern part of the County of Wicklow, and near the town bearing the same name. See "Acta Sanctorum Hibernise," v. Martii. Vita S. Kierani, n. 31, p. 465.
39 The entry of this name in the Acts of Adamnan's Synod is of importance in the History of the Book of Armagh, as it seems to fix the date of Muirchu Maccumachtheni, whose name is attached to a portion of the Memoirs of St. Patrick in that volume, in
:
thesewords "HsecpaucadeSanctiPatricii
peritia et virtutibus Muirchu Maccumach-
theni, dictante Aiduo Slebtiensis civitatis "
episcopo, conscripsit. (fol. 20, ba). The name of this informant also occurs in the
"
See " Acta Sanctorum Hibernise," v. Martii.
Vita S. Kierani. Appendix, cap. iv. , p. 473. 32 The Annals of Ulster have a. d. 696, for Adamnan's visit to Ireland, when he pro- mulgated the Law of the Innocents among
the people.
33 It is strange that Colgan, in one passage
of his work, should have confounded the Synod at Tara with the Convention at Drumceatt, held in the time of St. Columb- kille. See " Trias Thaumaturga," n. 36, p. 384.
34 The Rev. Mr. Reeves states, that the name is thus written in the original, which he had examined. Colgan understands it of Ecbertus Anglus.
35 See an account of him, at the 24th of April, in the Fourth Volume of this work, Art. i.
36 Venerable Bede tells us, that the last occasion on which the old Easter had been observed was at the festival of 715, after a duration of 150 years. The Roman tonsure was introduced among the Columban monks about the same time. This reformation was effected through the zealous exertions of a Northumbrian priest, named Egbert or
Adhmnain, or the
Canon of Adamnan. "
Ecgberet,
long
time was in living
42 Called mac bjiume
who for a
Appendix to Preface, n. (e), p. li.
40 See notices of this Saint, at the 8th of
April, in the Fourth Volume of this work, Art. i.
41 According to Dr. O'Donovan's "Annals of the Four Masters," this monarch reigned eight years ; from a. d. 693, when Finachta Fleadhach was slain, to the year 791, when he and his three sons also were killed in battle. See vol. i. , pp. 296 to 303, with notes, ibid.
this Synod as Aidan, son of Gabhean, did at Drumceatt. "—Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adam- nan's " Life of St. Columba. " Appendix to Preface, n. (h). , p. li.
Skene's "Celtic Scotland : A History of Ancient Alban," vol ii. , book ii. , chap. Jvi. , p. 231.
Ireland, to which country he exiled himself, "
-oefiili fii CfiuitencuAice. He died in 706, in the eleventh year of his reign. The introduc- tion of his name into the Acts is suspicious, unless we suppose him to have attended at
for the sake of Christ. See Historia Eccle- siastica Gentis Anglorum," lib. v. , cap. xxii. 37 See Chronicon Hyense. in the Additional Notes to Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's "Life of St. Columba," pp. 379 to 381. The Acts of St. Dunnchadh will be found, at the 25th of May, in the Fifth Volume of this work,
Art. i.
38 Murchu mac Ua Maichtene and his predecessor of Nectan. See William F
brother Meadhran, are noticed in the Irish
Calendars, at June 8th, and at that date, their respective festivals may be found in
7i6,3
during
acts of the Synod, in the form Aedh epscop Sleibte, whose day is Feb. 7, and whose obit is entered in Tighernach a—t 700, and in the Annals of Ulster at 699. "
Rev. Mr. Reeves' Adamnan's " Life of St. Columba. "
43 He was the brother and immediate
5io LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [September 23.
called Lex Adamnani, or Cain Adhamhnain," which means M Tribute of Adamnan" ; because from it, a privilege devolved on him and on his succes- sors of levying pecuniary contributions under certain conditions. At a subsequent period, when this assessment became a matter of consideration, an officer or agents was appointed for its collection. 40 It is much to be regretted, however, that we have not a more authentic account than the foregoing. It is possible, that the question regarding the proper mode for celebrating Easter had been discussed at this synod, and that usages recom- mendedbyAdamnanhadbeenadopted. Theeightcanons,"whichbear Adamnan's name were also probably promulgated, during its session. These canons do not seem, however, to have had any connexion with the Cain Adhamhnain. *8 Although Colgan says, nevertheless, that the Acts of this synodonlycontainedtheCainAdhamnanorCanonsofAdamnan;«° yet, the Rev. Dr. Lanigan is of the opinion, that matters of greater consequence were promulgated in its decrees. These Canons* are eight in number, and comprise some regulations with regard to fasting, as also a prohibition to eat the flesh of animals, which had fed upon carrion, or of beasts that died of themselves. They contain, also, a provision in the eighth Canon, whereby the owner of a horse or other animal grazing in land annexed to a town is obliged to pay a fine to any person, belonging to said town who may have been injured by such animal. s1
A well-informed writer of our saint's Acts says, that if ecclesiastical topics were entertained at this synod, these were not considered of sufficient impor- tance in Irish estimation to merit entry in a journal. The absorbing subject is said to have been, that civil enactment, which afterwards became a source of profit, and for this reason had special claims upon recorded acts. The same writer adds, that in the mystified Irish style, it is sometimes dangerous, and always difficult, to deal with their statements as historical records. 52 Nevertheless, it must be observed, that many of its canons are still extant 5 '
; and of these, some refer immediately to the priesthood, others have a reference
44 The Brehon Laws make frequent men- tion of this Cain. But its particulars were not known, until the Brussels MS. , contain- ing an account of this Synod, had been
"
in Martene a detached canon is to be found under the title, Item Adompnanus (ibid. , col. 11). It is of the same purport as the others, namely, relating to unclean food. It exists also in the Cotton MS. , but without Adamnan's name. (Otho. E. xiii. , fol. 126. b).
49See uActa Sanctorum Hibernise,"
History and 45 He was the C&r\& Ax>avc\
discovered. In Dr. Petrie's
Antiquities of Tara," various kinds of Cain are mentioned. See pp. 173, 174.
xx. Februarii. Vita S.
s° They are published in Martene's" The-
saurus Novus Anecdotarum," tomus iv. , col. 18.
s' Dr. Lanigan laments, that Colgan had not published those Acts, without appearing to be conscious at the time of a fact, that
are elsewhere, as he himself they published
Canons, but with considerable variations, chap, xviii. , sec. xiv. , notes, 186, 187, pp. under the title, Incipiunt Canones Adam- 139, 140.
nani, fol. 155 b. s* See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's
48 Martene printed the Canones Adam- "Life of St. Columba. " Appendix to Pre-
"
styled, mAOft Steward of Adamnan's Law. ''
Colgae, p. 382.
nAin,
46 At the year a. d. 927, in Dr. O'Dono-
"
van's Annals of the Four Masters," we
have a record concerning the death of
"
and Bishop of Daire-Chalgaigh, and
Caencomhrac, son of Maeluidhir, Abbot
Steward of Adamnan's Law. "—
Vol.
ii. ,
pp. , 620, 621.
47 These exist in the Cotton MS. of " Ecclesiastical History of Ireland," vol. iii. ,
nani with other Irish Canons, from a MS. of the Bigot Library at Rotterdam, and which formerly belonged to the Monastery
"
of Fescamp, in Normandy. See Thesaurus
Novus Anecdotarum," tomus iv. , col 18, Lutecia? Parisiorum, 1717. Besides these,
face, p. Ii.
