Whether this arrest was
owing to a secret inspiration from on high, or an inability to proceed, is not known.
owing to a secret inspiration from on high, or an inability to proceed, is not known.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v7
Drostan lived for the most part in Ireland, and that he was identical with that saint, to whom a parochial church had been dedicated.
This was called Kill-Drostan,^ or the "cellofDrostan,"inElphindiocese.
1* TothesestatementsofSirinus,Soller
Cormac,
See his "Historia Majoris Britannia? tarn Angliae quam Scotiae," lib. ii. , cap. vii. , p. 68,
9 See his Life in the Sixth Volume of this work, at the 9th of June, Art. i.
,0 See his work, " De Origine, Moribus, et Rebus Gestis Scotorum," lib. iv. , num. xlix. , p. 145.
"In "Scotorum Hystorise," lib. ix. , fol. clxxvii.
"
His feast occufs on the 26th of March, estate sprevit mundi vanitates, ibidem when a brief notice may be found in the
Irishmen,
Wherefore,
Vitse," lib. iv. , cap. xxvi.
4 See "Lives of Saints," vol. vii. , July
II, p. 278.
5 Taken from the Breviary of Aberdeen.
6"
See Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Sco-
torum,"tomus i. , lib. iv. , num. 375, p. 206. 7 The following is Wilson's account as
8
" commemoratio S. Dro'stani Confessoris, qui in eodem regno natus e regio sanguine, et
rendered by Sirinus into Latin :
In Scotia,
Aidani regis avunculus existens, in juvenili
monasteriumingressus, S. Benedicti habitum suscepit, in quo statu adeo in humilitate et
perfectione excelluit, ut in Scotia Albiensi et Hibernia celeberrimae famse fuerit, donee plenus sanctitate et miraculis, diem clausit circa annum Christi DC; ubi multa fuere antiquitus altaria et sacella in ejus honorem dicata. " These words are not to be found, however, in the later edition of Wilsons work, published in 1640.
Third Volume of this work. His chief
festival, however, is on the 13th of Decem- ber.
' 3 By some this is placed in the neighbour- hood of Elgin. See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's
"
Lives of the Saints," vol. vii. , July 1 1, p. 278.
,4 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii xi. De S. Drostano, num. 4, p.
199.
July i i . ]
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
203
adds, that he had no means for calling them in doubt, nor for confirming
them ; although he could not conceal the fact, that no commemoration of St.
Drostan occurred in the Irish Catalogues of Saints, collected with great
diligence by the Jesuits, Fathers Henry Fitzsimon and Stephen White.
However, he is willing to allow a claim of the Irish to this saint, if Scotch-
men do not object ; but, he says, both Ireland and Scotland may challenge
St. Drostan, for many reasons adduced by Sirinus. What more may be learned
regardingSt. Drostan,canbefoundintheBreviaryofAberdeen. Insub-
stance, this work treats thus regarding the saint. It is there stated, that St.
Drostan was descended from a royal race of the Scots. In early youth he
cultivated pious dispositions. When he had come to a mature age, having
heard concerning the mystery of our Lord's Incarnation and Passion, being
filled with the Holy Ghost, he endeavoured to serve the Almighty, with all
the affection of his soul. His parents found, that the boy Drostan was con-
secrated to God by a deep affection. They sent him to be instructed in
liberal studies to his uncle by the mother's side, St. Columba, who then
dwelt in Ireland. Afterwards, our saint took the religious habit at Dal-
quongale, as stated in the Aberdeen Breviary, but in Dal-Congaile,as corrected
in a marginal note. On the death of his superior, St. Drostan was elected Abbot,
in his place. While he filled this position, for some time, Drostan laboured to
advance the spiritual life of those monks, over whom he presided, by that exam-
ple of life and doctrine he set them. Some time having elapsed, he betook him-
selftoaremoteScottishdesert. However,hedidnotforsaketheflockcom-
mitted to his charge; but rather, he committed it to the supreme Pastor of souls.
There he led the life of a hermit. He built a church, in a place called Glenu-
x
Eske. s According to the Gospel precepts, he thus left all things for Christ.
Drostan cared not for the dignities of this earth, nor for regal honours, which he
might enjoy, owing to the advantages of his birth ; he renounced an earthly kingdom and a human principality, that he might run to the embraces of his Saviour. A certain priest, named Sion, being deprived of sight, was restored to its use, through St. Drostan's merits. The holy man became a despiserof the world, a follower of Christ, a lover of the desert, a conqueror over the old enemy of our race. He always invoked Divine assistance against the snares of his latent enemy, who endeavoured to lay nets of temptation for him. He alwaysaspiredtothejoysofHeaven. And,thathemightneveryieldtothe devil, he bore a severe martyrdom of corporal maceration, while his heart overflowed with compunction of spirit. Through the way of this present life, he aimed at the rewards of life eternal, and the holy man deserved to enter into a deathless life. Having finished his mortal career, in all holiness and
5 ' 16
there to enjoy the happiness of all true saints. 1 ? Owing to his imperfect Acts, Soller did not care to investigate more closely the age in which St. Drostan lived, or theworksheperformed. Thatlearnedwriter,however,wishedtobemore exactly instructed, regarding what place or church he had formerly inhabited, where he had been buried, or with what peculiar honour he had been vene- rated ; since that general consent—asseverated by Dempster—bore as little weight with him as the announcement, already alluded to, that Drostan was venerated at St. Andrews, in Scotland. It would not be easy to discover, whether the church of Aberdeen, truly or falsely, celebrates St. Drostan's festival at the 14th of December. At the nth day of July, Camerarius enters
purity, he departed to "The bosom of his Father and his God,
j s Otherwise Glen-esk. 16
written in a
1? See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus Hi.
xi. De S. Drostano, num. 5, 6, pp 20°-
Gray's "Poems," Elegy Country Churchyard.
Julii i99>
2o 4 LIVES OP THE IRISH SAINTS.
a feast 18 for St. Drostan, Abbot and Confessor. T 9 He is also invoked in a
Litany.
30 The death of this man has been holy
21 placed by Wilson,
Culdee
at the year 600, while Dempster
have notices of this holy man, who was especially venerated in their country.
23 and
Article III. —St. Sigisbert, Comfessor, and St. Placidus, Martyr, Dissentis, Switzerland. {Sixth and Seventh Centuries? ^ Although one of these holy servants of Christ was born in Ireland and the other was a native of Switzerland ; yet, as their companionship in life, and the church honours paid to their memory, give both a claim to be remembered on this day, so it is intended to relate some particulars regarding them. Both these holy men were especially venerated in the Grisons, Switzerland ; but, their existence seems to have been unknown to all the other preceding Martyrolo-
gists, until Ferrarius drew the account from the Records of their church at
Chur, and from their Proper Office there recited. The Bollandists give their
Acts 2 at the present date. 3 The notices, as contained in the Bollandists,
are in part, however, of a legendary character. There is a notice of these
saintsinRev. S. Baring-Gould'swork. * Thereisanaccountoftheminthe
DisentisAnnals. 5 Theformerofthesesaintsmusthavebeenborntowardsthe
close of the sixth century. St. Sigisbert is held to have been an Irishman by
birth. Thenamehereceivedinbaptismwasprobablydifferent. Somehave
supposed, that his Teutonic name refutes the supposition of his having been
an Irishman. 6 as we have seen in numberless the names of But, instances,
Irish saints have been changed into forms more familiar to people living on
the Continent. His education is said to have been received at Bangor, and
this is probable enough if we accept the succeeding statements regarding
18
Thus : "Sanctus Drostanus Abbas et Confessor. "
" See Bishop Forbes' " Kalendars of Scot- tish Saints," p. 239.
20
torum. "
2
In ten paragraphs.
3 See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii
xi. I)e SS. Placido Martyre et Sigisberto Confessore in Tenitorio Curiensi in Rhretia. Sylloge ex Breviario Curiensi et Ferrario, pp. 238 to 240.
* See "Lives of the Saints," vol. vii. , July 11, pp. 280, 281.
s See in " Die Wallfartsorte d. Schweiz,"
by Burgener, 1867.
6 At this very day was celebrated the feast
of St. Dathi, Bishop of Ravenna, as Galesi- nus states. The form of his name is
According to Iladdan and Stubbs, Councils and Ecclesiastical Documents, relating to Great Britain and Ireland," vol.
"
ii. , part i. , App. C. 21 "
In his Martyrologium Anglicanum. " 22 In his "HistoriaEcclesiasticaGentis Sco-
torum," tomus i. , lib. iv. , num. 375, p. 2C6. 23 In his work, " De Origine, Moribus et
Rebus Gestis Scotorum," lib. iv. , num. xlix. , p. 145.
s* In his "Historia Britannia? tarn Majoris
and this is no that yet proof
r.
Anglise quam Scotiae," lib. ii. , cap. vii. , p. 69. Edinburgi, —1740, 4to.
altogether Irish,
he was a native of Ireland.
'
Article ill. He states: "In territo-
rio Curiensi —Platidi martyris et Sigisberti Confessori? . " "Catalogus Gcneialis Sane-
7 His Lifeisset downat the 21st ofNo- vember.
2*
has it, at a. d. 606.
The Scottish writers
heismentioned
styled Drostanus, or Dronstanus, the former being the more approved form for writing and pronouncing his name. Although Sirin remarks, that the Breviary of Aberdeen is sufficiently filled with errors, we are obliged to give what it states respecting our saint. We are told, towards the end, that the bones of this holy confessor, Drostan, were buried at Aberdeen, in a stone tomb ; and that there, many, who were afflicted with divers kinds of diseases, had been restored to health through his merits.
Thus,
by John Lesley
John Major,
him. When St. Columbanus? and St. Gaul 8 went on their
into Switzerland, Sigisbert is said to have accompanied them, forming one of
8 9
See his Life, at the 16th of October. This is stated, by an old writer of St.
apostolic
mission
[July
24 whomheis by
July 1 1• ] LIVESOFTHEIRISHSAINTS. 2 5
the twelve missionaries, who then left their native country. 9 According to some accounts, St. Sigisbert was a disciple of St. Columbanus, and he accom-
panied the latter everywhere, sharing both in his consolations and tribulations. He lived as a monk at Luxeuil—it is said for twenty years—having been trainedundertheruleofSt. Columban. BeforethepersecutionoftheBur- gundian King, he is stated to have left that monastery. He accompanied his beloved master, during his peregrinations through France, and accom-
him into Switzerland. 10 When St. Columbanus went to
panied Bobbio,
Sigisbert is thought to have remained in the Alps.
Whether this arrest was
owing to a secret inspiration from on high, or an inability to proceed, is not known. He traversed eastwardly the heights of Crispalt, the northern summit of Mount St. Gothard. This must have been a difficult and fatiguing journey, through such deep valleys and stupendous mountains. He found a site that pleased him near the sources of the Vorder-Rhine, in a long valley, between
12
great height grew there, and this was an object especially venerated by the
heathens. At his prayer, the people proceeded to cut it down, but this order
nearly cost his life, for an irritated pagan, deeming it to be a sacrilegious act, threw an axe at the saint's head. The stroke escaped him, however, as he
made a sign of the cross. This miracle, joined to the great austerity of his life, caused Sigisbert to be universally venerated. Among his converts was one
that culminate in the Todi and the 11 He settled Scopi.
the
there, having called the place the desert.
Latin, and in French Dissentis. He built a small chapel and cell for himself in 613 at the foot of a mountain, bearing the name Vaccareccia, near a spring of limpid water. This was formed by the trunks and branches of trees. He there erected a small oratory in honour of the Mother of God. For the most part, the people living in that district were idolaters. By word and example, however, the holy solitary brought them to a knowledge of the true Faith. He was overjoyed to find, that the people renounced their false gods, cutting downthegroves,andoverturningthetemplesdedicatedtothem. Atreeof
snowy ridges
He was wealthy and powerful. Through curiosity, he went one day to hear Sigisbert preaching. This became the occasion for a grace which wrought his conversion. He was
moved to tears, and casting himself at the preacher's feet, he prayed to
become a Christian. He was received with great joy by Sigisbert, who
instructedandbaptizedhim. Soonafterwards,theconvertexpressedadesire
to lead a still more perfect life. He then offered to the Almighty and to the
BlessedVirginallhistemporalpossessions. Heplacedhimselfimmediately under the direction of Sigisbert. Soon he was joined by other monks. 1 * As
the number of his disciples began to increase, Sigisbert built another oratory, which he dedicated to St. Martin. He constructed cells around it, in which to lodge his monks. They became united in the strictest rules of Christian
called Placidus, who lived in a castle called Tremisium. 1?
Gall's Life, found in the monastery of Sele-
eremi amatorum. "
JI See Rev. S. " Lives of Baring-Gould's
the Saints," vol. vii. , July n, p. 281.
I2
The old Life of St. Gall, edited by Father O'Sheerin, may be seen in the " Col- lectanea Sacra," of Father Christopher Fleming, in the commentaries affixed to the Life of St. Columban, num. 81.
on the River Main, in
This contains some inaccuracies, however, such as stating that they left Ireland in the
time of Pope Gregory. They arrived in Franee long before his incumbency.
10
The old writer of Vita S. Galli states, that St. Columban came to Ursaria, which
the time when he wrote. He adds regarding
"
Columbanus; Ibi reliquit Sigebertum
genstad,
Germany.
was a
'3 Franciscus Guillimann adds: "
in Helvetia, also called Ursella and Urania, where he constructed a church, and that it was known as St. Columban's at
city
eaque tenebat omnia—, quae nunc Disertinoe regionis
It was designated Disertina in
" nominantur. " De Rebus
Helvetiae," lib. See Rev. S. Daring-Gould's "Lives of
iv. , cap. ii. , p. 425. l*
2o6 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July ii,
charity, and practised the most heroic virtues. He there established, not alone the rule of St. Columban, but introduced likewise his spirit ; for, by example as by words, he never failed to animate his brethren, in all the per- fections of their state. He also consecrated those immense solitudes around him to God and to his Holy Mother. However, a local Count, whose name wasVictortheFirstjs resentedthisintrusion—asheruledoverallRhaetial6 —and he resolved on taking possession of those lands, with which Placidus hadendowedthemonastery. Thelatterwenttohimwithacomplaintand remonstrance. With the freedom of another John the Baptist, Placide also reproached him with living a sinful life in company with an abandoned woman. He chose to be offended with Placidus, and in revenge, he ordered some of his retainers to beset the way by which he was to return. In a passionate mood, this chief ordered them to murder his visitor, and to smite off the head of Placidus. as we are on the nth of 1 ?
However,
Rhine, over a bridge, he and some of his servants fell into the river, when they
weresweptalongbythetorrentanddrowned. Thelossofhisdeardisciple
Placidus brought great affliction to the heart of Sigisbert. On the very spot
where he had been murdered, the people of that country afterwards built a
magnificent church in honour of the martyr, and it lasted for many subse-
This, told, happened July. the barbarous and unjust Count did not long survive.
18
very year when his glorious master St. Columbanus passed away to bliss.
quent centuries.
It is said, that St. Sigisbert departed this life in 613, the
Others have the date for his placed
at a. d. T 9 He was buried 615.
departure
in the same tomb with Placidus, so that while they were closely united in
charity and conversation during life, they were not separated when both had beenremovedfromtheirreligiouscommunity. Sigebertisregardedastheir apostle by the Grisons, in that portion of Switzerland. In 621, the Abbey of
20
Disentis was
No less than five
wrought at the tomb of St. Sigisbert and of St. Placidus. To honour their relics, a marble sarcophagus was made by orders of King Pepin. It is said, that Tello, who is reputed to have been a son of Victor and afterwards Bishop of Chur,22 endeavoured to make reparation for the cruelty of his father. Everywhere this bishop propagated devotion to St. Placidus. The veil which wrapped the head of St. Placidus had long been preserved as a relic in that place. The graves of these saints were visited in 781, by Charlemagne and by liis Empress Hildegarde. Frequent pilgrimages took place to the Abbey of Dissentis, when prayers were offered before the shrine of its patron saints. Among the illustrious visitors was St. Charles Borromeo, who undertook a
founded, parishes
were
subject
to it. 21
Miracles were
frequently
the Saints," vol. vii. , July 1 1, p. 281.
'5 He lived at a place, called Willinga, which was a castle situated on the other
bankoftheRhine. Itisnowinruins.
,6 See Franciscus Guillimann, "De Rebus
Helvetian," lib. iv. , cap. ii. , p. 425.
17 See Franciscus Guillimann, "Dc Rebus
20
The Abbot Dom. Albert Funsi of this
Helvttiae," lib. iv. , cap. ii. , p. 425.
x8
At a — recent comparatively period
an
Tremi-
enormous avalanche frequent among those
Alpine Mountains—buried it, and the people
living around it, so that the place where it
stood cannot now be known. See Les Petit!
Kollandistes, " Vies des Saints," tome viii. ,
e
xi Jour de Juillet, p. 249.
19 See Mabillon's "Annales Ordinis S. Benedicti,"tomus i. ,lib. xi. ,num. xx. ,p. 310.
(Tavetsch) Medullum (Medels. ) sunt et vici plures, at Camossum ^Kemps) Summus
Helvetia. ',"
and it continued to flourish for
many subsequent ages.
monastery communicated many particulars regarding it to Mabillon, and these were takenfromancientManuscripts.
21 Thus states FranciscusGuillimann, while enumerating the Federal Cantons of Rhaetia:
" Prima et
terii et vici, ampla et locuples, cujus parretipe
sunt siuin
quinque
;
ipsum,
antiquissima
est Disertini monas-
While passing the
Dissertinum
(Trams) Bregallia (Brigell) Actuatium
M
lib. iv. , cap. ii. , p. 425.
vicus '-'-
(Summits)
.
—"De Rebus
It is said, from 759 to 774. He died
A. D. 784. This, however, can hardly square with the much earlier date assigned for the
July it. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 207
fatiguing journey through the Rhetinn Alps for that purpose, and when he
was treated with marked the monks of that 23 When respect by monastery.
Disentis had been occupied by the French in 1799, the relics of those saints were for the most part lost. The feast of St. Sigisbert, confessor, and of St. Placidus, martyr, are celebrated on the nth of July, throughout that diocese where they so long lived and laboured. They are commemorated in the Chur Breviary. They are commemorated, likewise, in Les Petits 2* Bollan- dists, at the nth of July.
Article IV. —St. Lonan, of Ard-Cruinn. Veneration was given, at the nth of July, to Lonan, of Arda Crainn, as we find entered in the Martyr-
of 1 The Bollandists have at this same ology Tallagh. recorded,
date,
a feast
for Lonanus of Ard-cruinn,2 as furnished by Father O'Sheerin.
enquire, if Ard-cruinn can be identical with Ardcroney,3 a parish in the barony of Lower Ormond, and county of Tipperary. The left side of the direct road —as you advance from Borris-o-kane to Nenagh—affords the site for an ancient church, on a very elevated spot. Connected with this church appear the remains of an old castle ; some of the side walls, chambers, winding- stairs and window-places, are yet to be seen. The whole group of ruins is enclosed within a much frequented graveyard. The church walls are in tolerable preservation. In one end gable, a narrow cut-stone and pointed window remains entire. The opposite gable, near the old castle, appears rather to have been an interior cross-wall, under which a wide arch opens. The masonry in this group of buildings is very massiveand well cemented. The whole deserves an attentive study from the antiquary and archaeologist. In the
an old, and also a new one the former giving name to a parish, known as Loman. Tradition states, that a St. Lonan, nephew of the Irish Apostle, is honoured there. The ruins of the ancient church stand in a lonely cemetery a mile and a-half off the main road from Douglas to Luney. 4 In the Martyrology of Donegal,5 the feast of this saint is also entered, at the nth of July.
Article V. —St. Falbi, or Failbhe, Son of Culocha, of Disert Mic-Conlocha, in Cuircne, County of Westmeath. In the " Feilire " of
———
Isle of Man which is full of ancient Celtic ecclesiastical memorials there is
death of Sigisbert.
23 This is related, in the Italian Life of St.
Charles Borromeo, by the noble priest John Peter Giusani, lib. vi. , cap. xii.
24 See "Vies des Saints," tome viii. ,
where St. Patrick's mother was honoured. The present ruins I take to be the remains of a church erected a couple of hundred years ago on the site of an ancient foundation. In the s—mall burial-ground—now disused, I think stands a curious and ancient Celtic cross 6 feet high, and 3 feet broad at the shoulders. The circle is not worked through, but marked or punched deeply in the face of the stone. The stone itself is not regu- larly dressed. The panel, &c, of the cross exhibit the usual scroll-work. I could dis-
xie
Article iv.
Kelly, p. xxix.
2
de — 248,249. • Jour Juillet, pp.
l
Edited
by Rev. Dr.
See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii xi. Among the pretermitted saints,
p. 177.
3 It is noticed, on the Ordnance Sur-
vey Townland Maps for the County of Tip- perary," sheets io, 14, 15. The townland proper is on sheet 15.
4 The foregoing particulars, and the fol- lowing were communicated to the writer, by
Rev.
Cormac,
See his "Historia Majoris Britannia? tarn Angliae quam Scotiae," lib. ii. , cap. vii. , p. 68,
9 See his Life in the Sixth Volume of this work, at the 9th of June, Art. i.
,0 See his work, " De Origine, Moribus, et Rebus Gestis Scotorum," lib. iv. , num. xlix. , p. 145.
"In "Scotorum Hystorise," lib. ix. , fol. clxxvii.
"
His feast occufs on the 26th of March, estate sprevit mundi vanitates, ibidem when a brief notice may be found in the
Irishmen,
Wherefore,
Vitse," lib. iv. , cap. xxvi.
4 See "Lives of Saints," vol. vii. , July
II, p. 278.
5 Taken from the Breviary of Aberdeen.
6"
See Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Sco-
torum,"tomus i. , lib. iv. , num. 375, p. 206. 7 The following is Wilson's account as
8
" commemoratio S. Dro'stani Confessoris, qui in eodem regno natus e regio sanguine, et
rendered by Sirinus into Latin :
In Scotia,
Aidani regis avunculus existens, in juvenili
monasteriumingressus, S. Benedicti habitum suscepit, in quo statu adeo in humilitate et
perfectione excelluit, ut in Scotia Albiensi et Hibernia celeberrimae famse fuerit, donee plenus sanctitate et miraculis, diem clausit circa annum Christi DC; ubi multa fuere antiquitus altaria et sacella in ejus honorem dicata. " These words are not to be found, however, in the later edition of Wilsons work, published in 1640.
Third Volume of this work. His chief
festival, however, is on the 13th of Decem- ber.
' 3 By some this is placed in the neighbour- hood of Elgin. See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's
"
Lives of the Saints," vol. vii. , July 1 1, p. 278.
,4 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii xi. De S. Drostano, num. 4, p.
199.
July i i . ]
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
203
adds, that he had no means for calling them in doubt, nor for confirming
them ; although he could not conceal the fact, that no commemoration of St.
Drostan occurred in the Irish Catalogues of Saints, collected with great
diligence by the Jesuits, Fathers Henry Fitzsimon and Stephen White.
However, he is willing to allow a claim of the Irish to this saint, if Scotch-
men do not object ; but, he says, both Ireland and Scotland may challenge
St. Drostan, for many reasons adduced by Sirinus. What more may be learned
regardingSt. Drostan,canbefoundintheBreviaryofAberdeen. Insub-
stance, this work treats thus regarding the saint. It is there stated, that St.
Drostan was descended from a royal race of the Scots. In early youth he
cultivated pious dispositions. When he had come to a mature age, having
heard concerning the mystery of our Lord's Incarnation and Passion, being
filled with the Holy Ghost, he endeavoured to serve the Almighty, with all
the affection of his soul. His parents found, that the boy Drostan was con-
secrated to God by a deep affection. They sent him to be instructed in
liberal studies to his uncle by the mother's side, St. Columba, who then
dwelt in Ireland. Afterwards, our saint took the religious habit at Dal-
quongale, as stated in the Aberdeen Breviary, but in Dal-Congaile,as corrected
in a marginal note. On the death of his superior, St. Drostan was elected Abbot,
in his place. While he filled this position, for some time, Drostan laboured to
advance the spiritual life of those monks, over whom he presided, by that exam-
ple of life and doctrine he set them. Some time having elapsed, he betook him-
selftoaremoteScottishdesert. However,hedidnotforsaketheflockcom-
mitted to his charge; but rather, he committed it to the supreme Pastor of souls.
There he led the life of a hermit. He built a church, in a place called Glenu-
x
Eske. s According to the Gospel precepts, he thus left all things for Christ.
Drostan cared not for the dignities of this earth, nor for regal honours, which he
might enjoy, owing to the advantages of his birth ; he renounced an earthly kingdom and a human principality, that he might run to the embraces of his Saviour. A certain priest, named Sion, being deprived of sight, was restored to its use, through St. Drostan's merits. The holy man became a despiserof the world, a follower of Christ, a lover of the desert, a conqueror over the old enemy of our race. He always invoked Divine assistance against the snares of his latent enemy, who endeavoured to lay nets of temptation for him. He alwaysaspiredtothejoysofHeaven. And,thathemightneveryieldtothe devil, he bore a severe martyrdom of corporal maceration, while his heart overflowed with compunction of spirit. Through the way of this present life, he aimed at the rewards of life eternal, and the holy man deserved to enter into a deathless life. Having finished his mortal career, in all holiness and
5 ' 16
there to enjoy the happiness of all true saints. 1 ? Owing to his imperfect Acts, Soller did not care to investigate more closely the age in which St. Drostan lived, or theworksheperformed. Thatlearnedwriter,however,wishedtobemore exactly instructed, regarding what place or church he had formerly inhabited, where he had been buried, or with what peculiar honour he had been vene- rated ; since that general consent—asseverated by Dempster—bore as little weight with him as the announcement, already alluded to, that Drostan was venerated at St. Andrews, in Scotland. It would not be easy to discover, whether the church of Aberdeen, truly or falsely, celebrates St. Drostan's festival at the 14th of December. At the nth day of July, Camerarius enters
purity, he departed to "The bosom of his Father and his God,
j s Otherwise Glen-esk. 16
written in a
1? See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus Hi.
xi. De S. Drostano, num. 5, 6, pp 20°-
Gray's "Poems," Elegy Country Churchyard.
Julii i99>
2o 4 LIVES OP THE IRISH SAINTS.
a feast 18 for St. Drostan, Abbot and Confessor. T 9 He is also invoked in a
Litany.
30 The death of this man has been holy
21 placed by Wilson,
Culdee
at the year 600, while Dempster
have notices of this holy man, who was especially venerated in their country.
23 and
Article III. —St. Sigisbert, Comfessor, and St. Placidus, Martyr, Dissentis, Switzerland. {Sixth and Seventh Centuries? ^ Although one of these holy servants of Christ was born in Ireland and the other was a native of Switzerland ; yet, as their companionship in life, and the church honours paid to their memory, give both a claim to be remembered on this day, so it is intended to relate some particulars regarding them. Both these holy men were especially venerated in the Grisons, Switzerland ; but, their existence seems to have been unknown to all the other preceding Martyrolo-
gists, until Ferrarius drew the account from the Records of their church at
Chur, and from their Proper Office there recited. The Bollandists give their
Acts 2 at the present date. 3 The notices, as contained in the Bollandists,
are in part, however, of a legendary character. There is a notice of these
saintsinRev. S. Baring-Gould'swork. * Thereisanaccountoftheminthe
DisentisAnnals. 5 Theformerofthesesaintsmusthavebeenborntowardsthe
close of the sixth century. St. Sigisbert is held to have been an Irishman by
birth. Thenamehereceivedinbaptismwasprobablydifferent. Somehave
supposed, that his Teutonic name refutes the supposition of his having been
an Irishman. 6 as we have seen in numberless the names of But, instances,
Irish saints have been changed into forms more familiar to people living on
the Continent. His education is said to have been received at Bangor, and
this is probable enough if we accept the succeeding statements regarding
18
Thus : "Sanctus Drostanus Abbas et Confessor. "
" See Bishop Forbes' " Kalendars of Scot- tish Saints," p. 239.
20
torum. "
2
In ten paragraphs.
3 See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii
xi. I)e SS. Placido Martyre et Sigisberto Confessore in Tenitorio Curiensi in Rhretia. Sylloge ex Breviario Curiensi et Ferrario, pp. 238 to 240.
* See "Lives of the Saints," vol. vii. , July 11, pp. 280, 281.
s See in " Die Wallfartsorte d. Schweiz,"
by Burgener, 1867.
6 At this very day was celebrated the feast
of St. Dathi, Bishop of Ravenna, as Galesi- nus states. The form of his name is
According to Iladdan and Stubbs, Councils and Ecclesiastical Documents, relating to Great Britain and Ireland," vol.
"
ii. , part i. , App. C. 21 "
In his Martyrologium Anglicanum. " 22 In his "HistoriaEcclesiasticaGentis Sco-
torum," tomus i. , lib. iv. , num. 375, p. 2C6. 23 In his work, " De Origine, Moribus et
Rebus Gestis Scotorum," lib. iv. , num. xlix. , p. 145.
s* In his "Historia Britannia? tarn Majoris
and this is no that yet proof
r.
Anglise quam Scotiae," lib. ii. , cap. vii. , p. 69. Edinburgi, —1740, 4to.
altogether Irish,
he was a native of Ireland.
'
Article ill. He states: "In territo-
rio Curiensi —Platidi martyris et Sigisberti Confessori? . " "Catalogus Gcneialis Sane-
7 His Lifeisset downat the 21st ofNo- vember.
2*
has it, at a. d. 606.
The Scottish writers
heismentioned
styled Drostanus, or Dronstanus, the former being the more approved form for writing and pronouncing his name. Although Sirin remarks, that the Breviary of Aberdeen is sufficiently filled with errors, we are obliged to give what it states respecting our saint. We are told, towards the end, that the bones of this holy confessor, Drostan, were buried at Aberdeen, in a stone tomb ; and that there, many, who were afflicted with divers kinds of diseases, had been restored to health through his merits.
Thus,
by John Lesley
John Major,
him. When St. Columbanus? and St. Gaul 8 went on their
into Switzerland, Sigisbert is said to have accompanied them, forming one of
8 9
See his Life, at the 16th of October. This is stated, by an old writer of St.
apostolic
mission
[July
24 whomheis by
July 1 1• ] LIVESOFTHEIRISHSAINTS. 2 5
the twelve missionaries, who then left their native country. 9 According to some accounts, St. Sigisbert was a disciple of St. Columbanus, and he accom-
panied the latter everywhere, sharing both in his consolations and tribulations. He lived as a monk at Luxeuil—it is said for twenty years—having been trainedundertheruleofSt. Columban. BeforethepersecutionoftheBur- gundian King, he is stated to have left that monastery. He accompanied his beloved master, during his peregrinations through France, and accom-
him into Switzerland. 10 When St. Columbanus went to
panied Bobbio,
Sigisbert is thought to have remained in the Alps.
Whether this arrest was
owing to a secret inspiration from on high, or an inability to proceed, is not known. He traversed eastwardly the heights of Crispalt, the northern summit of Mount St. Gothard. This must have been a difficult and fatiguing journey, through such deep valleys and stupendous mountains. He found a site that pleased him near the sources of the Vorder-Rhine, in a long valley, between
12
great height grew there, and this was an object especially venerated by the
heathens. At his prayer, the people proceeded to cut it down, but this order
nearly cost his life, for an irritated pagan, deeming it to be a sacrilegious act, threw an axe at the saint's head. The stroke escaped him, however, as he
made a sign of the cross. This miracle, joined to the great austerity of his life, caused Sigisbert to be universally venerated. Among his converts was one
that culminate in the Todi and the 11 He settled Scopi.
the
there, having called the place the desert.
Latin, and in French Dissentis. He built a small chapel and cell for himself in 613 at the foot of a mountain, bearing the name Vaccareccia, near a spring of limpid water. This was formed by the trunks and branches of trees. He there erected a small oratory in honour of the Mother of God. For the most part, the people living in that district were idolaters. By word and example, however, the holy solitary brought them to a knowledge of the true Faith. He was overjoyed to find, that the people renounced their false gods, cutting downthegroves,andoverturningthetemplesdedicatedtothem. Atreeof
snowy ridges
He was wealthy and powerful. Through curiosity, he went one day to hear Sigisbert preaching. This became the occasion for a grace which wrought his conversion. He was
moved to tears, and casting himself at the preacher's feet, he prayed to
become a Christian. He was received with great joy by Sigisbert, who
instructedandbaptizedhim. Soonafterwards,theconvertexpressedadesire
to lead a still more perfect life. He then offered to the Almighty and to the
BlessedVirginallhistemporalpossessions. Heplacedhimselfimmediately under the direction of Sigisbert. Soon he was joined by other monks. 1 * As
the number of his disciples began to increase, Sigisbert built another oratory, which he dedicated to St. Martin. He constructed cells around it, in which to lodge his monks. They became united in the strictest rules of Christian
called Placidus, who lived in a castle called Tremisium. 1?
Gall's Life, found in the monastery of Sele-
eremi amatorum. "
JI See Rev. S. " Lives of Baring-Gould's
the Saints," vol. vii. , July n, p. 281.
I2
The old Life of St. Gall, edited by Father O'Sheerin, may be seen in the " Col- lectanea Sacra," of Father Christopher Fleming, in the commentaries affixed to the Life of St. Columban, num. 81.
on the River Main, in
This contains some inaccuracies, however, such as stating that they left Ireland in the
time of Pope Gregory. They arrived in Franee long before his incumbency.
10
The old writer of Vita S. Galli states, that St. Columban came to Ursaria, which
the time when he wrote. He adds regarding
"
Columbanus; Ibi reliquit Sigebertum
genstad,
Germany.
was a
'3 Franciscus Guillimann adds: "
in Helvetia, also called Ursella and Urania, where he constructed a church, and that it was known as St. Columban's at
city
eaque tenebat omnia—, quae nunc Disertinoe regionis
It was designated Disertina in
" nominantur. " De Rebus
Helvetiae," lib. See Rev. S. Daring-Gould's "Lives of
iv. , cap. ii. , p. 425. l*
2o6 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July ii,
charity, and practised the most heroic virtues. He there established, not alone the rule of St. Columban, but introduced likewise his spirit ; for, by example as by words, he never failed to animate his brethren, in all the per- fections of their state. He also consecrated those immense solitudes around him to God and to his Holy Mother. However, a local Count, whose name wasVictortheFirstjs resentedthisintrusion—asheruledoverallRhaetial6 —and he resolved on taking possession of those lands, with which Placidus hadendowedthemonastery. Thelatterwenttohimwithacomplaintand remonstrance. With the freedom of another John the Baptist, Placide also reproached him with living a sinful life in company with an abandoned woman. He chose to be offended with Placidus, and in revenge, he ordered some of his retainers to beset the way by which he was to return. In a passionate mood, this chief ordered them to murder his visitor, and to smite off the head of Placidus. as we are on the nth of 1 ?
However,
Rhine, over a bridge, he and some of his servants fell into the river, when they
weresweptalongbythetorrentanddrowned. Thelossofhisdeardisciple
Placidus brought great affliction to the heart of Sigisbert. On the very spot
where he had been murdered, the people of that country afterwards built a
magnificent church in honour of the martyr, and it lasted for many subse-
This, told, happened July. the barbarous and unjust Count did not long survive.
18
very year when his glorious master St. Columbanus passed away to bliss.
quent centuries.
It is said, that St. Sigisbert departed this life in 613, the
Others have the date for his placed
at a. d. T 9 He was buried 615.
departure
in the same tomb with Placidus, so that while they were closely united in
charity and conversation during life, they were not separated when both had beenremovedfromtheirreligiouscommunity. Sigebertisregardedastheir apostle by the Grisons, in that portion of Switzerland. In 621, the Abbey of
20
Disentis was
No less than five
wrought at the tomb of St. Sigisbert and of St. Placidus. To honour their relics, a marble sarcophagus was made by orders of King Pepin. It is said, that Tello, who is reputed to have been a son of Victor and afterwards Bishop of Chur,22 endeavoured to make reparation for the cruelty of his father. Everywhere this bishop propagated devotion to St. Placidus. The veil which wrapped the head of St. Placidus had long been preserved as a relic in that place. The graves of these saints were visited in 781, by Charlemagne and by liis Empress Hildegarde. Frequent pilgrimages took place to the Abbey of Dissentis, when prayers were offered before the shrine of its patron saints. Among the illustrious visitors was St. Charles Borromeo, who undertook a
founded, parishes
were
subject
to it. 21
Miracles were
frequently
the Saints," vol. vii. , July 1 1, p. 281.
'5 He lived at a place, called Willinga, which was a castle situated on the other
bankoftheRhine. Itisnowinruins.
,6 See Franciscus Guillimann, "De Rebus
Helvetian," lib. iv. , cap. ii. , p. 425.
17 See Franciscus Guillimann, "Dc Rebus
20
The Abbot Dom. Albert Funsi of this
Helvttiae," lib. iv. , cap. ii. , p. 425.
x8
At a — recent comparatively period
an
Tremi-
enormous avalanche frequent among those
Alpine Mountains—buried it, and the people
living around it, so that the place where it
stood cannot now be known. See Les Petit!
Kollandistes, " Vies des Saints," tome viii. ,
e
xi Jour de Juillet, p. 249.
19 See Mabillon's "Annales Ordinis S. Benedicti,"tomus i. ,lib. xi. ,num. xx. ,p. 310.
(Tavetsch) Medullum (Medels. ) sunt et vici plures, at Camossum ^Kemps) Summus
Helvetia. ',"
and it continued to flourish for
many subsequent ages.
monastery communicated many particulars regarding it to Mabillon, and these were takenfromancientManuscripts.
21 Thus states FranciscusGuillimann, while enumerating the Federal Cantons of Rhaetia:
" Prima et
terii et vici, ampla et locuples, cujus parretipe
sunt siuin
quinque
;
ipsum,
antiquissima
est Disertini monas-
While passing the
Dissertinum
(Trams) Bregallia (Brigell) Actuatium
M
lib. iv. , cap. ii. , p. 425.
vicus '-'-
(Summits)
.
—"De Rebus
It is said, from 759 to 774. He died
A. D. 784. This, however, can hardly square with the much earlier date assigned for the
July it. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 207
fatiguing journey through the Rhetinn Alps for that purpose, and when he
was treated with marked the monks of that 23 When respect by monastery.
Disentis had been occupied by the French in 1799, the relics of those saints were for the most part lost. The feast of St. Sigisbert, confessor, and of St. Placidus, martyr, are celebrated on the nth of July, throughout that diocese where they so long lived and laboured. They are commemorated in the Chur Breviary. They are commemorated, likewise, in Les Petits 2* Bollan- dists, at the nth of July.
Article IV. —St. Lonan, of Ard-Cruinn. Veneration was given, at the nth of July, to Lonan, of Arda Crainn, as we find entered in the Martyr-
of 1 The Bollandists have at this same ology Tallagh. recorded,
date,
a feast
for Lonanus of Ard-cruinn,2 as furnished by Father O'Sheerin.
enquire, if Ard-cruinn can be identical with Ardcroney,3 a parish in the barony of Lower Ormond, and county of Tipperary. The left side of the direct road —as you advance from Borris-o-kane to Nenagh—affords the site for an ancient church, on a very elevated spot. Connected with this church appear the remains of an old castle ; some of the side walls, chambers, winding- stairs and window-places, are yet to be seen. The whole group of ruins is enclosed within a much frequented graveyard. The church walls are in tolerable preservation. In one end gable, a narrow cut-stone and pointed window remains entire. The opposite gable, near the old castle, appears rather to have been an interior cross-wall, under which a wide arch opens. The masonry in this group of buildings is very massiveand well cemented. The whole deserves an attentive study from the antiquary and archaeologist. In the
an old, and also a new one the former giving name to a parish, known as Loman. Tradition states, that a St. Lonan, nephew of the Irish Apostle, is honoured there. The ruins of the ancient church stand in a lonely cemetery a mile and a-half off the main road from Douglas to Luney. 4 In the Martyrology of Donegal,5 the feast of this saint is also entered, at the nth of July.
Article V. —St. Falbi, or Failbhe, Son of Culocha, of Disert Mic-Conlocha, in Cuircne, County of Westmeath. In the " Feilire " of
———
Isle of Man which is full of ancient Celtic ecclesiastical memorials there is
death of Sigisbert.
23 This is related, in the Italian Life of St.
Charles Borromeo, by the noble priest John Peter Giusani, lib. vi. , cap. xii.
24 See "Vies des Saints," tome viii. ,
where St. Patrick's mother was honoured. The present ruins I take to be the remains of a church erected a couple of hundred years ago on the site of an ancient foundation. In the s—mall burial-ground—now disused, I think stands a curious and ancient Celtic cross 6 feet high, and 3 feet broad at the shoulders. The circle is not worked through, but marked or punched deeply in the face of the stone. The stone itself is not regu- larly dressed. The panel, &c, of the cross exhibit the usual scroll-work. I could dis-
xie
Article iv.
Kelly, p. xxix.
2
de — 248,249. • Jour Juillet, pp.
l
Edited
by Rev. Dr.
See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii xi. Among the pretermitted saints,
p. 177.
3 It is noticed, on the Ordnance Sur-
vey Townland Maps for the County of Tip- perary," sheets io, 14, 15. The townland proper is on sheet 15.
4 The foregoing particulars, and the fol- lowing were communicated to the writer, by
Rev.
