'""
tical Antiquities of Down, Connor and Dro-
more.
tical Antiquities of Down, Connor and Dro-
more.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v2
Dr.
Smith interprets this, to mean,
also, to have been called Giolla-Criosd O'Muidhin.
"° In an old Life of St. Cadroe, Abbot of
Wasor, it is stated, that the people of a city, Bishop and Vicar-General of Ossory ; Finn called Choriscon, whose inhabitants were
terford ; Domnall O'Fogartaigh or Fogarty,
Clonard; Tuathal O'Connachtaigh or O'Co- naty, Bishop of Hi Briuin, Brefny, or Kil- more ; Muredach O'Cobthaigh, Bishop of Kinel-Eogain, or Derry ; Maelpatrick O'Banain, Bishop of Dal Araide, or of Connor ; Mael-Isa Mac-an-Clerigh-cuir, Bishop of Ulidia or Down.
Corcach, or Cork. See "The Ancient and
Present State of the County and City of
Cork," vol. i. , book ii. , chap, ix,, n. I, p. 362.
"'
See Rev. C. B. Gibson's "History of the County and City of Cork," vol. ii. , chap,
xiii. , p. 304.
'" His Life occurs at the 2Sthof Septem-
"^ "In all the lists of the prelates who ber. He died about A. D. 623. See Dr. attended at the synod, Gelasius is named Lanigan's "Ecclesiastical History of Ire*
"
History of Ireland," chap, iv. , n. , p. 123. and n. 68, p. 318.
first. "—Rev. P. J. Carew's
Ecclesiastical land," vol. ii. , chap, xiv. , sect, iv. , p. 315,
Greeks, migrated from that place, on the
River Pactolus, in Asia Minor, in order to
settle in Thrace. The fable runs, that those
were driven by storms, after many strange
adventures, out of the Mediterranean Sea,
and into more northern regions. At last,
they were thrown on the coasts of Ireland,
where they settled in several places, and
among the rest, at Corach, a city of Munster.
See " Acta Sanctorum Hibemiae," Colgau's
^
February 4. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
335
that the Comorbans or successors of St. Barr, followed, in a scarcely inter-
rupted order ; although, this must partly be inferred, rather than proved, from occasional entries in our Annals. "3 it is said, the Danes established
themselves here, and, for their better security, enclosed this city with walls, aboutthemiddleoftheninthcentury. "4 Therecanbehardlyadoubt,if, for a time, the new colonists continued heathens, that they afterwards became convertstoChristianity; since,towardsthecloseofthetenthage,andduring later centuries, the episcopal succession is very regularly traceable,"s Few
Cork, Shandon and Blackpool, from Patrick's Hill.
vestiges of the earliest religious foundations, in Cork, can now be seen ;"^ yet, owing to its favourable maritime and local position, this city grew by degrees into importance, while its present trade and commerce bid fair to continue, if not increase, its population, improvements, and material re- sources. '^7 It is, likewise, eminently a Catholic city, abounding in various charitable and religious institutions. In Moravia, or Murray, a place in Scotland, Dempster^^^ states, that a St. Gilbert was bishop, and that he was a holy vindicator of the Scottish Church. "9 It seems probable, in placing
his feast at this date, a mistake is made for St. Gilbert of Sempringham, in
England, whose festival occurs, at the 4th of February. ^30
*=3 See Harris vol. Ware,
Cork," pp. 555 to 561.
'""^
*'
But, he does not
and engraved by Mrs. Millard of Dublin. "^ See " Menologium Scoticum. "
"9 See Bishop Forbes' "Kalendars of
Scottish Saints," p. 191.
'30 See the Bollandists* " Acta Sancto-
rum," tomus i. , Februarii iv. De Sancto Gilberto, Fundatore Ord. Sempringhamensis in Anglia. There is a Commentarius Pras- vius, in four sections and twenty paragraphs, by Father Godefrid Henschen : this is fol*
See Charles Smith's "Ancient and Present State of the County and City of Cork," vol. i. , book ii. , chap, ix. , pp. 362,
363.
"S See Archdall's " Monasticon Hibemi-
cum," pp. 63 to 68,
^^
fil and Statistical Survey of the County of Cork," vol. i. , chap. iv. ,p. 154.
"7 The accompanying view of Cork city
See Rev. Horatio Townsend's "Gene-
i. ,
Bishops
photograph,
H. Mares, drawn by William F. Wakeman,
of
is from a
taken Frederick by
336 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [February 4.
at all appear to have been connected, with either Scotia. Dempster seems, however, to have confounded him again with a St. Gilbert, Bishop of Caith- ness, and a confessor, who was venerated in Scotland, at the ist of April. '31 He died, however, in the year i245. '32 It seems very clear, that neither of the foregoing saints can be identical with Gille, or Gillibert, Bishop of Limerick, or with Giolla Aedha O'Muidhin, Bishop of Cork. To one or
other of the latter, the present feast, in our Irish Calendars, appears assign- able.
Article VI. —St. Fuidhbheach, Son of Cillin, or Fuidbech mac
Illadon. The period and place of this saint have baffled identification.
The name of Fuidbech, Mac Illadon, occurs in the Martyrology of Tallagh,^
at the 4th of February. The patronymic, however, -differs in the following notice. The festival of Fuidhbheach, son of Cillin, according to the Mar-
tyrology of Donegal,^ was celebrated, on this day. Within brackets, after the entry of this saint's name, in a table superadded to this work, he seems to have been connected supposititiously with places named Cill-Fuarr^in and Muilte Fudrrain, three miles from Buailte-Forannain,^ in Enghaile,* or Annaly. 5 The question is then put, as to whether or not, Frigidianus be the same as Fuaran ? ^ It must be observed, the analogies of orthoepy are not very apparent, between the several words here introduced.
Article VII. —Feast of St. Tarahata or Attracta, Virgin, of Killaraght,CountyofSligo. [Fifthoi-SixthCentury^ TheCarthusian Martyrology, Henry Fitzsimon, and a Calendar, published by O'Sullivan Beare,^ place the festival of a St. Tarahata, at this date. Dempster, wishing
"
to include her among the Scotch saints, enters,
Taraghtse Virginis, M. A. ," " "^
in his Menologium Scoticum," at the 4th of February. It is supposed, that Tarahata must be identical with St. Attracta, Virgin and Patroness of Killaraght. The Acts of this latter holy woman will be found, at the nth of August.
Article VIII. —St. Cearan of Tamlacht Gliadh, in Glenree, Upper Iveagh, County Down. The former name of this saint's locahty appears now to be obsolete. That he flourished at an early period seems to be estabUshed, although the exact time is unknown. We find registered in
gain's and Giolla na Naomh O'Huidhrin's
"Topographical Poems," edited by Dr. John O'Donovan, n. 277, p. xxxviii. It belonged to the O'Farrell family, while the name is yet very common in that locality,
^ Annaly or South Conmaicne, in latter See James Walsh's History of the ages, comprised the entire of Longford
lowed by an ancient Life, and by a second Life, with notes, pp. 567 to 573.
*3' See Professor Cosmo Innes prefatory notice to Records of the Bishopric of Caith- ness. Banatine Club "Miscellany," vol.
iii. , p. 9-
'^* "
Catholic Church in Scotland, from the In-
troduction of Christianity to the present time," chap, xii,, p. 189,
Article VI. —'Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, xiv.
"
the Four Masters," vol. iii. , p. 6, n. (n).
p.
= Edited
by
Drs. Todd and
Reeves, pp.
edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp. 422,
423.
Article vii. —' Sec " Historic Catho-
lica: Ibernia Compendium," edited by Rev.
Matthew Kelly, D. D. , tomus i. , hb. iv. ,
3^> 39-
3
It seems difficult, at present, to identify any of the three places here mentioned.
*This wassituatedinthe territory present
cap. xi. , p. 49 and cap. xii. , p. 57.
county of Longford. See John O'Dubha-
Scottish Saints," p. 191.
county. See Dr. O'Donovan's
Annals of
^
See "The Martyrology of Donegal,"
= Forbes' "Kalendars of See Bishop
February 4. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS 337
the Martyrology of Donegal,^ on this day, Ciaran of Tamhlacht Gliadh, in Glenn Righe. This place has been identified with Glenree, the glen or valley of the Newry river, by Dr. O'Donovan,^^ the Rev. William Reeves, and by William M. Hennessy. 3 Glenree extended northwards beyond Scarva,
in the parish of Aghaderg ; the church of which, called Hacyglid,* is pro- bably that mentioned in the Calendar. The name Gleann-Righe frequently occurs in our Annals, to express the western limit of Ulidia,5 after a. d. 332. '^ In the Martyrology of Tallagh,^ this saint's name appears to have been in- correctly entered, Colman, Tamlachta Gluidh. Tamlacht Menan, on Loch Bricrenn, seems to have been an ancient name for the present saint's place, and the trace of it is preserved in the townland Meenan,^ in the southern
part of Aghaderg parish, in the barony of Upper Iveagh, county of Down.
Article IX. —St. Corc, of Druim-Lomain. It is recorded, in the
Martyrology of Donegal,^ that the festival of Corc, of Druim Lomiin, had been celebrated on this day. This name occurs, with that of Cota of Druinn—probably an error for Druira—at this same date, in the Martyrology ofTallagh. 2 Theplaceisnotreadilyidentifiable.
Article X. —Reputed Festival of St. Fursey, Abbot at Perrone, INFrance. \SeventhCentury^ Atthe4thofFebruary,Dempster^hasa
festivalofSt. "* atPerrone. 3 This Fursey, abbot,
abbey
former diocese of Noyon, and, at present, it is in that of Amiens. 4
Article XL—St. Cota, of Druim, or Druim Lomain. In the Mar-
tyrology of Tallagh, this entry occurs under the designation of Cota of Druinn, at the 4th of February. ^ With this saint is also joined Corc. A gloss on the Martyrology of Marianus O'Gorman states, that both Cota and Core are of Drum Lomdin, or Drum Lommain. * Under any form of this local designation, it is not easily determined. It seems to be Colgan's opinion, that St. Cota or Cotana, venerated on this day, may possibly be identified with a holy virgin Cathnea, who flourished in the times of St. Patrick, and, who, with her three brothers, Cathaseus, Cathurus, and Cath- neus, lived at a church, built near a place, called "the shallow of the two
Article viii. —' Edited by Drs. Todd
and Reeves," pp. 38, 39.
'""
tical Antiquities of Down, Connor and Dro-
more. " Appendix T, n. (u), p. 253. 7 Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xiv.
See his Circuit of Muirceartach, p. "^
31, and his Battle of Magh Rath," p. 143. See it shown, on the "Ordnance Survey 3 The present saint is included among Townland Maps for the County of Down. "
those of the
Extracts" of the I. O. S. , vol. i. , p. 143. His place is said to have been in the valley of the Newry River,
*Dr. Reevesthinksthismustbeaclerical
Sheets — 33, 34, 40, 41.
Article ix. ^Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp. 38, 39.
county
of
Louth,
in the
error, for Achyderig, as it occvu-s in the Scoticum. "
**
Louth
"
Taxation of Dromore Diocese, in 1306, the See his Life, at the 1 6th of January,
latter being an ancient form, for the modern 3 See Bishop Forbes' "Kalendars of "
Aghaderg. See Ecclesiastical Antiquities Scottish Saints," J3. 191.
of Down, Connor and Dromore, n. (n), pp. 112 to 114.
5 A fosse and rampart, called the Dane's Cast, marked the boundary in Glenn-Ree. . See Stewart's " Historical Memoirs of Ar-
*'
See the Abbe Mice's
des Abbayes et Monasteres," col. 316.
Article xi. —' Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xiv.
^ The Martyrology of Tamlacht says the
same : Co]\c Acuf Coca o 'D|\uitnni. It omits Loman, however, in this connexion.
z
magh, p. 585. '"
See Rev. William Reeves' Vol. II.
Ecclesias-
'
=
* *' Article x. In the
was inthe situated,
Edited by Re—v. Dr. Kelly, p. xiv.
Menologium
Dictionnaire
338 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [February 5.
forks. " 3 This place seems to have been situated, not far from Tailtein, supposedtohavebeenidentifiedwithTelltowninMeath. Soangelicand innocent was this holy virgin, that the wild deer became tame, and suffered themselvestobemilkedbyherhands. * Wefindthecommemorationofa St. Cotas set down in the Martyrology of Donegal,^ as having been venerated on this day. Nothing very certain can be predicated, regarding this saint's time, place and Acts.
jfittfi Bap of jfrtruarg*
ARTICLE I. -ST. BUO, MISSIONARY IN ICELAND. [NINIff CEN7URY,\
CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION—PHYSICAL PECULIARITIES OF ICELAND—CHARACTER OF THE PEOPLE- EARLY NAME AND COLONIZATION OF ICELAND—IRISH CHRISTIANS AMONG THE FIRST INHABITANTS—DESCRIPTION OF THE ISLAND, BY THE IRISH GEOGRAPHER, DICUILL—THE NORWEGIANS SETTLE IN ICELAND—ICELANDIC INSTITUTIONS AND LITERATURE.
is, perhaps, the most inhospitable spot, which has ever been
madethehomeofcivilizedman. Itsinteriorisabarren ICELAND
awful initsaridloneliness; itscoast,forthree-fourthsoftheyearbeingboundin icebergs ; its inhabitants are doomed to shiver in the agonizing cold of the long nights during the Arctic winter, while their existence is, at the same time, threatened by those tremendous volcanic forces, which heave beneath the bosom of the island, flood the sides of Hecla and other hills with molten torrents, and parch the land with the burning streams of the geyser. A chilled and lifeless nature, waste and desolation, pervade the dreary plains, shutinbyhighhillsandjokuls. ^ Yet,inthislandofhorrors,afewthousand brave men for many centuries found time, not only to wring from an un-
generous soil a precarious existence, but to cultivate a love of literature, of liberty, and of country, which surrounds their frozen and inhospitable isle with a glory unknown, in some of the fairest lands, on which Nature has showered her choicest
3 In Irish It is Acli-'0A-5Ab1itil.
38, 39.
Article L —ChAP. 1.
difficult, however, to identify this denomination with
—
Ida Pfeiffer's "Journey to Iceland: and
Druim Lomain.
*
See "Trias Thaumaturga. " Septima Vita S. Patricii, lib. ii. , cap. vi. , and nn. 20, 21, 22, 23, pp. 130, 173.
name, the recent hand says, 'Marian M. Taml. ' as the authority for saying, that Core was of Drum Lomain. But this is a mis-
take. "
Travels in Sweden and Norway," translated
from the German, by Charlotte Fenimore
Cooper, pp. 160, 161.
5 In a
more recent hand
meaning that M. O'Gorman (or rather the
=" A of Iceland is to Ebenezer
note,
Dr. Todd
"Here the
map Henderson's
gifts. ^
says,
' Drumnii '
prefixed highly interesting work,
on this country, while, the same work also contains Gloss) calls him of Drum. On the next several very characteristic and well executed
*
Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
engravings, exhibiting the hot springs,scenery, and costumes of the people. It is intituled, " Iceland ; or the Journal of a Residence in that Island, during the years 18 14 and 1815. Containing observations on the Natural
adds, *'
(Marian),
desert,
* See Madame
February 5. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 339
Whether Iceland had its origin, at the period of the worid's creation, or whether it arose afterwards, over the sea-waves, by some extraordinary con- vulsion of nature, has been disputed. Some geologists hold the theory, that thousands of years ago, the subterranea—n fires, exploding beneath the Arctic Ocean, threw Iceland up into the light a volcanic mass much larger than Ireland. It is a vast slag, they assert, from the nether furnaces, rather than natural terra firma; every red, or black, or yellow cliff, every rock, and boulder, and yokul, bears testimony to the fact, that the island was smelted in the earth's bowels, and then cast forth, hissing through the billows, to cool and to crystalHze. Its mountains and fields, thus upheaved in the Arctic air, so soon as they had ceased to smoke, assumed a cap of ice and snow; while,thelowerglaciersformedoutofthese,meltingeverysummer and renewed every winter, have scored and carved the fringes of the island, into deep fiords and dark gorges, above which rise lofty peaks, white with eternal winter. It is the most desolate and dreary scenery in the world, deriving its charm, almost entirely, from the picturesqueness of naked Nature. Yet, it has been observed, that when Ingolfr, the Norwegian, arrived in Ice- land, it was in great part covered with forests. 3 Rivers of grey and black scoriae, whose red-hot ripples have frozen into harsh, sterile crags, traverse thelandineverydirection. Sometimes,thesestonyfloodsoverspreadwhole districts,likealakeofmeltedmatter; and,whenthishascooled,thesudden contraction cracks the surface, for leagues in length, producing deep fissures, which make the earth around look scarred and blistered. Nor is the- fiery island quiet even yet \ for, perpetual indications may be witnessed, exhibiting thestrifeofprimevalelements,stillgoingonbeneathherfoundations. Over her cold surface, Iceland is always smoking, steaming, ejecting fierce squirts of boihng water, black rubbish of the under-world flames, and floods of lava. There are thirty active volcanoes, besides Hecla,'^ with innumerable small cones,craters,andgeysers; while,everynowandthen,herunquietspirit bursts out in some terribl—e convulsion. - Sometimes, too, new islets are thrownuproundabouther volcanicchildrenofthisfierce,feverishmother. It is like sailing on a cauldron, to navigate some of those gloomy, unvisited fiords of the South-West ; one season, the deep-sea-lead finds no bottom, while, the next, there is a gaunt, black reef in the inlet. There are no wheat fields, and no sunshine to speak of, except during the brief summer of the Arctic circle. Yet, those children of the Norsemen like the country of their birth; whereas,someseventythousandofthemmanagetoliveandthrive, upon the flanks of the great cinder Iceland.
It has been asserted, that Iceland was the island, which the Irish and
Britons called Thyle, or Tyle, as also, Inis Thyle, or Tyle, which means,
" the Island of ^ Our oldest historians are unanimous, on Thyle. " quite
this point, as may be seen from the testimony of several ancient accounts.
Phenomena, History, Literature, and Anti- quities of the Island ; and the Religion, Character, Manners and Customs of its In- habitants. With an Introduction and Ap-
pendix. " This work was published in Edinburgh, A,D. i8i8, in two octavo vo- lumes.
Journal of a Tour in Iceland, in
" Schedce
'< The reader will find a
account of Hecla, with some particulars of other remarkable volcanic mountains, and curious natural objects, in William Jackson
s See a list of these recorded eruptions, in that interesting and elegantly illustrated work of Sabine Baring-Gould, intituled, " Iceland : its Scenes and Intro-
3
According
de Islandia," cap. ii.
to Ara
Multiseius,
Sagas. " duction, pp. xxi. , xxii. , xxiii.
very interesting
^ See " Acta Sanctorum Hiber- Colgan's
**
Hooker's
the Summer of 1809," vol. ii. Appendix C, pp. 105 to 269. Second edition, with additions.
nise," Februarii ii. De B. Erlulpho, sive Emulpho, Tylse Insulae sive Islandise Apos-
toll, nn. i, 4, pp. 241, 242.
340 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [February 5.
""
The author of the Icelands Landnamabok ;" ^ Latinized, Liber Originum
^
states, that in the chronicle,^ which St. Bede, the priest, wrote, he mentions the island of Thyle, as being far from the northern part of Britain. " ThatremoteThule,sooftenmentionedbyGrecianandRoman writers," is thought to have been identical with the present Iceland ; some, however, think, that the Shetland Islands were thus named. " Notwith- standing the contrary assertion, there can be no doubt whatever, that Iceland was inhabited before the close of the ninth century. '3 This, too, was pro- bably the case, even before it had been designated Thule, by the Romans. Independently of historical documents, and authorities, which seem to establish this matter, it is difficult even to suppose, while so many small islands in the northern ocean were peopled, long before they had been dis- covered by the Romans, that Iceland should have remained uninhabited. It is stated, that its climate was formerly much more temperate, than it has become,inthecourseofages; and,thatitssoilwasthenmuchbetterand more fruitful, than at present. Besides, the advantage of a passage to it had not been impeded by ice,'* as in the still more northern regions of Lapland andGreenland. Wefindsomeancientaccountstoassureus,thatIceland
was inhabited so early as the fifth century. 's There can hardly be any doubt, moreover,thatthefactwasknowntoourIrishancestors. '^ Thatmanshould contrive to live, in these desolate regions of the North, is not so very mar- vellous ; the Esquimaux have solved a still more dismal problem, and they have long existed contentedly where the bear and the seal can find a liveli- hood. But,theIcelandersaremuchmoreadvancedinsocialcomforts,and thoroughly civilized ; they have stereotyped the true and pure Norse tongue, in their beautiful poetry ; while, they have admirable musicians, as well as poets, historians, and scholars, to warm their deep enthusiam and love for " a land that is dark and covered with the mist of death. " ^^ From what we learn regarding St. Ailbe's'^ intention to proceed thither, for the purpose of leading a life, unknown to the world, it may perhaps be thought, that it was then destitute of inhabitants. This, however, is only conjectural ; for, not- withstanding its containing some inhabitants, St. Ailbe might have found places enough in the island, where he could have remained quite sequestered from them. '9 Icelandic history fully reveals to us how adventurous were
' He is said to have been originally Ari Scotland and Ireland. " The Norwegians
Tslandiae,"
or Are Frodi, who came to Iceland, in 1075.
This book was continued after his death.
It is remarkable, as being the earliest his-
torical composition, written in the old inhabited until A. D. 874, when it was oc-
Danish or northern tongue, and which still cupied by the Norwegians. See
'*
"
" **
Hystoria
remains the living language of Iceland. See Islandise.
Bosworth's Scandanavian Literature. "
'^ See Dr. Lanigan's Ecclesiastical His-
tory of Ireland," vol. iii. , chap, xx. , sect.
*'
An deus immensi maris, ac tua nautae Numina sola colant, tibi serviat ultima
Thule," &c.
of Northern Antiquaries to its British and
American Members," a very interesting ex-
position of the oldest Icelandic and Norwe- gianAccountsofIreland. Seepp. ito17.
^^ See Job x. , 21.
'^ See his Life at the 12th of September, *' See Dr. Lanigan's "Ecclesiastical His-
'
This work was edited and published, in
Icelandic, with a Latin translation, indices
iv. , n. 32, p. 225.
^s See **
Playfair's
and
9 "De Constitutione Mundi Regionum. " " See "Icelands Landnamabok," Prolo-
notes, by Johannes
Finnaeus.
Geography,"
vol.
iii. ,
gus, p. I.
" Thus Virgil writes regarding it :
—
p. 144.
*^ Besides a Danish map of Ireland, con-
taining the names of towns there, as written
in the Norse the reader will find in tongue,
—Georgicon, lib. i. , 11. 29, 30.
" See J. J. A. Worsaae's " Account of
the Danes and Norwegians in England,
in Scotland, sect, v. , p. 220.
^3 The Icelandic historian Arngrym Jonas,
and other writers, assert, this island was not
the
**
Report addressed by the Irish Society
February 5. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 341
Irish navigators in times remote.
also, to have been called Giolla-Criosd O'Muidhin.
"° In an old Life of St. Cadroe, Abbot of
Wasor, it is stated, that the people of a city, Bishop and Vicar-General of Ossory ; Finn called Choriscon, whose inhabitants were
terford ; Domnall O'Fogartaigh or Fogarty,
Clonard; Tuathal O'Connachtaigh or O'Co- naty, Bishop of Hi Briuin, Brefny, or Kil- more ; Muredach O'Cobthaigh, Bishop of Kinel-Eogain, or Derry ; Maelpatrick O'Banain, Bishop of Dal Araide, or of Connor ; Mael-Isa Mac-an-Clerigh-cuir, Bishop of Ulidia or Down.
Corcach, or Cork. See "The Ancient and
Present State of the County and City of
Cork," vol. i. , book ii. , chap, ix,, n. I, p. 362.
"'
See Rev. C. B. Gibson's "History of the County and City of Cork," vol. ii. , chap,
xiii. , p. 304.
'" His Life occurs at the 2Sthof Septem-
"^ "In all the lists of the prelates who ber. He died about A. D. 623. See Dr. attended at the synod, Gelasius is named Lanigan's "Ecclesiastical History of Ire*
"
History of Ireland," chap, iv. , n. , p. 123. and n. 68, p. 318.
first. "—Rev. P. J. Carew's
Ecclesiastical land," vol. ii. , chap, xiv. , sect, iv. , p. 315,
Greeks, migrated from that place, on the
River Pactolus, in Asia Minor, in order to
settle in Thrace. The fable runs, that those
were driven by storms, after many strange
adventures, out of the Mediterranean Sea,
and into more northern regions. At last,
they were thrown on the coasts of Ireland,
where they settled in several places, and
among the rest, at Corach, a city of Munster.
See " Acta Sanctorum Hibemiae," Colgau's
^
February 4. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
335
that the Comorbans or successors of St. Barr, followed, in a scarcely inter-
rupted order ; although, this must partly be inferred, rather than proved, from occasional entries in our Annals. "3 it is said, the Danes established
themselves here, and, for their better security, enclosed this city with walls, aboutthemiddleoftheninthcentury. "4 Therecanbehardlyadoubt,if, for a time, the new colonists continued heathens, that they afterwards became convertstoChristianity; since,towardsthecloseofthetenthage,andduring later centuries, the episcopal succession is very regularly traceable,"s Few
Cork, Shandon and Blackpool, from Patrick's Hill.
vestiges of the earliest religious foundations, in Cork, can now be seen ;"^ yet, owing to its favourable maritime and local position, this city grew by degrees into importance, while its present trade and commerce bid fair to continue, if not increase, its population, improvements, and material re- sources. '^7 It is, likewise, eminently a Catholic city, abounding in various charitable and religious institutions. In Moravia, or Murray, a place in Scotland, Dempster^^^ states, that a St. Gilbert was bishop, and that he was a holy vindicator of the Scottish Church. "9 It seems probable, in placing
his feast at this date, a mistake is made for St. Gilbert of Sempringham, in
England, whose festival occurs, at the 4th of February. ^30
*=3 See Harris vol. Ware,
Cork," pp. 555 to 561.
'""^
*'
But, he does not
and engraved by Mrs. Millard of Dublin. "^ See " Menologium Scoticum. "
"9 See Bishop Forbes' "Kalendars of
Scottish Saints," p. 191.
'30 See the Bollandists* " Acta Sancto-
rum," tomus i. , Februarii iv. De Sancto Gilberto, Fundatore Ord. Sempringhamensis in Anglia. There is a Commentarius Pras- vius, in four sections and twenty paragraphs, by Father Godefrid Henschen : this is fol*
See Charles Smith's "Ancient and Present State of the County and City of Cork," vol. i. , book ii. , chap, ix. , pp. 362,
363.
"S See Archdall's " Monasticon Hibemi-
cum," pp. 63 to 68,
^^
fil and Statistical Survey of the County of Cork," vol. i. , chap. iv. ,p. 154.
"7 The accompanying view of Cork city
See Rev. Horatio Townsend's "Gene-
i. ,
Bishops
photograph,
H. Mares, drawn by William F. Wakeman,
of
is from a
taken Frederick by
336 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [February 4.
at all appear to have been connected, with either Scotia. Dempster seems, however, to have confounded him again with a St. Gilbert, Bishop of Caith- ness, and a confessor, who was venerated in Scotland, at the ist of April. '31 He died, however, in the year i245. '32 It seems very clear, that neither of the foregoing saints can be identical with Gille, or Gillibert, Bishop of Limerick, or with Giolla Aedha O'Muidhin, Bishop of Cork. To one or
other of the latter, the present feast, in our Irish Calendars, appears assign- able.
Article VI. —St. Fuidhbheach, Son of Cillin, or Fuidbech mac
Illadon. The period and place of this saint have baffled identification.
The name of Fuidbech, Mac Illadon, occurs in the Martyrology of Tallagh,^
at the 4th of February. The patronymic, however, -differs in the following notice. The festival of Fuidhbheach, son of Cillin, according to the Mar-
tyrology of Donegal,^ was celebrated, on this day. Within brackets, after the entry of this saint's name, in a table superadded to this work, he seems to have been connected supposititiously with places named Cill-Fuarr^in and Muilte Fudrrain, three miles from Buailte-Forannain,^ in Enghaile,* or Annaly. 5 The question is then put, as to whether or not, Frigidianus be the same as Fuaran ? ^ It must be observed, the analogies of orthoepy are not very apparent, between the several words here introduced.
Article VII. —Feast of St. Tarahata or Attracta, Virgin, of Killaraght,CountyofSligo. [Fifthoi-SixthCentury^ TheCarthusian Martyrology, Henry Fitzsimon, and a Calendar, published by O'Sullivan Beare,^ place the festival of a St. Tarahata, at this date. Dempster, wishing
"
to include her among the Scotch saints, enters,
Taraghtse Virginis, M. A. ," " "^
in his Menologium Scoticum," at the 4th of February. It is supposed, that Tarahata must be identical with St. Attracta, Virgin and Patroness of Killaraght. The Acts of this latter holy woman will be found, at the nth of August.
Article VIII. —St. Cearan of Tamlacht Gliadh, in Glenree, Upper Iveagh, County Down. The former name of this saint's locahty appears now to be obsolete. That he flourished at an early period seems to be estabUshed, although the exact time is unknown. We find registered in
gain's and Giolla na Naomh O'Huidhrin's
"Topographical Poems," edited by Dr. John O'Donovan, n. 277, p. xxxviii. It belonged to the O'Farrell family, while the name is yet very common in that locality,
^ Annaly or South Conmaicne, in latter See James Walsh's History of the ages, comprised the entire of Longford
lowed by an ancient Life, and by a second Life, with notes, pp. 567 to 573.
*3' See Professor Cosmo Innes prefatory notice to Records of the Bishopric of Caith- ness. Banatine Club "Miscellany," vol.
iii. , p. 9-
'^* "
Catholic Church in Scotland, from the In-
troduction of Christianity to the present time," chap, xii,, p. 189,
Article VI. —'Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, xiv.
"
the Four Masters," vol. iii. , p. 6, n. (n).
p.
= Edited
by
Drs. Todd and
Reeves, pp.
edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp. 422,
423.
Article vii. —' Sec " Historic Catho-
lica: Ibernia Compendium," edited by Rev.
Matthew Kelly, D. D. , tomus i. , hb. iv. ,
3^> 39-
3
It seems difficult, at present, to identify any of the three places here mentioned.
*This wassituatedinthe territory present
cap. xi. , p. 49 and cap. xii. , p. 57.
county of Longford. See John O'Dubha-
Scottish Saints," p. 191.
county. See Dr. O'Donovan's
Annals of
^
See "The Martyrology of Donegal,"
= Forbes' "Kalendars of See Bishop
February 4. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS 337
the Martyrology of Donegal,^ on this day, Ciaran of Tamhlacht Gliadh, in Glenn Righe. This place has been identified with Glenree, the glen or valley of the Newry river, by Dr. O'Donovan,^^ the Rev. William Reeves, and by William M. Hennessy. 3 Glenree extended northwards beyond Scarva,
in the parish of Aghaderg ; the church of which, called Hacyglid,* is pro- bably that mentioned in the Calendar. The name Gleann-Righe frequently occurs in our Annals, to express the western limit of Ulidia,5 after a. d. 332. '^ In the Martyrology of Tallagh,^ this saint's name appears to have been in- correctly entered, Colman, Tamlachta Gluidh. Tamlacht Menan, on Loch Bricrenn, seems to have been an ancient name for the present saint's place, and the trace of it is preserved in the townland Meenan,^ in the southern
part of Aghaderg parish, in the barony of Upper Iveagh, county of Down.
Article IX. —St. Corc, of Druim-Lomain. It is recorded, in the
Martyrology of Donegal,^ that the festival of Corc, of Druim Lomiin, had been celebrated on this day. This name occurs, with that of Cota of Druinn—probably an error for Druira—at this same date, in the Martyrology ofTallagh. 2 Theplaceisnotreadilyidentifiable.
Article X. —Reputed Festival of St. Fursey, Abbot at Perrone, INFrance. \SeventhCentury^ Atthe4thofFebruary,Dempster^hasa
festivalofSt. "* atPerrone. 3 This Fursey, abbot,
abbey
former diocese of Noyon, and, at present, it is in that of Amiens. 4
Article XL—St. Cota, of Druim, or Druim Lomain. In the Mar-
tyrology of Tallagh, this entry occurs under the designation of Cota of Druinn, at the 4th of February. ^ With this saint is also joined Corc. A gloss on the Martyrology of Marianus O'Gorman states, that both Cota and Core are of Drum Lomdin, or Drum Lommain. * Under any form of this local designation, it is not easily determined. It seems to be Colgan's opinion, that St. Cota or Cotana, venerated on this day, may possibly be identified with a holy virgin Cathnea, who flourished in the times of St. Patrick, and, who, with her three brothers, Cathaseus, Cathurus, and Cath- neus, lived at a church, built near a place, called "the shallow of the two
Article viii. —' Edited by Drs. Todd
and Reeves," pp. 38, 39.
'""
tical Antiquities of Down, Connor and Dro-
more. " Appendix T, n. (u), p. 253. 7 Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xiv.
See his Circuit of Muirceartach, p. "^
31, and his Battle of Magh Rath," p. 143. See it shown, on the "Ordnance Survey 3 The present saint is included among Townland Maps for the County of Down. "
those of the
Extracts" of the I. O. S. , vol. i. , p. 143. His place is said to have been in the valley of the Newry River,
*Dr. Reevesthinksthismustbeaclerical
Sheets — 33, 34, 40, 41.
Article ix. ^Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp. 38, 39.
county
of
Louth,
in the
error, for Achyderig, as it occvu-s in the Scoticum. "
**
Louth
"
Taxation of Dromore Diocese, in 1306, the See his Life, at the 1 6th of January,
latter being an ancient form, for the modern 3 See Bishop Forbes' "Kalendars of "
Aghaderg. See Ecclesiastical Antiquities Scottish Saints," J3. 191.
of Down, Connor and Dromore, n. (n), pp. 112 to 114.
5 A fosse and rampart, called the Dane's Cast, marked the boundary in Glenn-Ree. . See Stewart's " Historical Memoirs of Ar-
*'
See the Abbe Mice's
des Abbayes et Monasteres," col. 316.
Article xi. —' Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xiv.
^ The Martyrology of Tamlacht says the
same : Co]\c Acuf Coca o 'D|\uitnni. It omits Loman, however, in this connexion.
z
magh, p. 585. '"
See Rev. William Reeves' Vol. II.
Ecclesias-
'
=
* *' Article x. In the
was inthe situated,
Edited by Re—v. Dr. Kelly, p. xiv.
Menologium
Dictionnaire
338 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [February 5.
forks. " 3 This place seems to have been situated, not far from Tailtein, supposedtohavebeenidentifiedwithTelltowninMeath. Soangelicand innocent was this holy virgin, that the wild deer became tame, and suffered themselvestobemilkedbyherhands. * Wefindthecommemorationofa St. Cotas set down in the Martyrology of Donegal,^ as having been venerated on this day. Nothing very certain can be predicated, regarding this saint's time, place and Acts.
jfittfi Bap of jfrtruarg*
ARTICLE I. -ST. BUO, MISSIONARY IN ICELAND. [NINIff CEN7URY,\
CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION—PHYSICAL PECULIARITIES OF ICELAND—CHARACTER OF THE PEOPLE- EARLY NAME AND COLONIZATION OF ICELAND—IRISH CHRISTIANS AMONG THE FIRST INHABITANTS—DESCRIPTION OF THE ISLAND, BY THE IRISH GEOGRAPHER, DICUILL—THE NORWEGIANS SETTLE IN ICELAND—ICELANDIC INSTITUTIONS AND LITERATURE.
is, perhaps, the most inhospitable spot, which has ever been
madethehomeofcivilizedman. Itsinteriorisabarren ICELAND
awful initsaridloneliness; itscoast,forthree-fourthsoftheyearbeingboundin icebergs ; its inhabitants are doomed to shiver in the agonizing cold of the long nights during the Arctic winter, while their existence is, at the same time, threatened by those tremendous volcanic forces, which heave beneath the bosom of the island, flood the sides of Hecla and other hills with molten torrents, and parch the land with the burning streams of the geyser. A chilled and lifeless nature, waste and desolation, pervade the dreary plains, shutinbyhighhillsandjokuls. ^ Yet,inthislandofhorrors,afewthousand brave men for many centuries found time, not only to wring from an un-
generous soil a precarious existence, but to cultivate a love of literature, of liberty, and of country, which surrounds their frozen and inhospitable isle with a glory unknown, in some of the fairest lands, on which Nature has showered her choicest
3 In Irish It is Acli-'0A-5Ab1itil.
38, 39.
Article L —ChAP. 1.
difficult, however, to identify this denomination with
—
Ida Pfeiffer's "Journey to Iceland: and
Druim Lomain.
*
See "Trias Thaumaturga. " Septima Vita S. Patricii, lib. ii. , cap. vi. , and nn. 20, 21, 22, 23, pp. 130, 173.
name, the recent hand says, 'Marian M. Taml. ' as the authority for saying, that Core was of Drum Lomain. But this is a mis-
take. "
Travels in Sweden and Norway," translated
from the German, by Charlotte Fenimore
Cooper, pp. 160, 161.
5 In a
more recent hand
meaning that M. O'Gorman (or rather the
=" A of Iceland is to Ebenezer
note,
Dr. Todd
"Here the
map Henderson's
gifts. ^
says,
' Drumnii '
prefixed highly interesting work,
on this country, while, the same work also contains Gloss) calls him of Drum. On the next several very characteristic and well executed
*
Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
engravings, exhibiting the hot springs,scenery, and costumes of the people. It is intituled, " Iceland ; or the Journal of a Residence in that Island, during the years 18 14 and 1815. Containing observations on the Natural
adds, *'
(Marian),
desert,
* See Madame
February 5. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 339
Whether Iceland had its origin, at the period of the worid's creation, or whether it arose afterwards, over the sea-waves, by some extraordinary con- vulsion of nature, has been disputed. Some geologists hold the theory, that thousands of years ago, the subterranea—n fires, exploding beneath the Arctic Ocean, threw Iceland up into the light a volcanic mass much larger than Ireland. It is a vast slag, they assert, from the nether furnaces, rather than natural terra firma; every red, or black, or yellow cliff, every rock, and boulder, and yokul, bears testimony to the fact, that the island was smelted in the earth's bowels, and then cast forth, hissing through the billows, to cool and to crystalHze. Its mountains and fields, thus upheaved in the Arctic air, so soon as they had ceased to smoke, assumed a cap of ice and snow; while,thelowerglaciersformedoutofthese,meltingeverysummer and renewed every winter, have scored and carved the fringes of the island, into deep fiords and dark gorges, above which rise lofty peaks, white with eternal winter. It is the most desolate and dreary scenery in the world, deriving its charm, almost entirely, from the picturesqueness of naked Nature. Yet, it has been observed, that when Ingolfr, the Norwegian, arrived in Ice- land, it was in great part covered with forests. 3 Rivers of grey and black scoriae, whose red-hot ripples have frozen into harsh, sterile crags, traverse thelandineverydirection. Sometimes,thesestonyfloodsoverspreadwhole districts,likealakeofmeltedmatter; and,whenthishascooled,thesudden contraction cracks the surface, for leagues in length, producing deep fissures, which make the earth around look scarred and blistered. Nor is the- fiery island quiet even yet \ for, perpetual indications may be witnessed, exhibiting thestrifeofprimevalelements,stillgoingonbeneathherfoundations. Over her cold surface, Iceland is always smoking, steaming, ejecting fierce squirts of boihng water, black rubbish of the under-world flames, and floods of lava. There are thirty active volcanoes, besides Hecla,'^ with innumerable small cones,craters,andgeysers; while,everynowandthen,herunquietspirit bursts out in some terribl—e convulsion. - Sometimes, too, new islets are thrownuproundabouther volcanicchildrenofthisfierce,feverishmother. It is like sailing on a cauldron, to navigate some of those gloomy, unvisited fiords of the South-West ; one season, the deep-sea-lead finds no bottom, while, the next, there is a gaunt, black reef in the inlet. There are no wheat fields, and no sunshine to speak of, except during the brief summer of the Arctic circle. Yet, those children of the Norsemen like the country of their birth; whereas,someseventythousandofthemmanagetoliveandthrive, upon the flanks of the great cinder Iceland.
It has been asserted, that Iceland was the island, which the Irish and
Britons called Thyle, or Tyle, as also, Inis Thyle, or Tyle, which means,
" the Island of ^ Our oldest historians are unanimous, on Thyle. " quite
this point, as may be seen from the testimony of several ancient accounts.
Phenomena, History, Literature, and Anti- quities of the Island ; and the Religion, Character, Manners and Customs of its In- habitants. With an Introduction and Ap-
pendix. " This work was published in Edinburgh, A,D. i8i8, in two octavo vo- lumes.
Journal of a Tour in Iceland, in
" Schedce
'< The reader will find a
account of Hecla, with some particulars of other remarkable volcanic mountains, and curious natural objects, in William Jackson
s See a list of these recorded eruptions, in that interesting and elegantly illustrated work of Sabine Baring-Gould, intituled, " Iceland : its Scenes and Intro-
3
According
de Islandia," cap. ii.
to Ara
Multiseius,
Sagas. " duction, pp. xxi. , xxii. , xxiii.
very interesting
^ See " Acta Sanctorum Hiber- Colgan's
**
Hooker's
the Summer of 1809," vol. ii. Appendix C, pp. 105 to 269. Second edition, with additions.
nise," Februarii ii. De B. Erlulpho, sive Emulpho, Tylse Insulae sive Islandise Apos-
toll, nn. i, 4, pp. 241, 242.
340 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [February 5.
""
The author of the Icelands Landnamabok ;" ^ Latinized, Liber Originum
^
states, that in the chronicle,^ which St. Bede, the priest, wrote, he mentions the island of Thyle, as being far from the northern part of Britain. " ThatremoteThule,sooftenmentionedbyGrecianandRoman writers," is thought to have been identical with the present Iceland ; some, however, think, that the Shetland Islands were thus named. " Notwith- standing the contrary assertion, there can be no doubt whatever, that Iceland was inhabited before the close of the ninth century. '3 This, too, was pro- bably the case, even before it had been designated Thule, by the Romans. Independently of historical documents, and authorities, which seem to establish this matter, it is difficult even to suppose, while so many small islands in the northern ocean were peopled, long before they had been dis- covered by the Romans, that Iceland should have remained uninhabited. It is stated, that its climate was formerly much more temperate, than it has become,inthecourseofages; and,thatitssoilwasthenmuchbetterand more fruitful, than at present. Besides, the advantage of a passage to it had not been impeded by ice,'* as in the still more northern regions of Lapland andGreenland. Wefindsomeancientaccountstoassureus,thatIceland
was inhabited so early as the fifth century. 's There can hardly be any doubt, moreover,thatthefactwasknowntoourIrishancestors. '^ Thatmanshould contrive to live, in these desolate regions of the North, is not so very mar- vellous ; the Esquimaux have solved a still more dismal problem, and they have long existed contentedly where the bear and the seal can find a liveli- hood. But,theIcelandersaremuchmoreadvancedinsocialcomforts,and thoroughly civilized ; they have stereotyped the true and pure Norse tongue, in their beautiful poetry ; while, they have admirable musicians, as well as poets, historians, and scholars, to warm their deep enthusiam and love for " a land that is dark and covered with the mist of death. " ^^ From what we learn regarding St. Ailbe's'^ intention to proceed thither, for the purpose of leading a life, unknown to the world, it may perhaps be thought, that it was then destitute of inhabitants. This, however, is only conjectural ; for, not- withstanding its containing some inhabitants, St. Ailbe might have found places enough in the island, where he could have remained quite sequestered from them. '9 Icelandic history fully reveals to us how adventurous were
' He is said to have been originally Ari Scotland and Ireland. " The Norwegians
Tslandiae,"
or Are Frodi, who came to Iceland, in 1075.
This book was continued after his death.
It is remarkable, as being the earliest his-
torical composition, written in the old inhabited until A. D. 874, when it was oc-
Danish or northern tongue, and which still cupied by the Norwegians. See
'*
"
" **
Hystoria
remains the living language of Iceland. See Islandise.
Bosworth's Scandanavian Literature. "
'^ See Dr. Lanigan's Ecclesiastical His-
tory of Ireland," vol. iii. , chap, xx. , sect.
*'
An deus immensi maris, ac tua nautae Numina sola colant, tibi serviat ultima
Thule," &c.
of Northern Antiquaries to its British and
American Members," a very interesting ex-
position of the oldest Icelandic and Norwe- gianAccountsofIreland. Seepp. ito17.
^^ See Job x. , 21.
'^ See his Life at the 12th of September, *' See Dr. Lanigan's "Ecclesiastical His-
'
This work was edited and published, in
Icelandic, with a Latin translation, indices
iv. , n. 32, p. 225.
^s See **
Playfair's
and
9 "De Constitutione Mundi Regionum. " " See "Icelands Landnamabok," Prolo-
notes, by Johannes
Finnaeus.
Geography,"
vol.
iii. ,
gus, p. I.
" Thus Virgil writes regarding it :
—
p. 144.
*^ Besides a Danish map of Ireland, con-
taining the names of towns there, as written
in the Norse the reader will find in tongue,
—Georgicon, lib. i. , 11. 29, 30.
" See J. J. A. Worsaae's " Account of
the Danes and Norwegians in England,
in Scotland, sect, v. , p. 220.
^3 The Icelandic historian Arngrym Jonas,
and other writers, assert, this island was not
the
**
Report addressed by the Irish Society
February 5. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 341
Irish navigators in times remote.