Magni Vitam, qualis typis edita est exara- verit, certo
pronunciare
non licet.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v9
See
—" De Rebus Britannicis Collectanea," vol. i. , p. 38.
s6 This miracle is alluded to, in the Ninth Lesson of the Saint's Office, as contained in the Aberdeen Breviary.
"Kalendars of Scottish
fuit fundator. "
Saints," p. 278. See tomus i. , p. 395.
6o
6l See " Les Fetits Hollandistes, " Vies des
Saints," vol. x. , Jour vie Saptembre, p. 529.
Monasticon
September 6. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
123
62 account has been left in Manuscript,^ by an unknown monk of St. Mary's
the church and possessions of St. Bees sustained considerable injury.
This
Monastery, at York.
At the 6th of September, St. Bega is venerated, according to the
11 of Martyrologium Anglicanum"
Wilson,6* 6s Arthurus,66 and Ferrarius,
John
Wion. 6? In the anonymous Calendar of Irish Saints,68 St. Bega is mentioned
at the same day. She is likewise commemorated in the Circle of -the Seasons, at this date/9 If we are to credit Dempster's statement^ St. Bega was venerated in Scotland, on this day, and at a place called Kilbeg. Also
1
is she commemorated by David Camerarius,? at the 8th September. In
Scotland, she was honoured at Kilbucho,? 2 and at Kilbagie. 73 There is a glebe likewise at Kilbegie ;? 4 and probably Kilbagie,75 in Clackmannan is
named after her. Throughout England and Scotland, also, a feast has been
assigned to St. Bees, on the 31st of October. ? 6 This is the date given for
her chief festival, in the Breviary of Aberdeen, and also by Greven, in his additions to Usuard. Under the name of St. Bees, it is said that she was likewise honoured on the 22nd of November. 77 Again, Gabriel Bucelin? 8 hasreferredherfeasttothe28thofDecember. BesidestheNatalisforher death—generally supposed to have been the 31st of October—the foregoing festivals must have reference to the translation of her relics, or to some special commemoration intended to increase popular devotion for her. Yet, perhaps it is more probable, especially in latter times, that some errors of date may have crept into the kalendars, or some confusion of correct identi- fication has probably occurred.
Assuming a gifted Irish pilgrim's visit to the Shrine of St. Bees, and
enquiries there made, to be incidents of real life,? 9 it would appear, that the
natives of Cumberland, in the present century, know little regarding this stranger virgin, who had once been held by their ancestors in distinguished honour. 80 It was otherwise in those middle ages, when the chronicler of her fame and miracles could only relate what was most clear, coming from the evidence of many Cumbrians, and what most deserved belief. There could
62 Anno Di. 1315. Robertus Brus obsi- debat Carleolum. Quo tempore Jacobus Duglas multa mala fecit apud Egremont, et spoliavit eccl. S. Begae, ac maneria de Cletter et Stainebume prions S. Begoe combusserunt. " —Leland, " De Rebus Brni etane^mei P4,
73 See Statistical Account of Scotland,"
vol. viii. , p. 605, and vol xiv. , p. 623.
i! T fi^? nllH ^n° AM ;K
Koran's
f
K<Z^^LTM
> AbbatlbuSCt
6
*-> In
66 In Sacro
67
" Historise Catholics Ibernice Com- pendium," tomus i. , lib iv. , cap. xi. , p. ci.
p. {^
<t Edition of 1608. «"
t0 ngli Martyrol°gy
Catalogus Generalis Sanctorum. " Gynoeceo.
? A Edltlon of l6
In
68 Published by O'Sullivan Beare, in
1%In "
Lignum Vita," lib. iii.
Appendix.
°' See p. 250.
70 See Bishop Forbes' "Kalendars of bv Ml's- J. Sadlier, —"Historical and
Scottish Saints," Menologium Scoticum, Legendary Poems," pp. 360, 361, New
p. 210.
7' See ibid. Scottish Entries in the
Kalendar of David Camerarius, p. 240.
York, 1869, 8vo. 8o He says :—
7* See Chalmers' " vol. Caledonia,"
"
I stood within the fontless porch,
I paced the empty nave, The very verger of the church
A false tradition gave. "—Ibid.
ii. , p. 958; "Statistical Account of Scotland,"
"
vol. iv. , p. 344 ; and Origines Parochiales
'
Scotiae, part 1. . p. 177.
74 See " part ii. , p. 822.
Parochiales Scotia,"
Origines
75 See "New Statistical Account of Scot- land " vol viii" pp 3' 128'
76See Rt- Rev- Patrick F-
"In* Saints in Great Britain," chap v. ,
160.
Jl ?
of John Wllson
'
S5.
f
79 See the verses headed " Saint Bees," m the admirably edited Poems of Thomas D'Arcy M'Gee, with copious notes. Also an Introduction and Biographical Sketch,
4°-
the Menologium Benedictinum. "
i24 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [September 6.
be no end to his narrative, states the compiler of her Acts, were all such
signs of her sanctity and miracles to be written, regarding the Virgin Bega, who now reigns in endless glory, and with Him, who is infinite and eternal.
ARTICLE II. —ST. MAGNUS, MAGOBALDUS, MAGNOALD, OR MAGNOBALDUS, APOSTLE OF SUABIA.
[SIXTH AND SEVENTH CENTURIES. } CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION—WRITERS OF THE ACTS OF ST. MAGNOALDUS OR MAGNUS—IRELAND THE COUNTRY OF HIS BIRTH—PERIOD OF HIS NATIVITY—HE BECOMES A DISCIPLE OF ST. COLUMBAN—SAINTS MAGNOALD AND GALL REMAIN IN SWITZERLAND— ADMONITION TO MAGNOALD OF ST. COLUMBAN AND PROPHECY BEFORE SETTING OUT FOR ITALY.
While abundant light has been thrown on the incidents of modern history, as also on the life and actions of celebrated characters who have lived in our own times, owing to the issue of printed works, and the recorded memoranda or correspondence of contemporaneous writers ; far different are the old manuscript memorials of doubtful authenticity, or whose authors and sources for information are not sufficiently accredited, when we seek to establish facts relating to many of our old-world saints. Such, it must be admitted, is often the case, with regard to acts, conveying to us the most remote traditions,inreferencetothepresentholyman. Theonlyancientauthority for his life is, unfortunately, not altogether trustworthy. This is a memoir, which it is stated had been written by his companion and disciple Theodore,1 and who laid it under the abbot's head, when he had been buried. Then the account runs, that when the body was disinterred, and on the stone coffin being opened, in the ninth century, the book had been taken out, and when
2 to to have been a forgery of the tenth or twelfth century. 3 This Life is made up of long extracts from Jonas, the monk of Bobbio, who wrote the Acts of St. Columban, and from Walafridus Strabo,* who wrote the Acts of St. Gall. EventsrelatedofothersaretransferredtoMagnoald. s Wherethecomposer of this Life had genuine lives to manipulate, and convert to a memoir of St. Magnoald, his book is interesting ; but, when he brings the abbot to that ground where his abbey had been founded, and for which the lives of St.
it wa—s delivered to —of
greatly decayed by age, Ermenric, Elwangen,
re-edit. However, it is supposed
at least in
great part
Columban and St. Gall furnished no data, frequently he lapses into foolish
Article ii. —Chapter i. —' Called by cujusdam impostoris. "
Latin writers, Theodorus Campedonensis,
from the place where he passed a part of his
life as an abbot. He was a monk of St.
Gall and of St. Magnus. It is stated, that
by command of Bishop Tozzo, he wrote the siastici Francorum," tomus ii. , at A. D. lifeofhismaster,St. Magnus. Heflourished
A. D. 680. See Rev. Dr. William Cave's
"
Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Historia Literaria," volumen i. Sseculum Monothe- leticum, p. 595.
2 He died a. d. 866.
3 Thus Basnage states
nee Ermenrici illud est opusculum, sed
:
" Nee Theodori
Bishop of Laon, who flourished in the seventh century, are related verbatim of Magnoald, the writer only changing the letter C into M. See Benkert's " Athanasia," vol. xi. Kritische Priifung d, Lebensgesch der Heil. Magnus, p. 414. Wurzburg, 1832.
* Pere Charles le Cointe holds the writer
to have been a synchronus of St. Magnus,
and to have thus flourished
to Walafridus Strabo. See "Annates Eccle-
614.
s Thus, the incidents told of St. Cagnoald,
prior
September 6. ]
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 25
6 This
about the bona fides of Theodore's Acts has been drawn in a great measure from an opinion of the learned Father Mabillon, that they were composed by some impostor i under such a shadowy title.
legend.
scepticism
This, however, is too sweeping a charge, and it seems far more probable that the writer's errors are owing to ignorance rather than to deliberate forgery. The Bollandists have very fully treated about St. Magnoaldus, or Magnus, andthen attributed to the monk Theodore, of Kempten, as taken from a manuscript " of St. Maximinus of Treves.
12
attributed to the saint's inter- cession. ^ This holy abbot's Acts have been edited by Father Constantine Suysken, S. J. , who has laboured much to investigate or unravel the obscure and often contradictory materials that are left for enquiry. In the first place the original life, as stated, if written by Theodorus,14 and buried with the saint, was almost defaced and scarcely legible, when discovered in the ninth century, and at present it is not known to exist. Again, by four
1 persons, that copy is said to have been given to a certain Ermenric, ^ a
monk and levite of Elewanga, to revise and restore. Neither is that particular manuscript to be found, and we know not if the task committed to him had been reliably executed. But, in the third place, that same work
l6 ;
at the 6thof
follows the unauthentic life of the saint,
previous commentary,9
September.
Afterwards succeeds an account of miracles,
8 Thereis a
to have fallen into other hands
whether through ignorance or fraud remains to be solved. When and where
while in the
the Acts of St. Magnus have become vitiated, in point of historic accuracy
appears
process
6"
See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's Lives of
the Saints," vol. ix. , September 6, p. 94.
disciple, of St. Magnus in his apostolic labours, to have been witness of nearly all the miracles he relates, and to have been a friend, at the hour of his death.
15 By some, he is also named Ermenold, who lived in the time of the Blessed Raban Maur, whose life may be found in the second volume of this work, at the 4th of February, Art. iv. Ermenric became the seventh Abbot of the monastery of Elewan- gen, in the diocese of Augustana, a. d. 845, according to Mabillon. In his epistles to Gundramnus and Ruodolfus, he speaks very modestly of his abilities. " An vero S.
Magni Vitam, qualis typis edita est exara- verit, certo pronunciare non licet. " "Acta Sanctorum Ordinis S. Benedicti," ssec. ii.
16 The third revisor or in interpolator,
reference to Ermenric, states, that the latter, compelled by obedience, and not willing to contemn the order of a pontiff, undertook
the patch-work, according to the best of his ability, although little learned to amend and insert what should be proper. However, he accomplished the task, through Divine assistance, renewing the writing and correct- ing what he found in a confused state, and making the text clearer by means of chapters. To his emendations or possibly corruptions of the original text, Father Suysken justly objects, and naturally preferred he had assumed only the role of amanuensis, and not that of interpolator. The Bollandist editor
:
" Qui Magnum appellat
7 He adds
Magnoaldum, ut Chagnoaldi sancti Colum- bani discipuli facta personato suo Magnoaldo affingat. Non immoror fabulis illius impos- toris observandis, quas in actis sanctorum nostrorum manifeste detexi. Nihil itaque certi sive de Magno, sive de Theodoro nobis succurrit, nisi quod eos non Columbani, sed Galli discipulos, non Scotto-Hibernos, sed Alamanos fuisse constat ex Walafiido Strabone, qui eos Willimari presbyteri clericos extitisse ait, — in sancti
antequam
Galli disciplinam cooptarentur. " Annales Ordinis S. Benedicti," tomus i. , lib. xiii. ,
sect, xxxiii. , p. 393.
8
See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus ii. , Sep- tembris vi. De Sancto Magno Monasterii Faucensis, Abbate Primo Fussse in Sueria, pp. 700 to 78x.
9 In thirteen sections, and one hundred and seventy-five paragraphs.
10
In eight chapters, and seventy-eight paragraphs, with accompanying notes.
11
Collated with the editions of Henricus
Canisius and of Melchior Goldast, together
with six other manuscripts-
12
Miracula auctore P. Ludovico Babens- tuber Benedictino Ettalensi.
13 These miracles are contained in seven
chapters, and in one hundred and fifty-six paragraphs, with illustrative notes.
"
M Said to have been a monk or eremite of adds: "utinam, inquam, ipsa Theodori
Campidonum or Kempten. This Theodore verba, confusa utcumque gestorum serie, is represented as the companion, or rather integre fideliterque posteritate tradidisset. "
10
ofemendation, —
26 LIVESOFTHEIRISHSAINTS. [September6.
1 theerrorshavecreptincannotwellbedetermined ? but,asuspicionremains,
j
that many of the mis-statements occurring are attributed to a compiler of the
eleventh 8 who to have had access to the Acts of St. century,' appears
Magnus, said to have been written by the monk, Theodore, and restored by Ermenric. Under such specious mask, not a few have been deceived, who imagined that the Acts still preserved must have had their origin on a
J
respectable and trustworthy ancient authority. 9 Of the later interpolated
Acts, various manuscript copies have reached our time, and some of these have been already printed. In the Bollandist Library there were various copies. Among these were four distinct ones, 20 taken from a Manuscript Vita S. Magni, belonging to the Library of St. Maximinius of Treves. This
21
latter the Bollandist editor selected as a text for publication.
these, the Jesuit Father Gamans had formerly sent a double copy ; one
of Saints Udalric22 and 23 and the Afra, Augsburg,
2
a some differences of statement. $
From the interpolated Acts of St. Magnus, all subsequent published accounts are chiefly drawn. Those Acts have been printed by Henricus
26 228 Canisius, and by Melchior de Haiminsfeld Goldast, ? while Surius has
1 Mabillon supposed, that the Acts of St. Magnus, as manipulated by Ermenric, had been temerariously enlarged by a later writer. Father Suysken has a suspicion of another interpolation in the original of Ermenric, from a reading found in one manuscript copy, regarding a miracle related in sub- stance, but in different words, from those found in other codices. And that the evident introduction of passages, from Walafrid Strabo's Life of St. Gall, into that of St. Magnus, should not be attributed to Ermen- ric, seems sufficiently established.
taken from the
library
other from a monastery at Ratisbon. * Among all of these might be found
18 "
There exists a copy ot the interpolated Acts of St. Magnus, and written by an anony- mous monk of Ratisbon. It bears the
ment, denique ab anonymo recentiore digesta et aucta. "
21 By him and by Mabillon allusion is
made to the as the Acta or Vita Tract,
Pseudo-Theodori, a title by which it shall be subsequently designated.
"Ex
codice MS. Augustae ad SS. Udalr. et
Afram ab an. 700 conscripto, in 4 Tit. Legendae aliquot SS. lit. z. n. 36-" In his
M
Vetara Analecta," Mabillon inserts a tract, written by a certain monk, of Ratisbon, whose name is not given, and in reference to his own temptations. After returning from
Fulda to Ratisbon, alluding to his labours by "
following title :
pergam. antiquiss.
candlelight, the monk writes
vero redii Vitam S. Magni scripsi, compul-
from the time when
Romans and called Castra Regince"
sus fratrum duorum
" vol. Picturesque Europe,"
intimis et assi- duis, Wilhelmi scilicet ex congregatione nostra, et alterius qui ad nos discendi causa
ex Monasterio S. Magni \enit Adalham d ic- tus, qui nunc—in S. Alfrre ccenobio abbas est
*' Whether weight or consideration might be attributable to the earliest versions, the
precihus
v. , p. 274.
25 See Acta Sanctorum," tomus ii. , Sep- tembris vi. De Sancto Magno, &c, Com-
constitutus. " Pars
had already premised, that he left the Monas- tery of St. Einmeram at Ratisbon, A. D. 1062, so that he must have written the Acts of St. Magnus, after the middle of the eleventh century. This is further established, from certain passages to be found in a Prologue, attached to those Acts.
ii.
:
Postquam
it was fortified the by —
This unknown writer
26 " In
Ingolstad,
Antiquae Lectiones," tomus v. ,
a. d. This has been taken 1604.
additions made are so faulty in chronological accuracy, in several places, that even those Acts are rendered self-contradictory.
20Onehasfortitlethesewords "VitaS.
Magnoaldi, qui et Magnus, discipuli S. Columbani et Galli. " The second has this
"
aldi, ex Monacho Luxoviensi, abbatis monas- terii Faucium, in dicecesi Augustana, a Theodoro ejus socio primum conscripta,
deinde ab Hermenrico, Elewangensi mona- cho, recensita et aucta. " The other two properly add after the foregoing announce-
heading :
Vita Sancti Magni seu Magno-
22
festival occurs on the 4th ofJuly.
OrWaldric,BishopofAugsburg, His
23 Or Afre, Martyr at Augsburg. His feast is held on the 5th of August.
24 " Ratisbon is one of the oldest cities of centralEurope. Someofitsbuildingsdate
mentarius Praevius, sect, i. , pp. 700 to 702.
from a vellum manuscript belonging to the
Monastery of St. Magnus, near the bridge at
Ratisbon. In the year 1725, this work, re-
printed and put into greater order by James
Basnage, was published in seven folio
volumes, at Amsterdam, under the title,
''
Thesaurus Monumentorum Ecclesiasti- corum. " It contains prefaces and valuable notes by the editor.
:
Besides
September 6. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 127
likewise the Life of St. Magnus. In 1621, Martin, Abbot of Fussen, edited the Acts of St. Magnus in Latin. Mathew Rader 2 9 wrote a Life of the saint, from the same compilation in "Bavaria Pia. "3° Again, Father Ludovicus Babenstuber composed the Acts of St. Magnus, in Latin, and to these he has added the particulars of many miracles wrought through the merits of the holy abbot. Father John Colgan had intended to issue the Acts of St. Magnus at the present date, as we find from the posthumous
Magnus
of St. Columbanus, as 8 who Jonas,3
Manuscripts. 3
2
Stephen
1 Notices of him are in the work of Father
list of his
White, S. J. 3
paragraphs.
In the year 1729, a Life of St. Magnus appeared in German, and by some anonymous writer belonging to the Monastery at Fussen. In this are inscribed many miracles, ascribed to the virtues of the Patron. Notices
The Benedictines 33 have the Acts of St. in sixteen Magnus,
In the Annals of his Order, Mabillon also has allusion to him. 34
of this holy abbot are to be found in Les Petits Bollandistes,35 under the *5
name of Magne or Mang, and by R«v. S. Baring-Gould. 3 —
—e old attributed to Theodorus
According to th Acts, Campodunensis
meaning Kempten St. Magnoald, or Magnus, was born in Hibemia. 37 Such account has been followed by nearly all subsequent writers who have treatedabouthim. Wemayhereobserv—ethatMagnoalduswasthenameby which he is first introduced to our notice Magnus was a title afterwards given him to designate his eminence and virtues. That statement of his having been a native of Ireland, however, has been questioned by Father Suysken, who thinks it more probable that he was born in Germany. Not believing St. to have been a
disciple
wrote a life of him, does not introduce such a person to the reader^ and
2? In ' ' Almanicarum Rerum 31 See " Actuum Sanctorum Scriptores," Catalogus
tomus i. , Francfort, 1606. This is intro- quae MS. habentur, ordine Mensium et
duced with the following epigraph, which Father Suysken had not discovered in any
Dierum. ''
32 See
emendatus et distinctus. " After chapter the 34 See " Annales Ordinis S. Benedicti,"
xiii. is another heading, which indicates a tomus i. , lib. xi. , sect, xvii. , p. 309 ; lib. xii. , "
"
mitae de Vita S. Magni Confessoris, sodalis
Apologia pro Hibernia," cap. iv. ,
other copy of the life:
S. Theodori ere-
p. 44.
33 See
Acta Sanctorum Ordinis S. Bene- sui, ab Ermenrico Elewangensi monacho dicti," tomus ii. , sec. ii. , pp. 505 to 510.
continuation of the work: Ermenrici sect, xxix. , p. 355 ; lib. xiii. , sect, xxxiii. , pp.
Elewangensis monachi supplementum. " On comparing this with the edition of Canisius,
whole periods and even chapters are wanting in the latter, not to speak of many minor differences.
28 See "De Probatis Sanctorum Vitis,"
vol. v. , vi. Septembris, pp. 73 to 81. The
Life is comprised in thirty-three paragraphs. In the third edition of Surius, the Acts of
St. Magnus, as published by Canisius, are to be found.
29 Born in Inichingen in the Tyrol, A. P.
1 At the of he entered the 561. age twenty,
Jesuit Order. This learned man died at Munich, on the 22nd of December, a. d.
392, 393-
35 See "Les Vies des Saints," tome x. ,
See Michaud's " Univer- Biographie
1634.
selle, Ancienne et Moderne," tome xxxv. , P- 59.
30 The well-known
Sancta "appeared in three folio volumes,
"
1615-1624-1627. "Bavaria Pia supplementary volume published in 1628, and enriched by Sadeler's beautiful en-
gravings.
work,
Jour
de Septembre, p. 528.
"
"
vie
& See " Lives of the Saints," vol. ix. , Sep-
tember 6, pp. 94, 95.
3? See the Bollandists' " Acta Sanctorum,"
tomus ii. , Septembris vi. De Sancto Magno Monasterii Faucensis Abbate Prime Fuessse in Suevia. Vita auctore, ut fertur, Theodoro monacho Campodunensi, ab Ermenrico Elewangensi aucta," et ab alio interpolata, cap. i. , p.
—" De Rebus Britannicis Collectanea," vol. i. , p. 38.
s6 This miracle is alluded to, in the Ninth Lesson of the Saint's Office, as contained in the Aberdeen Breviary.
"Kalendars of Scottish
fuit fundator. "
Saints," p. 278. See tomus i. , p. 395.
6o
6l See " Les Fetits Hollandistes, " Vies des
Saints," vol. x. , Jour vie Saptembre, p. 529.
Monasticon
September 6. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
123
62 account has been left in Manuscript,^ by an unknown monk of St. Mary's
the church and possessions of St. Bees sustained considerable injury.
This
Monastery, at York.
At the 6th of September, St. Bega is venerated, according to the
11 of Martyrologium Anglicanum"
Wilson,6* 6s Arthurus,66 and Ferrarius,
John
Wion. 6? In the anonymous Calendar of Irish Saints,68 St. Bega is mentioned
at the same day. She is likewise commemorated in the Circle of -the Seasons, at this date/9 If we are to credit Dempster's statement^ St. Bega was venerated in Scotland, on this day, and at a place called Kilbeg. Also
1
is she commemorated by David Camerarius,? at the 8th September. In
Scotland, she was honoured at Kilbucho,? 2 and at Kilbagie. 73 There is a glebe likewise at Kilbegie ;? 4 and probably Kilbagie,75 in Clackmannan is
named after her. Throughout England and Scotland, also, a feast has been
assigned to St. Bees, on the 31st of October. ? 6 This is the date given for
her chief festival, in the Breviary of Aberdeen, and also by Greven, in his additions to Usuard. Under the name of St. Bees, it is said that she was likewise honoured on the 22nd of November. 77 Again, Gabriel Bucelin? 8 hasreferredherfeasttothe28thofDecember. BesidestheNatalisforher death—generally supposed to have been the 31st of October—the foregoing festivals must have reference to the translation of her relics, or to some special commemoration intended to increase popular devotion for her. Yet, perhaps it is more probable, especially in latter times, that some errors of date may have crept into the kalendars, or some confusion of correct identi- fication has probably occurred.
Assuming a gifted Irish pilgrim's visit to the Shrine of St. Bees, and
enquiries there made, to be incidents of real life,? 9 it would appear, that the
natives of Cumberland, in the present century, know little regarding this stranger virgin, who had once been held by their ancestors in distinguished honour. 80 It was otherwise in those middle ages, when the chronicler of her fame and miracles could only relate what was most clear, coming from the evidence of many Cumbrians, and what most deserved belief. There could
62 Anno Di. 1315. Robertus Brus obsi- debat Carleolum. Quo tempore Jacobus Duglas multa mala fecit apud Egremont, et spoliavit eccl. S. Begae, ac maneria de Cletter et Stainebume prions S. Begoe combusserunt. " —Leland, " De Rebus Brni etane^mei P4,
73 See Statistical Account of Scotland,"
vol. viii. , p. 605, and vol xiv. , p. 623.
i! T fi^? nllH ^n° AM ;K
Koran's
f
K<Z^^LTM
> AbbatlbuSCt
6
*-> In
66 In Sacro
67
" Historise Catholics Ibernice Com- pendium," tomus i. , lib iv. , cap. xi. , p. ci.
p. {^
<t Edition of 1608. «"
t0 ngli Martyrol°gy
Catalogus Generalis Sanctorum. " Gynoeceo.
? A Edltlon of l6
In
68 Published by O'Sullivan Beare, in
1%In "
Lignum Vita," lib. iii.
Appendix.
°' See p. 250.
70 See Bishop Forbes' "Kalendars of bv Ml's- J. Sadlier, —"Historical and
Scottish Saints," Menologium Scoticum, Legendary Poems," pp. 360, 361, New
p. 210.
7' See ibid. Scottish Entries in the
Kalendar of David Camerarius, p. 240.
York, 1869, 8vo. 8o He says :—
7* See Chalmers' " vol. Caledonia,"
"
I stood within the fontless porch,
I paced the empty nave, The very verger of the church
A false tradition gave. "—Ibid.
ii. , p. 958; "Statistical Account of Scotland,"
"
vol. iv. , p. 344 ; and Origines Parochiales
'
Scotiae, part 1. . p. 177.
74 See " part ii. , p. 822.
Parochiales Scotia,"
Origines
75 See "New Statistical Account of Scot- land " vol viii" pp 3' 128'
76See Rt- Rev- Patrick F-
"In* Saints in Great Britain," chap v. ,
160.
Jl ?
of John Wllson
'
S5.
f
79 See the verses headed " Saint Bees," m the admirably edited Poems of Thomas D'Arcy M'Gee, with copious notes. Also an Introduction and Biographical Sketch,
4°-
the Menologium Benedictinum. "
i24 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [September 6.
be no end to his narrative, states the compiler of her Acts, were all such
signs of her sanctity and miracles to be written, regarding the Virgin Bega, who now reigns in endless glory, and with Him, who is infinite and eternal.
ARTICLE II. —ST. MAGNUS, MAGOBALDUS, MAGNOALD, OR MAGNOBALDUS, APOSTLE OF SUABIA.
[SIXTH AND SEVENTH CENTURIES. } CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION—WRITERS OF THE ACTS OF ST. MAGNOALDUS OR MAGNUS—IRELAND THE COUNTRY OF HIS BIRTH—PERIOD OF HIS NATIVITY—HE BECOMES A DISCIPLE OF ST. COLUMBAN—SAINTS MAGNOALD AND GALL REMAIN IN SWITZERLAND— ADMONITION TO MAGNOALD OF ST. COLUMBAN AND PROPHECY BEFORE SETTING OUT FOR ITALY.
While abundant light has been thrown on the incidents of modern history, as also on the life and actions of celebrated characters who have lived in our own times, owing to the issue of printed works, and the recorded memoranda or correspondence of contemporaneous writers ; far different are the old manuscript memorials of doubtful authenticity, or whose authors and sources for information are not sufficiently accredited, when we seek to establish facts relating to many of our old-world saints. Such, it must be admitted, is often the case, with regard to acts, conveying to us the most remote traditions,inreferencetothepresentholyman. Theonlyancientauthority for his life is, unfortunately, not altogether trustworthy. This is a memoir, which it is stated had been written by his companion and disciple Theodore,1 and who laid it under the abbot's head, when he had been buried. Then the account runs, that when the body was disinterred, and on the stone coffin being opened, in the ninth century, the book had been taken out, and when
2 to to have been a forgery of the tenth or twelfth century. 3 This Life is made up of long extracts from Jonas, the monk of Bobbio, who wrote the Acts of St. Columban, and from Walafridus Strabo,* who wrote the Acts of St. Gall. EventsrelatedofothersaretransferredtoMagnoald. s Wherethecomposer of this Life had genuine lives to manipulate, and convert to a memoir of St. Magnoald, his book is interesting ; but, when he brings the abbot to that ground where his abbey had been founded, and for which the lives of St.
it wa—s delivered to —of
greatly decayed by age, Ermenric, Elwangen,
re-edit. However, it is supposed
at least in
great part
Columban and St. Gall furnished no data, frequently he lapses into foolish
Article ii. —Chapter i. —' Called by cujusdam impostoris. "
Latin writers, Theodorus Campedonensis,
from the place where he passed a part of his
life as an abbot. He was a monk of St.
Gall and of St. Magnus. It is stated, that
by command of Bishop Tozzo, he wrote the siastici Francorum," tomus ii. , at A. D. lifeofhismaster,St. Magnus. Heflourished
A. D. 680. See Rev. Dr. William Cave's
"
Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Historia Literaria," volumen i. Sseculum Monothe- leticum, p. 595.
2 He died a. d. 866.
3 Thus Basnage states
nee Ermenrici illud est opusculum, sed
:
" Nee Theodori
Bishop of Laon, who flourished in the seventh century, are related verbatim of Magnoald, the writer only changing the letter C into M. See Benkert's " Athanasia," vol. xi. Kritische Priifung d, Lebensgesch der Heil. Magnus, p. 414. Wurzburg, 1832.
* Pere Charles le Cointe holds the writer
to have been a synchronus of St. Magnus,
and to have thus flourished
to Walafridus Strabo. See "Annates Eccle-
614.
s Thus, the incidents told of St. Cagnoald,
prior
September 6. ]
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 25
6 This
about the bona fides of Theodore's Acts has been drawn in a great measure from an opinion of the learned Father Mabillon, that they were composed by some impostor i under such a shadowy title.
legend.
scepticism
This, however, is too sweeping a charge, and it seems far more probable that the writer's errors are owing to ignorance rather than to deliberate forgery. The Bollandists have very fully treated about St. Magnoaldus, or Magnus, andthen attributed to the monk Theodore, of Kempten, as taken from a manuscript " of St. Maximinus of Treves.
12
attributed to the saint's inter- cession. ^ This holy abbot's Acts have been edited by Father Constantine Suysken, S. J. , who has laboured much to investigate or unravel the obscure and often contradictory materials that are left for enquiry. In the first place the original life, as stated, if written by Theodorus,14 and buried with the saint, was almost defaced and scarcely legible, when discovered in the ninth century, and at present it is not known to exist. Again, by four
1 persons, that copy is said to have been given to a certain Ermenric, ^ a
monk and levite of Elewanga, to revise and restore. Neither is that particular manuscript to be found, and we know not if the task committed to him had been reliably executed. But, in the third place, that same work
l6 ;
at the 6thof
follows the unauthentic life of the saint,
previous commentary,9
September.
Afterwards succeeds an account of miracles,
8 Thereis a
to have fallen into other hands
whether through ignorance or fraud remains to be solved. When and where
while in the
the Acts of St. Magnus have become vitiated, in point of historic accuracy
appears
process
6"
See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's Lives of
the Saints," vol. ix. , September 6, p. 94.
disciple, of St. Magnus in his apostolic labours, to have been witness of nearly all the miracles he relates, and to have been a friend, at the hour of his death.
15 By some, he is also named Ermenold, who lived in the time of the Blessed Raban Maur, whose life may be found in the second volume of this work, at the 4th of February, Art. iv. Ermenric became the seventh Abbot of the monastery of Elewan- gen, in the diocese of Augustana, a. d. 845, according to Mabillon. In his epistles to Gundramnus and Ruodolfus, he speaks very modestly of his abilities. " An vero S.
Magni Vitam, qualis typis edita est exara- verit, certo pronunciare non licet. " "Acta Sanctorum Ordinis S. Benedicti," ssec. ii.
16 The third revisor or in interpolator,
reference to Ermenric, states, that the latter, compelled by obedience, and not willing to contemn the order of a pontiff, undertook
the patch-work, according to the best of his ability, although little learned to amend and insert what should be proper. However, he accomplished the task, through Divine assistance, renewing the writing and correct- ing what he found in a confused state, and making the text clearer by means of chapters. To his emendations or possibly corruptions of the original text, Father Suysken justly objects, and naturally preferred he had assumed only the role of amanuensis, and not that of interpolator. The Bollandist editor
:
" Qui Magnum appellat
7 He adds
Magnoaldum, ut Chagnoaldi sancti Colum- bani discipuli facta personato suo Magnoaldo affingat. Non immoror fabulis illius impos- toris observandis, quas in actis sanctorum nostrorum manifeste detexi. Nihil itaque certi sive de Magno, sive de Theodoro nobis succurrit, nisi quod eos non Columbani, sed Galli discipulos, non Scotto-Hibernos, sed Alamanos fuisse constat ex Walafiido Strabone, qui eos Willimari presbyteri clericos extitisse ait, — in sancti
antequam
Galli disciplinam cooptarentur. " Annales Ordinis S. Benedicti," tomus i. , lib. xiii. ,
sect, xxxiii. , p. 393.
8
See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus ii. , Sep- tembris vi. De Sancto Magno Monasterii Faucensis, Abbate Primo Fussse in Sueria, pp. 700 to 78x.
9 In thirteen sections, and one hundred and seventy-five paragraphs.
10
In eight chapters, and seventy-eight paragraphs, with accompanying notes.
11
Collated with the editions of Henricus
Canisius and of Melchior Goldast, together
with six other manuscripts-
12
Miracula auctore P. Ludovico Babens- tuber Benedictino Ettalensi.
13 These miracles are contained in seven
chapters, and in one hundred and fifty-six paragraphs, with illustrative notes.
"
M Said to have been a monk or eremite of adds: "utinam, inquam, ipsa Theodori
Campidonum or Kempten. This Theodore verba, confusa utcumque gestorum serie, is represented as the companion, or rather integre fideliterque posteritate tradidisset. "
10
ofemendation, —
26 LIVESOFTHEIRISHSAINTS. [September6.
1 theerrorshavecreptincannotwellbedetermined ? but,asuspicionremains,
j
that many of the mis-statements occurring are attributed to a compiler of the
eleventh 8 who to have had access to the Acts of St. century,' appears
Magnus, said to have been written by the monk, Theodore, and restored by Ermenric. Under such specious mask, not a few have been deceived, who imagined that the Acts still preserved must have had their origin on a
J
respectable and trustworthy ancient authority. 9 Of the later interpolated
Acts, various manuscript copies have reached our time, and some of these have been already printed. In the Bollandist Library there were various copies. Among these were four distinct ones, 20 taken from a Manuscript Vita S. Magni, belonging to the Library of St. Maximinius of Treves. This
21
latter the Bollandist editor selected as a text for publication.
these, the Jesuit Father Gamans had formerly sent a double copy ; one
of Saints Udalric22 and 23 and the Afra, Augsburg,
2
a some differences of statement. $
From the interpolated Acts of St. Magnus, all subsequent published accounts are chiefly drawn. Those Acts have been printed by Henricus
26 228 Canisius, and by Melchior de Haiminsfeld Goldast, ? while Surius has
1 Mabillon supposed, that the Acts of St. Magnus, as manipulated by Ermenric, had been temerariously enlarged by a later writer. Father Suysken has a suspicion of another interpolation in the original of Ermenric, from a reading found in one manuscript copy, regarding a miracle related in sub- stance, but in different words, from those found in other codices. And that the evident introduction of passages, from Walafrid Strabo's Life of St. Gall, into that of St. Magnus, should not be attributed to Ermen- ric, seems sufficiently established.
taken from the
library
other from a monastery at Ratisbon. * Among all of these might be found
18 "
There exists a copy ot the interpolated Acts of St. Magnus, and written by an anony- mous monk of Ratisbon. It bears the
ment, denique ab anonymo recentiore digesta et aucta. "
21 By him and by Mabillon allusion is
made to the as the Acta or Vita Tract,
Pseudo-Theodori, a title by which it shall be subsequently designated.
"Ex
codice MS. Augustae ad SS. Udalr. et
Afram ab an. 700 conscripto, in 4 Tit. Legendae aliquot SS. lit. z. n. 36-" In his
M
Vetara Analecta," Mabillon inserts a tract, written by a certain monk, of Ratisbon, whose name is not given, and in reference to his own temptations. After returning from
Fulda to Ratisbon, alluding to his labours by "
following title :
pergam. antiquiss.
candlelight, the monk writes
vero redii Vitam S. Magni scripsi, compul-
from the time when
Romans and called Castra Regince"
sus fratrum duorum
" vol. Picturesque Europe,"
intimis et assi- duis, Wilhelmi scilicet ex congregatione nostra, et alterius qui ad nos discendi causa
ex Monasterio S. Magni \enit Adalham d ic- tus, qui nunc—in S. Alfrre ccenobio abbas est
*' Whether weight or consideration might be attributable to the earliest versions, the
precihus
v. , p. 274.
25 See Acta Sanctorum," tomus ii. , Sep- tembris vi. De Sancto Magno, &c, Com-
constitutus. " Pars
had already premised, that he left the Monas- tery of St. Einmeram at Ratisbon, A. D. 1062, so that he must have written the Acts of St. Magnus, after the middle of the eleventh century. This is further established, from certain passages to be found in a Prologue, attached to those Acts.
ii.
:
Postquam
it was fortified the by —
This unknown writer
26 " In
Ingolstad,
Antiquae Lectiones," tomus v. ,
a. d. This has been taken 1604.
additions made are so faulty in chronological accuracy, in several places, that even those Acts are rendered self-contradictory.
20Onehasfortitlethesewords "VitaS.
Magnoaldi, qui et Magnus, discipuli S. Columbani et Galli. " The second has this
"
aldi, ex Monacho Luxoviensi, abbatis monas- terii Faucium, in dicecesi Augustana, a Theodoro ejus socio primum conscripta,
deinde ab Hermenrico, Elewangensi mona- cho, recensita et aucta. " The other two properly add after the foregoing announce-
heading :
Vita Sancti Magni seu Magno-
22
festival occurs on the 4th ofJuly.
OrWaldric,BishopofAugsburg, His
23 Or Afre, Martyr at Augsburg. His feast is held on the 5th of August.
24 " Ratisbon is one of the oldest cities of centralEurope. Someofitsbuildingsdate
mentarius Praevius, sect, i. , pp. 700 to 702.
from a vellum manuscript belonging to the
Monastery of St. Magnus, near the bridge at
Ratisbon. In the year 1725, this work, re-
printed and put into greater order by James
Basnage, was published in seven folio
volumes, at Amsterdam, under the title,
''
Thesaurus Monumentorum Ecclesiasti- corum. " It contains prefaces and valuable notes by the editor.
:
Besides
September 6. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 127
likewise the Life of St. Magnus. In 1621, Martin, Abbot of Fussen, edited the Acts of St. Magnus in Latin. Mathew Rader 2 9 wrote a Life of the saint, from the same compilation in "Bavaria Pia. "3° Again, Father Ludovicus Babenstuber composed the Acts of St. Magnus, in Latin, and to these he has added the particulars of many miracles wrought through the merits of the holy abbot. Father John Colgan had intended to issue the Acts of St. Magnus at the present date, as we find from the posthumous
Magnus
of St. Columbanus, as 8 who Jonas,3
Manuscripts. 3
2
Stephen
1 Notices of him are in the work of Father
list of his
White, S. J. 3
paragraphs.
In the year 1729, a Life of St. Magnus appeared in German, and by some anonymous writer belonging to the Monastery at Fussen. In this are inscribed many miracles, ascribed to the virtues of the Patron. Notices
The Benedictines 33 have the Acts of St. in sixteen Magnus,
In the Annals of his Order, Mabillon also has allusion to him. 34
of this holy abbot are to be found in Les Petits Bollandistes,35 under the *5
name of Magne or Mang, and by R«v. S. Baring-Gould. 3 —
—e old attributed to Theodorus
According to th Acts, Campodunensis
meaning Kempten St. Magnoald, or Magnus, was born in Hibemia. 37 Such account has been followed by nearly all subsequent writers who have treatedabouthim. Wemayhereobserv—ethatMagnoalduswasthenameby which he is first introduced to our notice Magnus was a title afterwards given him to designate his eminence and virtues. That statement of his having been a native of Ireland, however, has been questioned by Father Suysken, who thinks it more probable that he was born in Germany. Not believing St. to have been a
disciple
wrote a life of him, does not introduce such a person to the reader^ and
2? In ' ' Almanicarum Rerum 31 See " Actuum Sanctorum Scriptores," Catalogus
tomus i. , Francfort, 1606. This is intro- quae MS. habentur, ordine Mensium et
duced with the following epigraph, which Father Suysken had not discovered in any
Dierum. ''
32 See
emendatus et distinctus. " After chapter the 34 See " Annales Ordinis S. Benedicti,"
xiii. is another heading, which indicates a tomus i. , lib. xi. , sect, xvii. , p. 309 ; lib. xii. , "
"
mitae de Vita S. Magni Confessoris, sodalis
Apologia pro Hibernia," cap. iv. ,
other copy of the life:
S. Theodori ere-
p. 44.
33 See
Acta Sanctorum Ordinis S. Bene- sui, ab Ermenrico Elewangensi monacho dicti," tomus ii. , sec. ii. , pp. 505 to 510.
continuation of the work: Ermenrici sect, xxix. , p. 355 ; lib. xiii. , sect, xxxiii. , pp.
Elewangensis monachi supplementum. " On comparing this with the edition of Canisius,
whole periods and even chapters are wanting in the latter, not to speak of many minor differences.
28 See "De Probatis Sanctorum Vitis,"
vol. v. , vi. Septembris, pp. 73 to 81. The
Life is comprised in thirty-three paragraphs. In the third edition of Surius, the Acts of
St. Magnus, as published by Canisius, are to be found.
29 Born in Inichingen in the Tyrol, A. P.
1 At the of he entered the 561. age twenty,
Jesuit Order. This learned man died at Munich, on the 22nd of December, a. d.
392, 393-
35 See "Les Vies des Saints," tome x. ,
See Michaud's " Univer- Biographie
1634.
selle, Ancienne et Moderne," tome xxxv. , P- 59.
30 The well-known
Sancta "appeared in three folio volumes,
"
1615-1624-1627. "Bavaria Pia supplementary volume published in 1628, and enriched by Sadeler's beautiful en-
gravings.
work,
Jour
de Septembre, p. 528.
"
"
vie
& See " Lives of the Saints," vol. ix. , Sep-
tember 6, pp. 94, 95.
3? See the Bollandists' " Acta Sanctorum,"
tomus ii. , Septembris vi. De Sancto Magno Monasterii Faucensis Abbate Prime Fuessse in Suevia. Vita auctore, ut fertur, Theodoro monacho Campodunensi, ab Ermenrico Elewangensi aucta," et ab alio interpolata, cap. i. , p.
