^° Fromthisobservation,wearenaturallyledtobelieve,thathe was an exact
imitator
of the holy Bishop of Milan,^''' in piety and love of study.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v2
D.
696.
See some notices of him, at that date,
By Colgan.
Professions were usually confined to
particular families in ancient Ireland ; but,
as the Venerable Charles O'Conor remarks :
"
Extraordinary merit was allowed to soar
above its hereditary department, on extra- ;
"
to the praises of the Deity," has omitted St.
"
Onchuo. See
Remains of Ireland ; with English Poetical Translations. " Introduction, pp. xii. , xiii.
'* See Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum Hiber- nise," viii. Februarii. De S. Onchuone, cap. i. , p. 276.
various bards,
who dedicated their talents
Irish Minstrelsy, or Bardic
February 8. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 405
to know, not only regal decrees, and old national or provincial laws, but to be able, from time to time, to give just judgments, when applying those laws to matters of controversy and in legal causes. Another profession was thatofthehistorian. 's Hewasrequiredtohaveaknowledgeofhiscountry's
history, the genealogies and privileges of her nobles, with all other matters appertaining to antiquarian study. A third profession was that of poetry
andgrammar. Thosepersonsaddictedtothelatterpursuitswererequired to observe verbal inflections or declensions, and to compose verses in every kind of metre. Throughout all Ireland, there was no prince or chief, be- longing to an illustrious family, who did not maintain some professors of these several faculties. Besides having a knowledge of the common anti- quities of their country, such learned men were also obliged, by virtue of their maintainence, to record all important matters, especially connected with that particular house or family, to which they were attached. ^^
In addition to the hereditary knowledge attained by our saint, with re- gard to those various sciences, it would also appear, that he inherited or
acquiredaspecialtasteforpoetry. Naturallygiftedwithexquisitesensibility, and a fine imagination, he made no inconsiderable progress in this fascinat-
ing art. But, considering how vain are human learning and all worldly pur- suits, he resolved to employ his talents, in celebrating the praises of God and of the saints, having neglected other subjects, on which his mental faculties hadbeenheretoforeexercised. Thus,makingaselection,withtrueChristian wisdom, between the creature and the Creator ; Onchuo sought to engage another great saint, in a pious project, which he then meditated. Having visited St. Finian the Leper,^7 this latter holy person was urged to under- take a pilgrimage, in company with our saint. Onchuo wished to journey
through all parts of Ireland, visiting various hermitages, cells and monasteries, where saintly men dwelt, at that time, or during any previous period, so that he might collect together relics, at the different localities, hallowed by con- nexion with those servants of God. Impeded by his infirmity, St. Finian
declined, however, assenting to this proposal. He even sought to dissuade Onchuo from such a purpose, saying it was decreed, both of them should die in that place, where they then were. From this account, and sequel of the narrative, it would appear, that the place, at which St. Finian and St. Onchuo held this interview, must have been at Clonmore, in the county of Carlow. ^^ Nevertheless, our saint, full of his pious intention, resolved on prosecuting his journey alone, and immediately he set out on his travels. ^9 The holy man formed his resolution of visiting each place, throughout our whole island, in which he thought there might be the most remote chance for dis-
c's For the former duties of the Ollamhre Notes, by John O'Donovan. Introductory
Senchas, or "Doctor of History," the reader is referred to O'Mahony's Keating's "His- tory of Ireland," book i. , part ii. , chap, vii. , pp. 302, 303.
=^ One of the most remarkable, and almost
the latest — Irish was Duald great genealogist
Remarks, pp. vi. , viii.
^^ Where the Acts of this saint will be
found, at the i6th of March, they, like- wise, contain allusions to St. Onchuo.
Mac Firbiss
haltach Mac Firbisigh
foully murdered at Dunflin, in the county of Sligo, A. D. 1670. His historical, topogra-
complete
Antiquities
Maedhoc, now Clonmore,
Carlow, with a sketch of the principal events in its immediate neighbourhood, from the
or as — styled by
in the
County
of
by his own hand, are at present in posses- sion of the Earl of Rodan. See Duald Mac Firbis' "Genealogies, Tribes and Customs of
Hy-Fiachrach, commonly called O'Dowda's Country," edited with a Translation and
8vo. " Acta Sanctorum Hiber- nise," viii. Februarii. Vita S. Onchuonis,
himself Dub- of Lecan, who was
and History
of Cluain-mor-
phicalandgenealogicalcollections,written mostauthentics—ources,"infourchapters,
^'^ Mr. John M'Call has published a very "
and learned tract, intituled, The
containing pp. i 32. Dublin, 1862,
^9 See
cap. ii. , iii. , p. 276.
Colgan's
4o6 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS [February 8.
covering or procuring relics, of any Irish saints. He had hoped, that such a collection might afterwards serve to increase devotion, and preserve the
memory of those pious servants of God, among the people. Such purposes he accomplished; for, whatever monastery or cell, he visited, furnished some contribution to the store, he had previously acquired. Not only did he obtain memorials of the dead ; but, he received even certain gifts or
articles, from pious men, whose reputation for sanctity had been already es- tablished,intheIrishChurch. Alloftheseprecioustreasures,Onchuode- posited, in the same reliquary. 3° Thus journeyed this devout servant of God,ifwithoutthepillarofcloudbyday,andthepillaroffire bynight,to guide him, as the Almighty formerly conducted the Israelites through the desert j3^ yet, like them, carrying their sacred vessels, he piously bore venerated mementoes of his country's sanctity, for, even at that early period, holy persons had slept calmly in the Lord, and their remains were held everywhere, in great reverence, among the people.
CHAPTER II.
ST. ONCHUO ARRIVES AT CLONMORE—HIS REQUEST PREFERRED TO THE ABBOT, ST. MAIDOC—A MIRACLE—ST. ONCHUO'S DEATH AND BURIAL, AT CLONMORE—^TIME WHEN HE FLOURISHED—NOTICES OF HIM, IN THE CALENDARS—CONCLUSION.
Enthusiasm and perseverance carry men to the accomplishment of great objects. So occupied with this his earnest intent, the Lord was pleased to reward St. Onchuo's zeal and industry, for he soon amassed a very consider- able number of sacred mementoes. These he preserved with the utmost care. Many a beautiful scene he admired on the way, and many an edifying
hour he spent as a guest, in some religious house. In fine, having nearly
accomplished his original purpose, he came to the flourishing monastery of Clonmore,^ in Leinster, over which the illustrious Maidoc or Aidus, son to Eugenius of the Leinster family, then presided as abbot. ^
St. Onchuo received kind hospitality, and he demanded some memorial from this holy superior. 3 Through humility, however, Maidoc refused such a request ; when, it is said, his finger fell to the ground in a miraculous manner. Our saint immediately took it up, and placed it among his other relics. Having felt pain, caused by the loss of his finger, St. Maidoc was
"
moved by Divine inspiration, to cry out :
All the relics thou hast collected mustremaininthisplace,andthyremainsshallbewiththem. " Theevent justified this prediction ; for, the precious reliquary, with its contents, was preservedlongafterwards,inClonmoremonastery. 4 TheprophecyofSt.
3° See ibid. ^ cap. vii. , p. 277.
Exodus— 22. xiii. , 21,
St. Mogue's Well, at Clonmore, on the last
3'
"
See Chapter ii.
of
day winter, January 31st. See
Letters
The townland of Clon- more, in a parish of the same denomination,
"
Sheet 9.
= The festival of this St. Maidoc occurs,
on the I ith of April.
3 From information obtained, by P.
O'Keefe, on the spot, a pattern used to be held, about the year 1 780 or before, near
Barony of Rathvilly, is shown on the
Ord-
County of Carlow.
^
relating to the Antiquities of the County of Carlow, containing Information collected
during the progress of the Ordnance Survey in 1839," p. 373. This furthermore throws some doubt on the exact Maidoc, who was patron at Clonmore.
In the Book of Clonenagh, the memory of saints belonging to this monastery is pre- served, and an excessively large number is said to repose at Clonmore, as may be col-
" nance Survey Townland Maps for the
February 8. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS, 407
Finian, the Leper, was also fulfilled, for his bones reposed, together with those of our saint,s near the cross,^ to the south of it, in the adjoining ceme- tery. 7 There, St. Onchuo found his last resting place on earth. ^ When he
^°
Between the ruined castle" and Clonmore church, on the road side, a
few yards above a little rivulet, crossing at that point, lies Tuhber Mogiie, or,
Mogue'sWell. " Thereisnotraceoftheoldmonastery,atpresent; but,in all likelihood, it stood not very far from the present church and village cross- roads. Beside the well, and near the road, topping the wail of the glebe- lands, an old granite cross still stands, in an upright position. Before the top was broken off, it must have been, at least, eight feet high. The old burial-ground is opposite the church, and on the other side of this road.
died, too, at Clonmore,^ all his relics were there religiously preserved.
lected from these following words : "Cen- tum viginti novem supra decern millia pres- byterorum ; qui cum S. Maidoco, et filio poetse requiescunt Cluanmorise, invoco in auxiliummeum. " But, Colgan is of opinion,
that these foregoing words only apply to saints, whose relics were preserved in the shrine of St. Onchuo, which remained at Clonmore. See "Acta Sanctorum Hiber- niss," viii. Februarii, n. i6, p. 277. How- ever, this excessive number is greatly dimi-
sufficiently plain from the allusions in -it to
certain disputes concerning the place where the relics collected by a St. Onchuo were
nished, in a later published version of
**
The
277.
^ In a memorandum, kindly furnished to
the writer, by Mr. John M'Call, whose native place is near Clonmore, and who at
present lives at 25 Patrick-street, Dublin, it is remarked, that Dr. Lanigan hardly studied Colgan's observations on St. Onchuo, with any sort of care, since he has indulged in so many vague assertions, regarding the pre- sent holy man.
Litany of Aengus Ceile De," as taken from
the MS. folios formerly belonging to the
"Book of Leinster," and now preserved in
the Franciscan Library, Dublin, tloi pceu
cec c^uimchi]\ a\k "oec 1 ctuAin mo|\, La moe"ooc ocuf La triAc int) eicif, hoc
" Two thousand nine hundred and ten priests in Cluanmor, with
9 St. Onchuo seems to have
those relics to the monastery of Clonmore, MoedhocandM—acIneicis(sonofthesage), atwhichplacehedied,asthescholiaston
omnef Inuoeo, \\,.
assigned
I invoke," &c. "The Irish Ecclesiastical Record," vol. iii. May, 1867, pp. 392, 393-
s Colgan gives as his authority for this
assertion, the following Latin translation of
the foregoing verses has it, in this following Latin version: "Sunt namque membra sive ossa Finani leprosi et Onchuonis in uno
"" loconempeCluanmorias. See ActaSanc-
torum Hibemise," viii. Februarii, n. 17, p. 277.
some old Irish verses attributed to St.
" ^° "
Moling: Venerabiles sunt duo, quorum
quiescunt corpora juxta crucem ad Austrum ; S. Onchuo qui mundi fluentis non tenebatur
See in reference to this subject The
Irish Ecclesiastical Record," vol. vi. , Feb. ,
afFectu ; et S. Finanus
refragibilis : ubi cadit arbor, inde auferri non debent ejus rami sive frondes. " From
these words, Colgan infers, that a contest arose, regarding those relics collected by
Onchuo, and which may be supposed to have originated between members of that monastery, in which our saint was a monk, and those of the monastery in which he died.
^
Dr. Lanigan conjectures, that a poem,
attributed to St. Moling of Ferns, was the
composition of a Clonmore monk, who eases, it is now nearly unknown and ne- wished to make it appear, that the whole
body of St. Finian reposed in that place.
He allows, however, that a part of his relics was probably to be found there, in St.
bon-
Filius
fuit vir sermone potens, poeta magnus et ir-
— Francis Grose has Captain given
two
orum strenuus opifex
:
poetee (Onchuo)
views one an and the other an —interior,
exterior, view of Clonmore Castle, in his
"Antiquities of Ireland," vol. i. , p. 76. They were drawn, by Lieutenant Daniel
Grose, in 1792, and they present a good re- presentation of its former strength.
Onchuo's collection. He adds
Moling was not the author of the poem, is
leprosus operum
:
" That St.
chap, ii. , p. 10. A solitary rowan, or moun-
tain ash, more commonly called, a "quicken- tree," grows near this well.
deposited. "—" Ecclesiastical History of Ire- land," vol. iii. , chap, xviii. , sect, iii. , n. 34,
p. 87.
7 See Colgan's
"
Acta Sanctorum Hiber- niae. " Vita S. Onchuonis, cap. viii. , p.
1870, p. 244.
^^
^^
holy well the sacred brotherhood of the ad- joining monastery, and several of their
"Though it was obviously from this
flock, for ages gone by, drew their necessary
supply of water, and though it was until
very recently resorted to by the peasantry
for miles round for the cure of many dis-
glected, and —suffered to choke up with grass
and weeds. " ^John M
'Call's
and History of Cluain-mor-Maedhoc," &c. ,
"Antiquities
4o8 LIVES OB THE IRISH SAINTS. [February 8.
The shattered parts of another cross may be seen there ; and, it is supposed to have been that cross, to the south of which St. Mogue's, St. Finan's and St. Onchuo'sbodieswereinterred. Whenthiscrosswascompleteanderect, it could not have been much less than twelve feet in height. The shaft, sunk in a stone socket, yet stands, and near it may be seen the dissevered upper part, but the centre portion is missing. It is probable, this cross, as also the lesser one, had been demolished by the Cromwellian soldiers,^3 under Colonel Hewson, in 1650, when the castle of Clonmore was destroyed. An old stone basin, four feet in length, by two and a-half feet in width, with
one of the holy water fonts,'-» formerly belonging to the monastery, lies within a small enclosure, north of the church, ^s
St. Onchuo lived, probably, during the time when Aid, the son of Ainmi-
reach, King of Ireland, reigned, from about the year 568 to 594,'^ since our saint was contemporaneous with St. Maidoc of Clonmore, said to have been an elder, and a uterine brother'7 of that monarch Aid. '^ A very ancient vellum book,^9 which has been mentioned, under Brighet, at the ist of Feb- ruary, states, that Mac-in-Eccis, in his manners and life was like unto Ambrose.
^° Fromthisobservation,wearenaturallyledtobelieve,thathe was an exact imitator of the holy Bishop of Milan,^''' in piety and love of study. " We have no record, defining the year of St. Onchuo's death; although, it is pretty certain, he flourished about the middle, or towards the
close, of the sixth century.
The ancient calendars of Ireland contain allusions to this holy pilgrim,
at the present date. Thus, on the 8th of February, the Martyrology of Tallagh^3 registers Hua ind Egais, who collected the relics of the saints. We are further informed, that his discourses were always regarding Christ. ^'^ The Calendars of CashePs and of Marianus O'Gorman^^ celebrate, likewise, the characteristics and pursuits of this most religious poet. We read, as set down in the Martyrology of Donegal,^? on this day, about Onchu, Mac in
=^
^3 A tradition, to this effect, prevails in His feast occurs, as a Duplex, in the
the neighbourhood. See John Ryan's Roman Breviary, at the 7th of December,
''
and
of the
County
of with an Office of Nine Lessons. See
Antiquities Carlow," chap, xxxi. , p. 336.
History
"
die vii. Decembris.
'4 It is a pitiable case, that no antiquary and artist combined can be found to enume- rate, illustrate and classify for us the nume- rous old fonts, now lying neglected in so many of our' graveyards, and after the fashion or manner, shown in that elegant volume,
" A Series of Ancient Baptismal Fonts, Chronologically Arranged. " Drawn by F.
~-
These characteristics are well shown in
who calls our saint, Hua an Eiges, or " descen- Simpson, Jun. Engraved by R. Roberts. dant of the poet," observes, that he was
Only English remains are therein given.
Onchuo, the Poet, of Connaught, who reli- giously and elegantly composed every kind of verse, and who was always engaged cele- brating the Divine praises,
=^5 it states, that Onchuo, a remarkable
poet, was of Connaught origin, and that he
rested in Cluainmor, in Lagenia,
cs See John M'Call's interesting and eru- *'
The Antiquities and His-
dite little tract,
tory of Cluain-mor-Maedhoc, now Clon- more, in the County of Carlow," &c. , chap. ii. , pp. 10, II.
^^ See Dr. O'Donovan's *' Annals of the Four Masters," vol. i. , pp. 204 to 221.
^^ This Colgan promised to show, in his
Acts, at the nth of April.
cap. i. , viii. , and n. I, pp. 276, 277.
*9 This is now preserved in the Franciscan
Library, Dublin.
"^ See Drs. Todd's and Reeves* " Martyr-
ology of Donegal," pp. 42, 43.
=<^
By this authority, he is called Onchuo
'^ '* See Colgan's
Mac Aneigeas, i. e. , "son of the poet," bom in Connaught. He it is, who collected many relics of the Saints of Ireland, at the
Acta Sanctorum Hiber-
nias," viii. Februarii. Vita S. Onchuonis, monastery of Clonmore, of St. Maidoc.
^
Acta Sanctorum Hibemiae," Vita S. Onchuonis, n. 18,
p. 277.
"7 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
42, 43.
Breviarium Romanuip," pars Hiemalis,
the Life of St. Ambrose, by his Secretary Paulinus the Deacon, and afterwards a Priest.
=3 Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xv.
'^^ a Commentator on St.
" viii. Februarii.
See Colgan's
iEngus,
February 8. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 409
Eccis,'*^ of the Connacians. It was he, we are informed, that collected a great many relics of the saints of Erinn to Cluain-mor-Maedhog. In the KalendarsofScotland,oursaintwaslikewisecelebrated. TheKalend—arof
Drummond enters the nat—
alis of the confessor
responding with the 8th of February, in the island of Hibernia. 's The
practise of making pilgrimages, to the churches and shrines of renowned
Irish Saints, was formerly much in vogue ; and, those accounts, left in the Acts of St. Onchuo, prove, that the relics of holy persons were held in great
veneration,wheretheirmortalremainsweredeposed. Infine,thereliquary, containing sacred memorials, and which our saint collected during his life, gave a just celebrity to his pious zeal. It also added much, after his death, to the renown of Clonmore, where his own body lay, awaiting the final re- surrection of the just.
Article II. —St. Mac Liac or Mac Liag, Bishop of Liath-Dromma OR Leitrim. At this date, in the Martyrology of Tallagh,^ we find Mac Liac, Bishop of Liath dromma. No further clue is given here, as to his
family or race. In the Martyrology of Donegal,^ however, he is called Mac Liag, Bishop of Liathdrum. He is also said to have been a scion of the race of Colla Uais, who was Monarch of Ireland. Under the head of Liath-
Duald Mac Firbiss Mac — of
Druim,3 enters, Liag, Bishop Liath-druim,
at
February the 8th. 4 Where the Liath-druim or as Anglicised Leitrim—
with which this saint was connected, had been situated, can hardly be deter-
mined with accuracy. Liathdruims was an ancient name^ for Tara Hill ;7
there was a Liathdruim, in Clanrickard's territory, and now a barony in the
county of Galway f there was a Liathdruim, in the parish of Monasteroris, in
theKing'sCounty-p therewaslikewiseaLiathdruim,inWestBreifne,orin
the territory of Muintir Eolais. ^° There are countless places, bearing the
name Leitrim," /,<? . , the Grey Ridge," in various parts of Ireland. ^3 The
Liath-Dromma or Leitrim, best known in Ireland, is now a poor, decaying
^'^ in the of on the banks of the and parish Kiltoghert,^^ Shannon,
village,
which gives name to a townland, barony and county, in the province of Connaught. Hence,wemayinfer,thisLeitrimwasonceaplaceofnote. ^^
*2 In a note, Dr. Todd says, that the County. " Sheet ii. There is also a Lei-
words, Mac in Eccis, signify "son of the
poet. "
29 See Bishop Forbes' "Kalendars of
tra, in the parish of Clonmacnoise, in this county. See ibid. Sheet 13.
^° See O'Donovan's " Annals of the Four
Masters," vol. v. , pp. 1708, 1709, and vol.
vi. , 1964, Also, vol. vii. Index, pp. 1965.
p. 77, ibid.
"No less than 44 Leitrims—singly or in
composition—and found as townland names,
appear in the "General Alphabetical Index to the Townlands and Towns, Parishes and
Baronies of Ireland," p. 642.
Scottish Saints," p. 4. Article ii. —'^ Edited
by
Rev. Dr.
Kelly,
p. XV.
= Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
42, 43.
3 Leitrim, according to William M. Hen-
nessy's note.
i. , pp. 1 16, 117. 5 See Petrie's
"
"
4 See
Academy," Irish MSS. series, vol. i. , part
Proceedings of the Royal Irish
History and Antiquities of Tara Hill," p. 108.
chap, ix. , p. 506. " '3 See Dr. O'Donovan's
Annals of the
^ See Dr. O'Donovan's edition of " Leab- har na g-Ceart, or Book of Rights," n. (t),
p. 144,
7 See O'Donovan's
Four Masters," vol. ii. , n. (f ), p. 622.
*'
'* on Ordnance Sur- This is shown the
vey Townland Maps for the County of Lei- trim. " Sheet 27.
"
Masters," vol. ii. , n. (f), pp. 622, 623.
8 vol. v. , n. Ibid. ,
Annals of the Four
'S This extensive parish is represented on Sheets 20, 21, 23, 24, 27, 28, 31, 32, ibid. 9 See ibid. , vol. iii. , n. (h), p. 192. And, It includes 30,494 acres, 3 roods and 2
(o), pp. 1772, 1773.
"Ordnance Survey Maps of the King's perches of land and water.
Oncu,
at the vi. Ides cor-
'=
History of Irish Names of Places," part iv. ,
See Dr. P. W. Joyce's "Origin and
410 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [February 8.
The present Macliegus, and the brother of St. Modichu or Modicus,^7 also called Dichiio or Modichuo, were sons of Cernach, son to Aid, son of Goar,
son to Amalgad, son of Muredach/^ son of Carthenn, son of Ethac,^9 son to
Echod, son of Colla Uais. ='° By Colgan, St. Macliegus is called Bishop of
Liethdrumia, and his feast is assigned to the 8th of February. ''^ He is followed by Archdall,^^ who tells us his place Lietdrumai or Liathdromen is identical with Leitrim, in that county of Ireland so called.
Article III. —St. Trenog or Ternoc, Anchorite, on the West OF the River Barrow. This holy man is entered, in the Martyrology of Tallagh,^ at the 8th of February, as Ternoc, Anchorita. From the latter adjunct, we may suppose he lived a solitary life. A later record spells his name somewhat differently, and it also vaguely defines his place. In the Martyrology of Donegal,^' there is recorded, on this day, a festival, for St. Trenog,anAnchorite,onthewestoftheBearbha. Thiswastheancient name for the River Barrow ;3 yet, although conjectures may be offered, re- garding various old churches and former religious sites, at the direction in- dicated, such a description is still too indefinite, to discover the exact posi- tion of that place, where St. Ternoc or Ternog passed his hermit-life.
Article IV. —St. Failbhe, of Erdomh. The simple entry, Failbhe, is all that occurs in the Martyrology of Tallagh,^ at the 8th of February.
Preceding this entry the word, Airdoni, is placed. It is doubtless intended, as a reference to this saint's locality, which is differently spelled in a more recent calendar. We read, on this day, as recorded in the Martyrology of Donegal,^aboutFailbhe,ofErdomh. 3 Wherethisplacewassituatedisnot
^^ See Archdall's "Monasticon Hiberni-
cum," p. 410.
'7 See a notice of him, at the 7th of Jan-
uary.
" In one enumeration of the pedigree,
this name seems missing.
^9 In one enumeration, this name is ap-
parently left out.
on its banks was a continuous wood. A great-uncle to the authoress—as her father
—used to
" Ellauna," which recites the for- tunes of an imaginary Princess of Leix, is below mediocrity; yet, the venerable au- thoress, who in her declining years was often seen by the writer, secured universal esteem and respect, owing to her gentleness
and
of demeanour, bountiful charities, ge-
nuine sympathy for the distresses of the
poor.
Article iv.
See some notices of him, at that date,
By Colgan.
Professions were usually confined to
particular families in ancient Ireland ; but,
as the Venerable Charles O'Conor remarks :
"
Extraordinary merit was allowed to soar
above its hereditary department, on extra- ;
"
to the praises of the Deity," has omitted St.
"
Onchuo. See
Remains of Ireland ; with English Poetical Translations. " Introduction, pp. xii. , xiii.
'* See Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum Hiber- nise," viii. Februarii. De S. Onchuone, cap. i. , p. 276.
various bards,
who dedicated their talents
Irish Minstrelsy, or Bardic
February 8. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 405
to know, not only regal decrees, and old national or provincial laws, but to be able, from time to time, to give just judgments, when applying those laws to matters of controversy and in legal causes. Another profession was thatofthehistorian. 's Hewasrequiredtohaveaknowledgeofhiscountry's
history, the genealogies and privileges of her nobles, with all other matters appertaining to antiquarian study. A third profession was that of poetry
andgrammar. Thosepersonsaddictedtothelatterpursuitswererequired to observe verbal inflections or declensions, and to compose verses in every kind of metre. Throughout all Ireland, there was no prince or chief, be- longing to an illustrious family, who did not maintain some professors of these several faculties. Besides having a knowledge of the common anti- quities of their country, such learned men were also obliged, by virtue of their maintainence, to record all important matters, especially connected with that particular house or family, to which they were attached. ^^
In addition to the hereditary knowledge attained by our saint, with re- gard to those various sciences, it would also appear, that he inherited or
acquiredaspecialtasteforpoetry. Naturallygiftedwithexquisitesensibility, and a fine imagination, he made no inconsiderable progress in this fascinat-
ing art. But, considering how vain are human learning and all worldly pur- suits, he resolved to employ his talents, in celebrating the praises of God and of the saints, having neglected other subjects, on which his mental faculties hadbeenheretoforeexercised. Thus,makingaselection,withtrueChristian wisdom, between the creature and the Creator ; Onchuo sought to engage another great saint, in a pious project, which he then meditated. Having visited St. Finian the Leper,^7 this latter holy person was urged to under- take a pilgrimage, in company with our saint. Onchuo wished to journey
through all parts of Ireland, visiting various hermitages, cells and monasteries, where saintly men dwelt, at that time, or during any previous period, so that he might collect together relics, at the different localities, hallowed by con- nexion with those servants of God. Impeded by his infirmity, St. Finian
declined, however, assenting to this proposal. He even sought to dissuade Onchuo from such a purpose, saying it was decreed, both of them should die in that place, where they then were. From this account, and sequel of the narrative, it would appear, that the place, at which St. Finian and St. Onchuo held this interview, must have been at Clonmore, in the county of Carlow. ^^ Nevertheless, our saint, full of his pious intention, resolved on prosecuting his journey alone, and immediately he set out on his travels. ^9 The holy man formed his resolution of visiting each place, throughout our whole island, in which he thought there might be the most remote chance for dis-
c's For the former duties of the Ollamhre Notes, by John O'Donovan. Introductory
Senchas, or "Doctor of History," the reader is referred to O'Mahony's Keating's "His- tory of Ireland," book i. , part ii. , chap, vii. , pp. 302, 303.
=^ One of the most remarkable, and almost
the latest — Irish was Duald great genealogist
Remarks, pp. vi. , viii.
^^ Where the Acts of this saint will be
found, at the i6th of March, they, like- wise, contain allusions to St. Onchuo.
Mac Firbiss
haltach Mac Firbisigh
foully murdered at Dunflin, in the county of Sligo, A. D. 1670. His historical, topogra-
complete
Antiquities
Maedhoc, now Clonmore,
Carlow, with a sketch of the principal events in its immediate neighbourhood, from the
or as — styled by
in the
County
of
by his own hand, are at present in posses- sion of the Earl of Rodan. See Duald Mac Firbis' "Genealogies, Tribes and Customs of
Hy-Fiachrach, commonly called O'Dowda's Country," edited with a Translation and
8vo. " Acta Sanctorum Hiber- nise," viii. Februarii. Vita S. Onchuonis,
himself Dub- of Lecan, who was
and History
of Cluain-mor-
phicalandgenealogicalcollections,written mostauthentics—ources,"infourchapters,
^'^ Mr. John M'Call has published a very "
and learned tract, intituled, The
containing pp. i 32. Dublin, 1862,
^9 See
cap. ii. , iii. , p. 276.
Colgan's
4o6 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS [February 8.
covering or procuring relics, of any Irish saints. He had hoped, that such a collection might afterwards serve to increase devotion, and preserve the
memory of those pious servants of God, among the people. Such purposes he accomplished; for, whatever monastery or cell, he visited, furnished some contribution to the store, he had previously acquired. Not only did he obtain memorials of the dead ; but, he received even certain gifts or
articles, from pious men, whose reputation for sanctity had been already es- tablished,intheIrishChurch. Alloftheseprecioustreasures,Onchuode- posited, in the same reliquary. 3° Thus journeyed this devout servant of God,ifwithoutthepillarofcloudbyday,andthepillaroffire bynight,to guide him, as the Almighty formerly conducted the Israelites through the desert j3^ yet, like them, carrying their sacred vessels, he piously bore venerated mementoes of his country's sanctity, for, even at that early period, holy persons had slept calmly in the Lord, and their remains were held everywhere, in great reverence, among the people.
CHAPTER II.
ST. ONCHUO ARRIVES AT CLONMORE—HIS REQUEST PREFERRED TO THE ABBOT, ST. MAIDOC—A MIRACLE—ST. ONCHUO'S DEATH AND BURIAL, AT CLONMORE—^TIME WHEN HE FLOURISHED—NOTICES OF HIM, IN THE CALENDARS—CONCLUSION.
Enthusiasm and perseverance carry men to the accomplishment of great objects. So occupied with this his earnest intent, the Lord was pleased to reward St. Onchuo's zeal and industry, for he soon amassed a very consider- able number of sacred mementoes. These he preserved with the utmost care. Many a beautiful scene he admired on the way, and many an edifying
hour he spent as a guest, in some religious house. In fine, having nearly
accomplished his original purpose, he came to the flourishing monastery of Clonmore,^ in Leinster, over which the illustrious Maidoc or Aidus, son to Eugenius of the Leinster family, then presided as abbot. ^
St. Onchuo received kind hospitality, and he demanded some memorial from this holy superior. 3 Through humility, however, Maidoc refused such a request ; when, it is said, his finger fell to the ground in a miraculous manner. Our saint immediately took it up, and placed it among his other relics. Having felt pain, caused by the loss of his finger, St. Maidoc was
"
moved by Divine inspiration, to cry out :
All the relics thou hast collected mustremaininthisplace,andthyremainsshallbewiththem. " Theevent justified this prediction ; for, the precious reliquary, with its contents, was preservedlongafterwards,inClonmoremonastery. 4 TheprophecyofSt.
3° See ibid. ^ cap. vii. , p. 277.
Exodus— 22. xiii. , 21,
St. Mogue's Well, at Clonmore, on the last
3'
"
See Chapter ii.
of
day winter, January 31st. See
Letters
The townland of Clon- more, in a parish of the same denomination,
"
Sheet 9.
= The festival of this St. Maidoc occurs,
on the I ith of April.
3 From information obtained, by P.
O'Keefe, on the spot, a pattern used to be held, about the year 1 780 or before, near
Barony of Rathvilly, is shown on the
Ord-
County of Carlow.
^
relating to the Antiquities of the County of Carlow, containing Information collected
during the progress of the Ordnance Survey in 1839," p. 373. This furthermore throws some doubt on the exact Maidoc, who was patron at Clonmore.
In the Book of Clonenagh, the memory of saints belonging to this monastery is pre- served, and an excessively large number is said to repose at Clonmore, as may be col-
" nance Survey Townland Maps for the
February 8. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS, 407
Finian, the Leper, was also fulfilled, for his bones reposed, together with those of our saint,s near the cross,^ to the south of it, in the adjoining ceme- tery. 7 There, St. Onchuo found his last resting place on earth. ^ When he
^°
Between the ruined castle" and Clonmore church, on the road side, a
few yards above a little rivulet, crossing at that point, lies Tuhber Mogiie, or,
Mogue'sWell. " Thereisnotraceoftheoldmonastery,atpresent; but,in all likelihood, it stood not very far from the present church and village cross- roads. Beside the well, and near the road, topping the wail of the glebe- lands, an old granite cross still stands, in an upright position. Before the top was broken off, it must have been, at least, eight feet high. The old burial-ground is opposite the church, and on the other side of this road.
died, too, at Clonmore,^ all his relics were there religiously preserved.
lected from these following words : "Cen- tum viginti novem supra decern millia pres- byterorum ; qui cum S. Maidoco, et filio poetse requiescunt Cluanmorise, invoco in auxiliummeum. " But, Colgan is of opinion,
that these foregoing words only apply to saints, whose relics were preserved in the shrine of St. Onchuo, which remained at Clonmore. See "Acta Sanctorum Hiber- niss," viii. Februarii, n. i6, p. 277. How- ever, this excessive number is greatly dimi-
sufficiently plain from the allusions in -it to
certain disputes concerning the place where the relics collected by a St. Onchuo were
nished, in a later published version of
**
The
277.
^ In a memorandum, kindly furnished to
the writer, by Mr. John M'Call, whose native place is near Clonmore, and who at
present lives at 25 Patrick-street, Dublin, it is remarked, that Dr. Lanigan hardly studied Colgan's observations on St. Onchuo, with any sort of care, since he has indulged in so many vague assertions, regarding the pre- sent holy man.
Litany of Aengus Ceile De," as taken from
the MS. folios formerly belonging to the
"Book of Leinster," and now preserved in
the Franciscan Library, Dublin, tloi pceu
cec c^uimchi]\ a\k "oec 1 ctuAin mo|\, La moe"ooc ocuf La triAc int) eicif, hoc
" Two thousand nine hundred and ten priests in Cluanmor, with
9 St. Onchuo seems to have
those relics to the monastery of Clonmore, MoedhocandM—acIneicis(sonofthesage), atwhichplacehedied,asthescholiaston
omnef Inuoeo, \\,.
assigned
I invoke," &c. "The Irish Ecclesiastical Record," vol. iii. May, 1867, pp. 392, 393-
s Colgan gives as his authority for this
assertion, the following Latin translation of
the foregoing verses has it, in this following Latin version: "Sunt namque membra sive ossa Finani leprosi et Onchuonis in uno
"" loconempeCluanmorias. See ActaSanc-
torum Hibemise," viii. Februarii, n. 17, p. 277.
some old Irish verses attributed to St.
" ^° "
Moling: Venerabiles sunt duo, quorum
quiescunt corpora juxta crucem ad Austrum ; S. Onchuo qui mundi fluentis non tenebatur
See in reference to this subject The
Irish Ecclesiastical Record," vol. vi. , Feb. ,
afFectu ; et S. Finanus
refragibilis : ubi cadit arbor, inde auferri non debent ejus rami sive frondes. " From
these words, Colgan infers, that a contest arose, regarding those relics collected by
Onchuo, and which may be supposed to have originated between members of that monastery, in which our saint was a monk, and those of the monastery in which he died.
^
Dr. Lanigan conjectures, that a poem,
attributed to St. Moling of Ferns, was the
composition of a Clonmore monk, who eases, it is now nearly unknown and ne- wished to make it appear, that the whole
body of St. Finian reposed in that place.
He allows, however, that a part of his relics was probably to be found there, in St.
bon-
Filius
fuit vir sermone potens, poeta magnus et ir-
— Francis Grose has Captain given
two
orum strenuus opifex
:
poetee (Onchuo)
views one an and the other an —interior,
exterior, view of Clonmore Castle, in his
"Antiquities of Ireland," vol. i. , p. 76. They were drawn, by Lieutenant Daniel
Grose, in 1792, and they present a good re- presentation of its former strength.
Onchuo's collection. He adds
Moling was not the author of the poem, is
leprosus operum
:
" That St.
chap, ii. , p. 10. A solitary rowan, or moun-
tain ash, more commonly called, a "quicken- tree," grows near this well.
deposited. "—" Ecclesiastical History of Ire- land," vol. iii. , chap, xviii. , sect, iii. , n. 34,
p. 87.
7 See Colgan's
"
Acta Sanctorum Hiber- niae. " Vita S. Onchuonis, cap. viii. , p.
1870, p. 244.
^^
^^
holy well the sacred brotherhood of the ad- joining monastery, and several of their
"Though it was obviously from this
flock, for ages gone by, drew their necessary
supply of water, and though it was until
very recently resorted to by the peasantry
for miles round for the cure of many dis-
glected, and —suffered to choke up with grass
and weeds. " ^John M
'Call's
and History of Cluain-mor-Maedhoc," &c. ,
"Antiquities
4o8 LIVES OB THE IRISH SAINTS. [February 8.
The shattered parts of another cross may be seen there ; and, it is supposed to have been that cross, to the south of which St. Mogue's, St. Finan's and St. Onchuo'sbodieswereinterred. Whenthiscrosswascompleteanderect, it could not have been much less than twelve feet in height. The shaft, sunk in a stone socket, yet stands, and near it may be seen the dissevered upper part, but the centre portion is missing. It is probable, this cross, as also the lesser one, had been demolished by the Cromwellian soldiers,^3 under Colonel Hewson, in 1650, when the castle of Clonmore was destroyed. An old stone basin, four feet in length, by two and a-half feet in width, with
one of the holy water fonts,'-» formerly belonging to the monastery, lies within a small enclosure, north of the church, ^s
St. Onchuo lived, probably, during the time when Aid, the son of Ainmi-
reach, King of Ireland, reigned, from about the year 568 to 594,'^ since our saint was contemporaneous with St. Maidoc of Clonmore, said to have been an elder, and a uterine brother'7 of that monarch Aid. '^ A very ancient vellum book,^9 which has been mentioned, under Brighet, at the ist of Feb- ruary, states, that Mac-in-Eccis, in his manners and life was like unto Ambrose.
^° Fromthisobservation,wearenaturallyledtobelieve,thathe was an exact imitator of the holy Bishop of Milan,^''' in piety and love of study. " We have no record, defining the year of St. Onchuo's death; although, it is pretty certain, he flourished about the middle, or towards the
close, of the sixth century.
The ancient calendars of Ireland contain allusions to this holy pilgrim,
at the present date. Thus, on the 8th of February, the Martyrology of Tallagh^3 registers Hua ind Egais, who collected the relics of the saints. We are further informed, that his discourses were always regarding Christ. ^'^ The Calendars of CashePs and of Marianus O'Gorman^^ celebrate, likewise, the characteristics and pursuits of this most religious poet. We read, as set down in the Martyrology of Donegal,^? on this day, about Onchu, Mac in
=^
^3 A tradition, to this effect, prevails in His feast occurs, as a Duplex, in the
the neighbourhood. See John Ryan's Roman Breviary, at the 7th of December,
''
and
of the
County
of with an Office of Nine Lessons. See
Antiquities Carlow," chap, xxxi. , p. 336.
History
"
die vii. Decembris.
'4 It is a pitiable case, that no antiquary and artist combined can be found to enume- rate, illustrate and classify for us the nume- rous old fonts, now lying neglected in so many of our' graveyards, and after the fashion or manner, shown in that elegant volume,
" A Series of Ancient Baptismal Fonts, Chronologically Arranged. " Drawn by F.
~-
These characteristics are well shown in
who calls our saint, Hua an Eiges, or " descen- Simpson, Jun. Engraved by R. Roberts. dant of the poet," observes, that he was
Only English remains are therein given.
Onchuo, the Poet, of Connaught, who reli- giously and elegantly composed every kind of verse, and who was always engaged cele- brating the Divine praises,
=^5 it states, that Onchuo, a remarkable
poet, was of Connaught origin, and that he
rested in Cluainmor, in Lagenia,
cs See John M'Call's interesting and eru- *'
The Antiquities and His-
dite little tract,
tory of Cluain-mor-Maedhoc, now Clon- more, in the County of Carlow," &c. , chap. ii. , pp. 10, II.
^^ See Dr. O'Donovan's *' Annals of the Four Masters," vol. i. , pp. 204 to 221.
^^ This Colgan promised to show, in his
Acts, at the nth of April.
cap. i. , viii. , and n. I, pp. 276, 277.
*9 This is now preserved in the Franciscan
Library, Dublin.
"^ See Drs. Todd's and Reeves* " Martyr-
ology of Donegal," pp. 42, 43.
=<^
By this authority, he is called Onchuo
'^ '* See Colgan's
Mac Aneigeas, i. e. , "son of the poet," bom in Connaught. He it is, who collected many relics of the Saints of Ireland, at the
Acta Sanctorum Hiber-
nias," viii. Februarii. Vita S. Onchuonis, monastery of Clonmore, of St. Maidoc.
^
Acta Sanctorum Hibemiae," Vita S. Onchuonis, n. 18,
p. 277.
"7 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
42, 43.
Breviarium Romanuip," pars Hiemalis,
the Life of St. Ambrose, by his Secretary Paulinus the Deacon, and afterwards a Priest.
=3 Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xv.
'^^ a Commentator on St.
" viii. Februarii.
See Colgan's
iEngus,
February 8. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 409
Eccis,'*^ of the Connacians. It was he, we are informed, that collected a great many relics of the saints of Erinn to Cluain-mor-Maedhog. In the KalendarsofScotland,oursaintwaslikewisecelebrated. TheKalend—arof
Drummond enters the nat—
alis of the confessor
responding with the 8th of February, in the island of Hibernia. 's The
practise of making pilgrimages, to the churches and shrines of renowned
Irish Saints, was formerly much in vogue ; and, those accounts, left in the Acts of St. Onchuo, prove, that the relics of holy persons were held in great
veneration,wheretheirmortalremainsweredeposed. Infine,thereliquary, containing sacred memorials, and which our saint collected during his life, gave a just celebrity to his pious zeal. It also added much, after his death, to the renown of Clonmore, where his own body lay, awaiting the final re- surrection of the just.
Article II. —St. Mac Liac or Mac Liag, Bishop of Liath-Dromma OR Leitrim. At this date, in the Martyrology of Tallagh,^ we find Mac Liac, Bishop of Liath dromma. No further clue is given here, as to his
family or race. In the Martyrology of Donegal,^ however, he is called Mac Liag, Bishop of Liathdrum. He is also said to have been a scion of the race of Colla Uais, who was Monarch of Ireland. Under the head of Liath-
Duald Mac Firbiss Mac — of
Druim,3 enters, Liag, Bishop Liath-druim,
at
February the 8th. 4 Where the Liath-druim or as Anglicised Leitrim—
with which this saint was connected, had been situated, can hardly be deter-
mined with accuracy. Liathdruims was an ancient name^ for Tara Hill ;7
there was a Liathdruim, in Clanrickard's territory, and now a barony in the
county of Galway f there was a Liathdruim, in the parish of Monasteroris, in
theKing'sCounty-p therewaslikewiseaLiathdruim,inWestBreifne,orin
the territory of Muintir Eolais. ^° There are countless places, bearing the
name Leitrim," /,<? . , the Grey Ridge," in various parts of Ireland. ^3 The
Liath-Dromma or Leitrim, best known in Ireland, is now a poor, decaying
^'^ in the of on the banks of the and parish Kiltoghert,^^ Shannon,
village,
which gives name to a townland, barony and county, in the province of Connaught. Hence,wemayinfer,thisLeitrimwasonceaplaceofnote. ^^
*2 In a note, Dr. Todd says, that the County. " Sheet ii. There is also a Lei-
words, Mac in Eccis, signify "son of the
poet. "
29 See Bishop Forbes' "Kalendars of
tra, in the parish of Clonmacnoise, in this county. See ibid. Sheet 13.
^° See O'Donovan's " Annals of the Four
Masters," vol. v. , pp. 1708, 1709, and vol.
vi. , 1964, Also, vol. vii. Index, pp. 1965.
p. 77, ibid.
"No less than 44 Leitrims—singly or in
composition—and found as townland names,
appear in the "General Alphabetical Index to the Townlands and Towns, Parishes and
Baronies of Ireland," p. 642.
Scottish Saints," p. 4. Article ii. —'^ Edited
by
Rev. Dr.
Kelly,
p. XV.
= Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
42, 43.
3 Leitrim, according to William M. Hen-
nessy's note.
i. , pp. 1 16, 117. 5 See Petrie's
"
"
4 See
Academy," Irish MSS. series, vol. i. , part
Proceedings of the Royal Irish
History and Antiquities of Tara Hill," p. 108.
chap, ix. , p. 506. " '3 See Dr. O'Donovan's
Annals of the
^ See Dr. O'Donovan's edition of " Leab- har na g-Ceart, or Book of Rights," n. (t),
p. 144,
7 See O'Donovan's
Four Masters," vol. ii. , n. (f ), p. 622.
*'
'* on Ordnance Sur- This is shown the
vey Townland Maps for the County of Lei- trim. " Sheet 27.
"
Masters," vol. ii. , n. (f), pp. 622, 623.
8 vol. v. , n. Ibid. ,
Annals of the Four
'S This extensive parish is represented on Sheets 20, 21, 23, 24, 27, 28, 31, 32, ibid. 9 See ibid. , vol. iii. , n. (h), p. 192. And, It includes 30,494 acres, 3 roods and 2
(o), pp. 1772, 1773.
"Ordnance Survey Maps of the King's perches of land and water.
Oncu,
at the vi. Ides cor-
'=
History of Irish Names of Places," part iv. ,
See Dr. P. W. Joyce's "Origin and
410 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [February 8.
The present Macliegus, and the brother of St. Modichu or Modicus,^7 also called Dichiio or Modichuo, were sons of Cernach, son to Aid, son of Goar,
son to Amalgad, son of Muredach/^ son of Carthenn, son of Ethac,^9 son to
Echod, son of Colla Uais. ='° By Colgan, St. Macliegus is called Bishop of
Liethdrumia, and his feast is assigned to the 8th of February. ''^ He is followed by Archdall,^^ who tells us his place Lietdrumai or Liathdromen is identical with Leitrim, in that county of Ireland so called.
Article III. —St. Trenog or Ternoc, Anchorite, on the West OF the River Barrow. This holy man is entered, in the Martyrology of Tallagh,^ at the 8th of February, as Ternoc, Anchorita. From the latter adjunct, we may suppose he lived a solitary life. A later record spells his name somewhat differently, and it also vaguely defines his place. In the Martyrology of Donegal,^' there is recorded, on this day, a festival, for St. Trenog,anAnchorite,onthewestoftheBearbha. Thiswastheancient name for the River Barrow ;3 yet, although conjectures may be offered, re- garding various old churches and former religious sites, at the direction in- dicated, such a description is still too indefinite, to discover the exact posi- tion of that place, where St. Ternoc or Ternog passed his hermit-life.
Article IV. —St. Failbhe, of Erdomh. The simple entry, Failbhe, is all that occurs in the Martyrology of Tallagh,^ at the 8th of February.
Preceding this entry the word, Airdoni, is placed. It is doubtless intended, as a reference to this saint's locality, which is differently spelled in a more recent calendar. We read, on this day, as recorded in the Martyrology of Donegal,^aboutFailbhe,ofErdomh. 3 Wherethisplacewassituatedisnot
^^ See Archdall's "Monasticon Hiberni-
cum," p. 410.
'7 See a notice of him, at the 7th of Jan-
uary.
" In one enumeration of the pedigree,
this name seems missing.
^9 In one enumeration, this name is ap-
parently left out.
on its banks was a continuous wood. A great-uncle to the authoress—as her father
—used to
" Ellauna," which recites the for- tunes of an imaginary Princess of Leix, is below mediocrity; yet, the venerable au- thoress, who in her declining years was often seen by the writer, secured universal esteem and respect, owing to her gentleness
and
of demeanour, bountiful charities, ge-
nuine sympathy for the distresses of the
poor.
Article iv.