"
Appendix
Quarta ad Acta S.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v2
Florentiae iv.
323.
Cod.
xx.
Vita S.
Brigidae.
MS.
Monast.
S.
Gisleni in Cella.
See Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy's "Descriptive Catalogue of Materials relating to the History of Great Britain and Ireland, vol.
i.
, part, i.
, pp.
114 to 116.
^94 Vol. xi. , fol. I.
»95 Among the Bruxelles MSS. , in the Burgundian Library, there is a tract " S. Brigidse Vita," vol. iv. , part i. , p. 24.
appended,
Hugbaldus Elnonensis, Monachus. MS. Vita S. Brigidae. Appendix Tertia, cap. i. ,
Duffus Hardy's
"
Descriptive Catalogue of
Materials relating to the History of Great
Britain and Ireland," vol. i. , parti. , pp. in
to 1 14.
'9^
Among the Clarendon Manuscripts, formerly the property of Sir James Ware,
**
Vita S. Brigidse," and a"VitaS. Brigidffi. "
*9^ In the various European Libraries we have been enabled to trace the following copies :—Vita S. Brigidae MS. Regensburg. Vita S. Brigittse fragmentum. We find
«'
are Excerpts from
Hujus vitse auctor est, ni fallor,
'9" See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga,"
Bibl. du Roi. 2999, 3. olim Le Tellier veil. XI. cent. Vita S. Brigidse Virginis. MS. Bibl. du Roi. 3788, 42. olim Colbert, veil, xu. cent. Yita S. Brigidse, Virginis. MS.
pp. 609, 610.
'97 See Trinity College MS. , classed B, I, 5, at fol. 114 b,
Bibl. du Roi. 5269, 21, olim Faurian. veil, xiv, cent. Vita S. Brigidse Virginis. MS. Bibl. du Roi. 5278, 23. olim Colbert, veil. xiii. & xiv. cent. Vita S. Brigidse, Virginis. MS. Bibl. du Roi. 5292, 48.
February i. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 19
The less remote genealogies of Ireland's kings, chiefs, and saints are found to harmonize in a remarkable manner with each other. Nor can we regard more ancient pedigrees and traditions as mere fabrications. '^s Ac- cording to Cogitosus and Animosus, St. Brigid was descended from Feidlimidh Rechtmar or the Law-giver, ^99 through the line of Ethach,2°<» qj. Eochaidh^°^Finn Fothart, his son, who was brother to the celebrated Conn of the Hundred Battles, King of Ireland. =°^ The family to which our saint belonged was formerly very celebrated, and a powerful one, belonging to the Province of Leinster. In Irish song and story, bards and senachies hadproclaimedtheirrenown. ThegenealogistsofIrelandhavebeencareful to record St. Brigid's descent,^°3 which in the direct line from her paternal progenitor, Eochaidh Finn Fothart, was illustrated by holy persons, as well as by heroes. ''°4 The various Irish pedigrees and kalendars enumerate not less than fourteen— enters thirteen— ^°'^ who had been
posed, however, to have been of a different family. St. Gall, Patron of Switzerland,^°7 and his brother Deicolus, Abbot of Lure^°^ have been con- jecturallyaddedtotheforegoingnumber. Thefollowingistheorderofpa- ternal descent, traced for St. Brigid. To Eochaidh Finn was born a son, namedAongusMeann. HehadasonCormac,whosesonCairpreNiadh was father to Art Corb, whose son was Conleach or Conla. To the latter was born a son. Den, the father of Bresal, who was the father of Demri. *°9
Colgan''°5 only saints,
descended from Eochaidh Finn. Two of these named in the list are sup-
^98 See Rev. Dr. Todd's "St. Patrick,
Apostle of Ireland. " Appendix to Intro-
duction, A, p. 247.
'99
0'Gorman,ofCathaldMaguire,andofDone- gal.
=°^
The following is a list of the saints and their places, with presumed days for their fes- tivities. I. St. Aidan, venerated on the 27th of August, or on the 4th of September, at a place called Cluain Tarbh, or Clontarf. 2. St. Berchan,also called MobiClairenachjVene- rated on the 12th of October, at Glasnevin.
King of Ireland, from A. D. 164 to 174,
accordingtoO'Flalierty'schronology. See
"Ogygi^j" P3-'*s- iii-j cap. Ivii. , pp. 306 to
308. In Dr. O'Donovan's "Annals of the
Four Masters," however, his reign is placed
much earlier, viz. , from A. D. no to 1 19.
See vol. i. , pp. 100 to 103. Having enacted 3. St. Barrindus, of Achadh-Cailltin, at a law of retaliation for the repression of the 8th of November. 4. St. Colman, of various crimes, this king died a natural Airthir Femhin. 5. St. Declan, of Ard- death, after a reign of nine years. Cathaeir more, venerated on the 24th of July. But,
Mor, or the Great, succeeded, according to from the life of this latter saint, which "
Dr. O'Donovan's Annals of the Four Colgan intended to publish at that day, it
Masters. " Afterareignofthreeyears,we are informed, that he was slain in the battle of Magh-h-Agha, by Conn of the Hundred Fights and by the Fian or militia of Luaighne,
Secunda
would seem, Declan and his brother Colman are not derived from the race of Eochad, as
"
13th of February, or on the 4th of October.
12. St. Mochuan. 13. St. Samata, who
A. D. 122. See ibid. , pp. 102, 103. '"^ "
See "Trias Thaumaturga. Vita S. Brigidas, cap. i. , p. 519.
=°'
See ibid. Quarta Vita S. Brigida, cap. i. , p. 546.
^°^ From A. D. 177 to 211, according to
O'Flaherty's "Ogygia," pars, iii. , cap. Ix. ,
Ixi. , pp. 313 to 318. Dr. O'Donovan's the 4th of July. 10. St. Fintan, Abbot of "Annals of the Four Masters" has it from Clonenagh, venerated on the 17th of Feb- A. D. 123 to 157. See vol. i. , pp. 103 to ruary. II. St. Finan, venerated on the
105.
^°3 Among the St. Gall manuscripts like-
"
was venerated on the 1 6th of April. See "
wise there is a
Genealogia S. Brigidse. " See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga.
" Appendix Quarta ad Acta S. Brigidse, cap.
ii. , p. 613.
^°5 He remarks, that the Natales for most
of those saints are found entered in the Martyrologies of Tallagh, of Marianus
Trias Thaumaturga. " Appendix ^°7 See his Life at the i6th of October.
='°'*
Colgan's
Quarta ad Acta S. Brigidae, cap. iii. , p. 613.
the author of the
writes, but rather from the posterity of his brother Fiach Sugdhe. 6. St. Diman, bishop, who was venerated on the 9th, or on the 22nd, of March. 7. St. Enan, of Drum Rath, venerated on the 19th of August. 8. St. Fechin, of Fore, venerated on the 20th of January. 9. St. Finbarr or Fionub- har. Abbot of Inis Doimhle, venerated on
Sanctilogic Genealogy"
=°8 '«^ThisaccordswiththeIrishLifeofSt.
See his Life at the i8th of January.
20 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [February i.
The son of this latter was 6ubtach, the father of St. Brigid. =^° Thus was the illustrious virgin eleventlTm Imeal descent, from the renowned Feidlimidh Rechtmar,*" or the Lawgiver,^^^ King of Ireland, in the second century of our Christian era. ^^3 It would seem, that on our saint's maternal side, Brigid was descended from the O'Connor family. '^4 The mother of this holy virgin
is incorrectly called Brocea, Brocaj^^'s or Brocessa, by Cogitosus, and by some foreign writers. But, by most of our native authorities, she is more correctlynamedBrotseach,^^^orBrocseach. =^7 ThesisterofthisBrotseach appears to have been Fanchea, the mother of three holy sons. ^'^ The Calendar of the O'Clerys states, that Broiccseach,=^9 daughter of Dallbronach, son to Aedh Meamhair,=^2o ^^^g ^^ mother of this most renowned virgin. Such a respectable pedigree is alone sufficient to disprove an assertion ot certain writers recording our saint's acts, that her mother was of servile con- dition. Both her parents are called Christians, and they are reputed to have been of noble birth. "^ It seems probable enough, they may have been among St. Patrick's converts, when he spent some time in Loutli, before re- turning to the North from his southern missionary travels. Besides the
Brigid, in the "Book of Lismore" and in
the ** Leabhar Breac" according to Professor
on its south and west, with Meath towards the north. Like other great districts of Ire- land, it had its own kings ; subject, however,
O'Looney's copy, pp. 3, 4.
*'° Such is her line as traced in the to the chief monarch of the island. Naas
**
xv. Cormac Mac Cuillenan, in his treatise on " Genealogies of the Saints," contained in the "Psalter of Cashel," assigns the same descent on the father's side, for St. Brigid.
wasthe St. capital city during
Brigid's period. Its metropolis for many ages past has been Dublin, which formerly had many suffragan sees within its present archiepiscopal limits. For some time past, it has only the suffragan In this particular, Dr. Geoffry Keating sees of Kildare and Leighlin, Ossory and
Sanctilogic Genealogies," chapter
agrees with the foregoing authorities. See
Dermod O'Connor's Keating's "General
History of Ireland," part ii. , p. 389.
2" In the Fourth Life of St. Brigid, it is said, he was thus named, because he effected great law reforms in his kingdom of Ireland, while * ' Reacht" of the Scotic dialect in
Ferns.
her. See Trias Thaumaturga. Appendix Quarta ad Acta S. Brigidas, cap. ii. , p. 613. ^'7 Irish writers more generally, as also Latin is identical with "lex. " In English more correctly, write her name Brocseach, it means "law. " and hence Colgan prefers to adopt their or-
=*^ Colgan agrees, that the cognomen thography. See ibid. Quarta Vita S. Bri-
Reachtmar is Latinized by the words
"
gidae, n, 8, p. 563,
legi- fer" or "legislator. " Such an epithet had been bestowed on him because of his being a great lover of justice. He also says that of this word '^'^ Reachtmar'''* \? , in accordance with our historic traditions, and
"
the common use of the epithet. See Thaumaturga. " Vita Quarta S. Brigidse, lib. i. , cap. i. , p. 546, and n. 3, p. 563.
='^
"Mothers of the Irish Saints," relates, that Fanchea, daughter of Dalbronach, was mo- ther of Saints Conall, Eugene, and Carbre, three sons of Neman.
='9 In the table to this martyrology, after
the holy virgin's name, we find the following comment introduced, within brackets :— "[DaughterofBroicsech; hermotherwas
the
origin
race of Eochaidh Finnfuathairt, son to Feidhlimidh Reachtmhar, son to Tuathal Teachtmhar, Monarch of Erinn.
»'* According to Professor O'Looney's Irish Life, St. Brigid's mother was Broig- seach, the daughter of Dallbronach, of the Dail Conchobhar in South Bregia.
="S In the Third Office of St. Brigid, pub-
lished by Colgan, "patre Diptoco, et matre Broca," are held to have been her parents. Her offices and other accounts make our saint a native of Leinster. This was an- ciently a Province of Ireland, bounded eastwards by the Irish Sea, having Munster
Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves. "° He is said to have been of Dalconchab-
of Bregia, accord- ing to an Irish Life of St. Brigid. St, Ultan also belonged to that family. A scholiast, in his preface to a hymn, said to have been composed by St. Ultan, writes, that he com- posed this hymn in . praise of St. Brigid : and that he was of the Daleconchabuir, to which belonged St, Brigid's (mother, Brot-
seach, daughter of Dallbronac,
=" See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga,"
Cogitosus' or Secunda Vita S. Brigidaj, cap, i. , p. 519.
Trias
"'3 The O'Clery's Calendar agrees, like-
wise, that St. Brigid descended from the Brocsecha. ]" See " Martyrology of Done-
gal.
="'*
Colgan remarks, that she should be
called Brotseach, as the generality of au-
thors—especially in old Latin codices—style ""
"
St. yEngus the Culdee, in his tract,
huir, in the southern
part
February i. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 21
testimony of Cogitosus, referable to the Christian parentage of St. Brigid, in that metrical prologue to her sixth life,^" Dubtach is represented as a noble,
pious man, and still more noble, through his own proper spouse^=^3 and their holy offspring. "* Nor does there appear to be any qualification to this
eulogy, in regard to any particular portion of his life. Whether the birth of their illustrious daughter took place before or after their conversion to Chris- tianity is not established on any reliable authority.
Our most judicious historians, Protestant and Catholic,'='S pass over in silence, or with reproof, those very incredible legends, which contradict the
^^*^
foregoing accounts.
render the least remarkable circumstances, attending St. Brigid's birth, more probable ; while the romantic narratives can be traced to no better sources than popular traditions, s—o liable to be obscured by fables. No doubt, cer- tain old Acts of the saint we cannot be sure, however, these are the most ancient and authentic —contain the entry of such preposterous statements.
Later writers, during the middle ages,''^7 adopted those vain fantasies, without sufficient examination, and these again have been repeated by more modern
or in
The best refutation of certain strange accounts, relating to St. Brigid's birth, will probably be found in a brief statement of the legend. ^30 xhe paternal ancestor of our illustrious virgin, and who is named Eochaidh Finn, went among the Lagenians, whose king bestowed many tracts of land on him, at different places. In that province the prince's posterity dwelt at a time
Indeed, an exact critical analysis will only serve to
of the historic — complete ignorance value, applic-
writers^^^
abletotheirsourcesforinformation. Th—egenealogyofSt. Brigid'smother apparently drawn from remote pedigrees shows that she was not of servile condition,229 but through family origin, in every respect, fitted to be the lawful and respected spouse of the noble Dubtach.
unreflectingly
^^'^^^ "Dubtachus erat ejus
genitor cogno-
being everywhere wife of Dubtach. "
else of as the spoken
mine dietus
Clarus homo meritis, clarus et a
;
'^'^^ That the illustrious St. Brigid was born in Scotia of noble and Christian parents is stated in the ' ' Chronica Generalis Mun- di," by Petrus de Natalibus, lib. iii. , cap. 69, as, also, in St. Brigid's Second, Third, and Fourth Offices, published by Colgan. She is said to have been "de bona pro- sapia" in the First Office,
^^^ See the succinct account of John Cap-
**
Nova Legenda Angliae," fol. "^ Such as Harris in his edition of Sir
"
James Ware's works, vol. ii,,
Ireland," book i. , chap, iii. , pp. ii, 12.
^^9 That she was a captive is intimated in
"S Such as Ussher, Ware, Lanigan, &c.
The latter writer observes, that " no atten-
tion is due to what v/e find in two or three
of the so-called Lives of St. Brigid concern-
ing her mother having been a concubine,
whom, when pregnant, the wife of Dubtach
obliged him to dismiss, and of her having
been purchased by a pagan poet or a magus,
and how, in consequence of his taking her
to Ulster, she was then delivered of the
saint. This romance-like narrative cannot
agree with the circumstance, that the parents
of the saint were Christians. I mean such the life called the fifth, whatever it has on strict Christians as were then in Ireland, nor these subjects was evidently taken from one with the rank of her mother's family and her or other of them, Amidst other nonsense
vis ; Nobilis
mitis
proa- pietate
atque humilis, repletus ;
Nobilior propria conjuge, prole pia. " —Sexta Vita S. Brigidae. Prologus. Col- gan's "TriasThaumaturga,"p. 582.
=^^3 She is understood to have been Bro-
cessa or Brotseach, the mother of St.
Brigid.
grave in his xlix.
^"^^
In those well-known acts of St. Brigid,
written by Cogitosus, she is said to have
been predestined for accomplishment of the
Almighty's decrees, by special graces re- ceived from heaven.
"Writers of
Colgan's first published metrical acts of the
saint, attributed to St. Brogan Cloen. See
*'
TriasThaumaturga. " Hymnus,seuVita Prima S. Brigidse, strophe i. , p. 515.
^3o On this subject. Dr. Lanigan remarks : * ' These stories are given in the third and fourth lives, which in very great part are mere transcripts of each other, agreeing, word for word, in many passages. The
former bears every appearance of being an abridgment of the latter. Be this as it may, they form but one authority. And as to
22 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
[February i.
Fourth Life wrote. =3^ From his race, as we
when the author of St.
are told, a celebrated and powerful chieftain, named Dubtach, was derived, whoboughtafemaleservant,namedBroschach. Shewasverybeautifuland
distinguished by her great propriety of manner. =^32 Immediately after follows a romantic and an incredible account, seemingly irreconcilable with this latter statement. On learning that Broschach had conceived, the proper wife of Dubtach, it is said, became very much grieved, and advised her husband to sell his slave. ^33 Fear was expressed, at the same time, that Broschach's children should domineer over the family of his wife. But, the chieftain Dubtach would not hearken to the counsels of his consort, on ac- count of a great love he entertained for Broschach. =34
Brigid's
About this time, it is said, that two holy bishops^35 came from Britain, =36 andenteredthehouseofDubtach. OneofthesewascalledMelorMaol, andtheotherMelchuorMaolchu. ^37 Theseweredisciples,wearetold,of St. Patrick, the archbishop, who then preached God's word in Ireland. ^38 Maol said to Dubtach's " are sorrowful ? The of
wife, Why you offspring thy servant, shall be exalted above you and your progeny :239 however, love that servant equally with your own sons, because her infant shall procure blessings for your children. " But, the jealously of Dubtach's wife was not appeased,
and her brothers, who were powerful and brave men, earnestly urged Dubtach to sell his servant, in a distant part of the country. By a special inspiration, a poet, belonging to the Hy-Niall family,^40 came from the northern part of
contained in these tracts a magus is intro-
duced foretelling the future sanctity of the child, while she was still in her mother's womb. "—"Ecclesiastical History of Ire- land," vol. i. , chap, viii. , sec. ii. , n. 22, pp. 381, 382.
'3' Colgan remarks, that this account fur- nishes no slight indication showing how the author of this life lived at a very early period, and that he flourished at least previously to the tenth century, as for many ages back, the family of St. Brigid did not live, in those
Vita Quarta S. Brigidoe, lib. i. , cap. i. , p. 546, In closing this»account of Broschach,
as she is generally called throughout the Fourth Life, the author adds regarding her,
**in omnibus enim moribus, illafoemma erat perfecta. "
=^3S They were disciples and nephews of St. Patrick, the children ofhis sister Darerca. Colgan gives their acts, at the 6th of Feb- ruary, the day of their feast, in his "Acta Sanctorum Hibernise," vi.
^94 Vol. xi. , fol. I.
»95 Among the Bruxelles MSS. , in the Burgundian Library, there is a tract " S. Brigidse Vita," vol. iv. , part i. , p. 24.
appended,
Hugbaldus Elnonensis, Monachus. MS. Vita S. Brigidae. Appendix Tertia, cap. i. ,
Duffus Hardy's
"
Descriptive Catalogue of
Materials relating to the History of Great
Britain and Ireland," vol. i. , parti. , pp. in
to 1 14.
'9^
Among the Clarendon Manuscripts, formerly the property of Sir James Ware,
**
Vita S. Brigidse," and a"VitaS. Brigidffi. "
*9^ In the various European Libraries we have been enabled to trace the following copies :—Vita S. Brigidae MS. Regensburg. Vita S. Brigittse fragmentum. We find
«'
are Excerpts from
Hujus vitse auctor est, ni fallor,
'9" See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga,"
Bibl. du Roi. 2999, 3. olim Le Tellier veil. XI. cent. Vita S. Brigidse Virginis. MS. Bibl. du Roi. 3788, 42. olim Colbert, veil, xu. cent. Yita S. Brigidse, Virginis. MS.
pp. 609, 610.
'97 See Trinity College MS. , classed B, I, 5, at fol. 114 b,
Bibl. du Roi. 5269, 21, olim Faurian. veil, xiv, cent. Vita S. Brigidse Virginis. MS. Bibl. du Roi. 5278, 23. olim Colbert, veil. xiii. & xiv. cent. Vita S. Brigidse, Virginis. MS. Bibl. du Roi. 5292, 48.
February i. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 19
The less remote genealogies of Ireland's kings, chiefs, and saints are found to harmonize in a remarkable manner with each other. Nor can we regard more ancient pedigrees and traditions as mere fabrications. '^s Ac- cording to Cogitosus and Animosus, St. Brigid was descended from Feidlimidh Rechtmar or the Law-giver, ^99 through the line of Ethach,2°<» qj. Eochaidh^°^Finn Fothart, his son, who was brother to the celebrated Conn of the Hundred Battles, King of Ireland. =°^ The family to which our saint belonged was formerly very celebrated, and a powerful one, belonging to the Province of Leinster. In Irish song and story, bards and senachies hadproclaimedtheirrenown. ThegenealogistsofIrelandhavebeencareful to record St. Brigid's descent,^°3 which in the direct line from her paternal progenitor, Eochaidh Finn Fothart, was illustrated by holy persons, as well as by heroes. ''°4 The various Irish pedigrees and kalendars enumerate not less than fourteen— enters thirteen— ^°'^ who had been
posed, however, to have been of a different family. St. Gall, Patron of Switzerland,^°7 and his brother Deicolus, Abbot of Lure^°^ have been con- jecturallyaddedtotheforegoingnumber. Thefollowingistheorderofpa- ternal descent, traced for St. Brigid. To Eochaidh Finn was born a son, namedAongusMeann. HehadasonCormac,whosesonCairpreNiadh was father to Art Corb, whose son was Conleach or Conla. To the latter was born a son. Den, the father of Bresal, who was the father of Demri. *°9
Colgan''°5 only saints,
descended from Eochaidh Finn. Two of these named in the list are sup-
^98 See Rev. Dr. Todd's "St. Patrick,
Apostle of Ireland. " Appendix to Intro-
duction, A, p. 247.
'99
0'Gorman,ofCathaldMaguire,andofDone- gal.
=°^
The following is a list of the saints and their places, with presumed days for their fes- tivities. I. St. Aidan, venerated on the 27th of August, or on the 4th of September, at a place called Cluain Tarbh, or Clontarf. 2. St. Berchan,also called MobiClairenachjVene- rated on the 12th of October, at Glasnevin.
King of Ireland, from A. D. 164 to 174,
accordingtoO'Flalierty'schronology. See
"Ogygi^j" P3-'*s- iii-j cap. Ivii. , pp. 306 to
308. In Dr. O'Donovan's "Annals of the
Four Masters," however, his reign is placed
much earlier, viz. , from A. D. no to 1 19.
See vol. i. , pp. 100 to 103. Having enacted 3. St. Barrindus, of Achadh-Cailltin, at a law of retaliation for the repression of the 8th of November. 4. St. Colman, of various crimes, this king died a natural Airthir Femhin. 5. St. Declan, of Ard- death, after a reign of nine years. Cathaeir more, venerated on the 24th of July. But,
Mor, or the Great, succeeded, according to from the life of this latter saint, which "
Dr. O'Donovan's Annals of the Four Colgan intended to publish at that day, it
Masters. " Afterareignofthreeyears,we are informed, that he was slain in the battle of Magh-h-Agha, by Conn of the Hundred Fights and by the Fian or militia of Luaighne,
Secunda
would seem, Declan and his brother Colman are not derived from the race of Eochad, as
"
13th of February, or on the 4th of October.
12. St. Mochuan. 13. St. Samata, who
A. D. 122. See ibid. , pp. 102, 103. '"^ "
See "Trias Thaumaturga. Vita S. Brigidas, cap. i. , p. 519.
=°'
See ibid. Quarta Vita S. Brigida, cap. i. , p. 546.
^°^ From A. D. 177 to 211, according to
O'Flaherty's "Ogygia," pars, iii. , cap. Ix. ,
Ixi. , pp. 313 to 318. Dr. O'Donovan's the 4th of July. 10. St. Fintan, Abbot of "Annals of the Four Masters" has it from Clonenagh, venerated on the 17th of Feb- A. D. 123 to 157. See vol. i. , pp. 103 to ruary. II. St. Finan, venerated on the
105.
^°3 Among the St. Gall manuscripts like-
"
was venerated on the 1 6th of April. See "
wise there is a
Genealogia S. Brigidse. " See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga.
" Appendix Quarta ad Acta S. Brigidse, cap.
ii. , p. 613.
^°5 He remarks, that the Natales for most
of those saints are found entered in the Martyrologies of Tallagh, of Marianus
Trias Thaumaturga. " Appendix ^°7 See his Life at the i6th of October.
='°'*
Colgan's
Quarta ad Acta S. Brigidae, cap. iii. , p. 613.
the author of the
writes, but rather from the posterity of his brother Fiach Sugdhe. 6. St. Diman, bishop, who was venerated on the 9th, or on the 22nd, of March. 7. St. Enan, of Drum Rath, venerated on the 19th of August. 8. St. Fechin, of Fore, venerated on the 20th of January. 9. St. Finbarr or Fionub- har. Abbot of Inis Doimhle, venerated on
Sanctilogic Genealogy"
=°8 '«^ThisaccordswiththeIrishLifeofSt.
See his Life at the i8th of January.
20 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [February i.
The son of this latter was 6ubtach, the father of St. Brigid. =^° Thus was the illustrious virgin eleventlTm Imeal descent, from the renowned Feidlimidh Rechtmar,*" or the Lawgiver,^^^ King of Ireland, in the second century of our Christian era. ^^3 It would seem, that on our saint's maternal side, Brigid was descended from the O'Connor family. '^4 The mother of this holy virgin
is incorrectly called Brocea, Brocaj^^'s or Brocessa, by Cogitosus, and by some foreign writers. But, by most of our native authorities, she is more correctlynamedBrotseach,^^^orBrocseach. =^7 ThesisterofthisBrotseach appears to have been Fanchea, the mother of three holy sons. ^'^ The Calendar of the O'Clerys states, that Broiccseach,=^9 daughter of Dallbronach, son to Aedh Meamhair,=^2o ^^^g ^^ mother of this most renowned virgin. Such a respectable pedigree is alone sufficient to disprove an assertion ot certain writers recording our saint's acts, that her mother was of servile con- dition. Both her parents are called Christians, and they are reputed to have been of noble birth. "^ It seems probable enough, they may have been among St. Patrick's converts, when he spent some time in Loutli, before re- turning to the North from his southern missionary travels. Besides the
Brigid, in the "Book of Lismore" and in
the ** Leabhar Breac" according to Professor
on its south and west, with Meath towards the north. Like other great districts of Ire- land, it had its own kings ; subject, however,
O'Looney's copy, pp. 3, 4.
*'° Such is her line as traced in the to the chief monarch of the island. Naas
**
xv. Cormac Mac Cuillenan, in his treatise on " Genealogies of the Saints," contained in the "Psalter of Cashel," assigns the same descent on the father's side, for St. Brigid.
wasthe St. capital city during
Brigid's period. Its metropolis for many ages past has been Dublin, which formerly had many suffragan sees within its present archiepiscopal limits. For some time past, it has only the suffragan In this particular, Dr. Geoffry Keating sees of Kildare and Leighlin, Ossory and
Sanctilogic Genealogies," chapter
agrees with the foregoing authorities. See
Dermod O'Connor's Keating's "General
History of Ireland," part ii. , p. 389.
2" In the Fourth Life of St. Brigid, it is said, he was thus named, because he effected great law reforms in his kingdom of Ireland, while * ' Reacht" of the Scotic dialect in
Ferns.
her. See Trias Thaumaturga. Appendix Quarta ad Acta S. Brigidas, cap. ii. , p. 613. ^'7 Irish writers more generally, as also Latin is identical with "lex. " In English more correctly, write her name Brocseach, it means "law. " and hence Colgan prefers to adopt their or-
=*^ Colgan agrees, that the cognomen thography. See ibid. Quarta Vita S. Bri-
Reachtmar is Latinized by the words
"
gidae, n, 8, p. 563,
legi- fer" or "legislator. " Such an epithet had been bestowed on him because of his being a great lover of justice. He also says that of this word '^'^ Reachtmar'''* \? , in accordance with our historic traditions, and
"
the common use of the epithet. See Thaumaturga. " Vita Quarta S. Brigidse, lib. i. , cap. i. , p. 546, and n. 3, p. 563.
='^
"Mothers of the Irish Saints," relates, that Fanchea, daughter of Dalbronach, was mo- ther of Saints Conall, Eugene, and Carbre, three sons of Neman.
='9 In the table to this martyrology, after
the holy virgin's name, we find the following comment introduced, within brackets :— "[DaughterofBroicsech; hermotherwas
the
origin
race of Eochaidh Finnfuathairt, son to Feidhlimidh Reachtmhar, son to Tuathal Teachtmhar, Monarch of Erinn.
»'* According to Professor O'Looney's Irish Life, St. Brigid's mother was Broig- seach, the daughter of Dallbronach, of the Dail Conchobhar in South Bregia.
="S In the Third Office of St. Brigid, pub-
lished by Colgan, "patre Diptoco, et matre Broca," are held to have been her parents. Her offices and other accounts make our saint a native of Leinster. This was an- ciently a Province of Ireland, bounded eastwards by the Irish Sea, having Munster
Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves. "° He is said to have been of Dalconchab-
of Bregia, accord- ing to an Irish Life of St. Brigid. St, Ultan also belonged to that family. A scholiast, in his preface to a hymn, said to have been composed by St. Ultan, writes, that he com- posed this hymn in . praise of St. Brigid : and that he was of the Daleconchabuir, to which belonged St, Brigid's (mother, Brot-
seach, daughter of Dallbronac,
=" See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga,"
Cogitosus' or Secunda Vita S. Brigidaj, cap, i. , p. 519.
Trias
"'3 The O'Clery's Calendar agrees, like-
wise, that St. Brigid descended from the Brocsecha. ]" See " Martyrology of Done-
gal.
="'*
Colgan remarks, that she should be
called Brotseach, as the generality of au-
thors—especially in old Latin codices—style ""
"
St. yEngus the Culdee, in his tract,
huir, in the southern
part
February i. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 21
testimony of Cogitosus, referable to the Christian parentage of St. Brigid, in that metrical prologue to her sixth life,^" Dubtach is represented as a noble,
pious man, and still more noble, through his own proper spouse^=^3 and their holy offspring. "* Nor does there appear to be any qualification to this
eulogy, in regard to any particular portion of his life. Whether the birth of their illustrious daughter took place before or after their conversion to Chris- tianity is not established on any reliable authority.
Our most judicious historians, Protestant and Catholic,'='S pass over in silence, or with reproof, those very incredible legends, which contradict the
^^*^
foregoing accounts.
render the least remarkable circumstances, attending St. Brigid's birth, more probable ; while the romantic narratives can be traced to no better sources than popular traditions, s—o liable to be obscured by fables. No doubt, cer- tain old Acts of the saint we cannot be sure, however, these are the most ancient and authentic —contain the entry of such preposterous statements.
Later writers, during the middle ages,''^7 adopted those vain fantasies, without sufficient examination, and these again have been repeated by more modern
or in
The best refutation of certain strange accounts, relating to St. Brigid's birth, will probably be found in a brief statement of the legend. ^30 xhe paternal ancestor of our illustrious virgin, and who is named Eochaidh Finn, went among the Lagenians, whose king bestowed many tracts of land on him, at different places. In that province the prince's posterity dwelt at a time
Indeed, an exact critical analysis will only serve to
of the historic — complete ignorance value, applic-
writers^^^
abletotheirsourcesforinformation. Th—egenealogyofSt. Brigid'smother apparently drawn from remote pedigrees shows that she was not of servile condition,229 but through family origin, in every respect, fitted to be the lawful and respected spouse of the noble Dubtach.
unreflectingly
^^'^^^ "Dubtachus erat ejus
genitor cogno-
being everywhere wife of Dubtach. "
else of as the spoken
mine dietus
Clarus homo meritis, clarus et a
;
'^'^^ That the illustrious St. Brigid was born in Scotia of noble and Christian parents is stated in the ' ' Chronica Generalis Mun- di," by Petrus de Natalibus, lib. iii. , cap. 69, as, also, in St. Brigid's Second, Third, and Fourth Offices, published by Colgan. She is said to have been "de bona pro- sapia" in the First Office,
^^^ See the succinct account of John Cap-
**
Nova Legenda Angliae," fol. "^ Such as Harris in his edition of Sir
"
James Ware's works, vol. ii,,
Ireland," book i. , chap, iii. , pp. ii, 12.
^^9 That she was a captive is intimated in
"S Such as Ussher, Ware, Lanigan, &c.
The latter writer observes, that " no atten-
tion is due to what v/e find in two or three
of the so-called Lives of St. Brigid concern-
ing her mother having been a concubine,
whom, when pregnant, the wife of Dubtach
obliged him to dismiss, and of her having
been purchased by a pagan poet or a magus,
and how, in consequence of his taking her
to Ulster, she was then delivered of the
saint. This romance-like narrative cannot
agree with the circumstance, that the parents
of the saint were Christians. I mean such the life called the fifth, whatever it has on strict Christians as were then in Ireland, nor these subjects was evidently taken from one with the rank of her mother's family and her or other of them, Amidst other nonsense
vis ; Nobilis
mitis
proa- pietate
atque humilis, repletus ;
Nobilior propria conjuge, prole pia. " —Sexta Vita S. Brigidae. Prologus. Col- gan's "TriasThaumaturga,"p. 582.
=^^3 She is understood to have been Bro-
cessa or Brotseach, the mother of St.
Brigid.
grave in his xlix.
^"^^
In those well-known acts of St. Brigid,
written by Cogitosus, she is said to have
been predestined for accomplishment of the
Almighty's decrees, by special graces re- ceived from heaven.
"Writers of
Colgan's first published metrical acts of the
saint, attributed to St. Brogan Cloen. See
*'
TriasThaumaturga. " Hymnus,seuVita Prima S. Brigidse, strophe i. , p. 515.
^3o On this subject. Dr. Lanigan remarks : * ' These stories are given in the third and fourth lives, which in very great part are mere transcripts of each other, agreeing, word for word, in many passages. The
former bears every appearance of being an abridgment of the latter. Be this as it may, they form but one authority. And as to
22 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
[February i.
Fourth Life wrote. =3^ From his race, as we
when the author of St.
are told, a celebrated and powerful chieftain, named Dubtach, was derived, whoboughtafemaleservant,namedBroschach. Shewasverybeautifuland
distinguished by her great propriety of manner. =^32 Immediately after follows a romantic and an incredible account, seemingly irreconcilable with this latter statement. On learning that Broschach had conceived, the proper wife of Dubtach, it is said, became very much grieved, and advised her husband to sell his slave. ^33 Fear was expressed, at the same time, that Broschach's children should domineer over the family of his wife. But, the chieftain Dubtach would not hearken to the counsels of his consort, on ac- count of a great love he entertained for Broschach. =34
Brigid's
About this time, it is said, that two holy bishops^35 came from Britain, =36 andenteredthehouseofDubtach. OneofthesewascalledMelorMaol, andtheotherMelchuorMaolchu. ^37 Theseweredisciples,wearetold,of St. Patrick, the archbishop, who then preached God's word in Ireland. ^38 Maol said to Dubtach's " are sorrowful ? The of
wife, Why you offspring thy servant, shall be exalted above you and your progeny :239 however, love that servant equally with your own sons, because her infant shall procure blessings for your children. " But, the jealously of Dubtach's wife was not appeased,
and her brothers, who were powerful and brave men, earnestly urged Dubtach to sell his servant, in a distant part of the country. By a special inspiration, a poet, belonging to the Hy-Niall family,^40 came from the northern part of
contained in these tracts a magus is intro-
duced foretelling the future sanctity of the child, while she was still in her mother's womb. "—"Ecclesiastical History of Ire- land," vol. i. , chap, viii. , sec. ii. , n. 22, pp. 381, 382.
'3' Colgan remarks, that this account fur- nishes no slight indication showing how the author of this life lived at a very early period, and that he flourished at least previously to the tenth century, as for many ages back, the family of St. Brigid did not live, in those
Vita Quarta S. Brigidoe, lib. i. , cap. i. , p. 546, In closing this»account of Broschach,
as she is generally called throughout the Fourth Life, the author adds regarding her,
**in omnibus enim moribus, illafoemma erat perfecta. "
=^3S They were disciples and nephews of St. Patrick, the children ofhis sister Darerca. Colgan gives their acts, at the 6th of Feb- ruary, the day of their feast, in his "Acta Sanctorum Hibernise," vi.