3^ However, Father Joachim Lorenzo
Villanueva
be- lieved in their genuineness, at least, so far as some are concerned.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v3
The Life of St.
Patrick, contained deposited, in the Library of Trinity College, in the Book of Armagh, was written by
Muirchu-Maccu-Mactheni, who relates, that
he composed this tract, by command of
who died A. D. tiones Aidi," has been placed, at the end of
the Life, and closing it is the note " Hsec
:
pauca de Sancti Patricii peritia et virtutibus Muirchu Maccu Machtheni dictante Aiduo
Slebtiensis civitatis episcopo conscripsit. " A comparison of the Lives will serve to show, that the Life of St. Patrick, by Pro- bus, the Fifth in Colgan's collection, is only an amended version of that, by Machtheni, in the Book of Armagh. A folio has been lost from it, but identity of subject and com- position enables us to supply this deficiency, from the Life of Probus. In the year 937, the Canon of Patrick was encased by Uo- nough, son of Flann, King of Ireland. This case was perhaps the leathern satchel, still with and which is of
" ofthe Irish Proceedings Royal Academy,"
vol. iii. , pp. 259, 260, 316 to 324. See Dr.
"
of
A summary of contents, headed " Annota-
Aedh, Bishop
Sletty,
692.
preserved it,
antiquity. Dr. Petrie has given drawings of this, with a description of the Book itself.
In the of the eleventh beginning
century, whenBryan Boroimhe, Kingof Ireland,visited Armagh, his Secretary and Confessor, Maol- suthian. Latinized, Calvus Ferennis, made an entry in it, in Bryan's presence. The Book was often used, for the administration of solemn oaths. A keeper was appointed, and eight townlands, known as Balli Moyre, were near Armagh, and conferred on the hereditary keepers, the Mac Moyers, who held them, in 1656, when Sir James Ware wrote. Florence Mac Moyer was one of the suborned witnesses, who gave evidence against Dr. Oliver Plunket, and in a blank
very great
fol. , xi. cent. , Conf. S. Pat. , ff. 158-166.
'3 A considerable portion of the " Confes- sion," as given by the writers of the British Museum and Bodleian Library copies, is not contained in the Book of Armagh version. It seems probable, that the latter, being the oldest copy, is also the most authentic. In page is found the entry, Liber Florentini her version of this. Sister Mary Francis Muire, June 29, 1662. Edward Lhuyd, the Clare Cusack has very properly enclosed, eminent Welsh Philologist, who died in within brackets, those portions she added
Dublin. See Sister Mary Francis Clare
Cusack's " Life of St. Patrick, Apostle ot
Ireland," chap, ii. , pp. 59 to 68. See also
Ecclesiastical Architecture of Ire- land, anterior to the Anglo-Norman In- vasion," &c. , part ii. , sect, iii. , subsect. i. , pp. 332 to 338.
7 A version of it has been published, in Sir William Betham's "Antiquarian Re- searches," vol. i. , part ii. , pp. 417 to 432. A description of The Book of Armagh is to be found in his Vol. i. , pp. 243 to 442. In J. T. Gilbert's " Facsimiles of National Manu-
scriptsof Ireland," partii. , there is to be found a version of St. Patrick's "Confession," as taken from the Book of Armagh, which is in course of editorial preparation by Very Rev. Dean Reeves, with a view of its being pub- lished.
^ It was at the time of the destroyed,
French Revolution.
9 This is described, as a vel. fol. 3. 16.
'° avel. xi. It is classed, Nero E. i. , fol. ,
cent, ff. 1676-1726.
" See Rev. Dr. Charles O'Conor's
"Rerum Hibernicarum Scriptores," tomus
i. Prolegomena, pars, i. , p. cxx.
" These are classed, Fell, i, in a vel fol. ,xi. cent. Conf. S. Pat. , ff. 7-13. , and, 3, in a vel.
Petrie's
2C
4^2 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [March 17.
There are other different copies of this One of those editions, by Sir James
"
Besides these, English translations of St. Patrick's
pubHshed. One of these appeared,^? * in Dublin, edited by the late Ven. Archdeacon, John Hamilton ;=^° and, later still, at Kenmare, Sister Mary Francis Clare Cusack has presented one, very correctly rendered, with the Latin text, in parallel columns. ^^ This latter is one of the most authentic and valuable editions of it, as yet printed. ''^ In addition to St. Patrick's
the Bollandists/+ in the year 1668. work, pubHshed by various persons.
^s
Dr. Charles was O'Conor,^^
in the
issued, in the year 1814 ;'? a third, by Sir William Betham, saw the light, in the year 1826, while a fourth,'^ by Rev. Dr. Joachim Lorenzo Villanueva, was published, in the year 1835, in Dublin. These several versions have been made, from one or other of the ancient manuscripts, already described.
Ware, appeared,
year 1656 ;
another, by
" his letter to Confession,"
or as also the Canons Carotic,
King Coroticus,^3
of two Councils, which he is said to have held, are considered, by some of
the best critics, to have been written by him. A Cottonian Manuscript, in the British Museum, contains the text of the Epistle to Caroticus. ^* It has been published, and even with an English version. ^s Certain Synodal Canons are attributed to St. Patrick's authorship alone f^ and, again, there are others, which are ascribed to St. Patrick, to St. Auxilius, and to St. Iserni- nus. '7 Canons—differing from the foregoing—have been edited, likewise ;
from the Bodleian copy. The " Confes- St. Patrick's Life.
" ^' sion of St. Patrick, she has carefully and
See her admirable and interesting work,
conscientiously edited, while the marginal notes are collations, with five different
copies, viz. : B, representing the Cotton MS. , British Museum, F, denoting copies I or 3, Fell. Bodleian Library, V, signifying Villaneuva, corresponding with the BoUan- dists, and W, standing for Sir James Ware's version.
"The Life of St. Patrick, Apostle of Ire-
'* From a
cop5r, procured by
Father
'3 A of this was Rev. copy published by
Andrew Denis, Atrebas, of the Society of
Jesus, from St. Vedast's Monastery.
•'
'5 In
cio. " Confessio S. Patricii, pp. i to 23. —
Dr. Charles O'Conor, in " Rerum Hiberni-
Opuscula adscripta Sancto Patri-
carum Scriptores," tomus i. Prolegomena, pars, i. , pp. cxvii. to cxx. The editor adds some notes to the foregoing Epistle. The
•^ Compare MS. Bodl. , Rawl. , B. 505. ""
Rev. John Lynch, P. P. of Ballymena, has Lives of the Irish Saints," in Irish. See appended the Confessio," in five chapters, also Dr. O'Conor's Catalogue of Stowe and the'* "Epistola," to his "Life of St.
MSS. and MS. Laud. 95. See Sir Thomas Patrick. "
Duffus Hardy's "Descriptive Catalogue of ^* There are two other Manuscript copies Materials relating to the History of Great extant. Fell, i, and 3, in the Bodleian
Britain and Ireland to the end of the reign of Henry VII. ," vol. i. , part i. , p. 71.
Library, Oxford.
'7 See " Remm Hibernicarum
" Life of St of
Patrick, Apostle Ireland,"
chap, xi. , pp. 612 to 620. Her text is from the Cotton Manuscript, in the British Museum.
tores," tomus i. cvii. to cxvii.
'^
Scrip- Prolegomena, pars, i. , pp.
This version coincides with the BoUan- dists' one, and he gives various readings, from other Codices, without however indi- cating the sources.
'9 See " The Confession of St. Patrick,
These are found, in an old book of
concerning his Life and Conduct.
"
Trans-
lated from the original Latin, as contained
in an ancient Manuscript, over 1,000 years
old. Dublin, 8vo.
'"' He was then P. P. of St. Michan's
Church, and it was written a short time pre-
vious to his death, and published in 1859. To this had been prefixed, a Dedication to
his parishioners, as likewise a summary of
^s
See Sister Mary Francis Clare Cusack's
Confession" have been
land," chap, xi. , pp. 580 to 611. ^' ''
Her copy of the Confession" is taken
from the Book of Armagh, as transcribed by
the Rev. T. O'Mahony of Trinity College, with various readings, from copies, found in the British Museum, in the BodleianLi brai ies, and in that copy, printed by the Bollandists.
**
Canons, belonging to the Cottonian Library,
"
Tit. Ixvi. See Villanueva's
Ibernorum Apostoli, Synodi, Canones, Opuscula," &c. Scholia, n. 2, p. 20.
^'^ See Sir Henry Spelman's "Concilia, Decreta, Leges, Constitutiones in Re Eccle-
siarum Orbis Britannici," published in 1639. These Canons were copied by Wilkins, Ware and Villaneueva. They are taken from a Codex of the Benedictine Library,
and preserved, in the College of Corpus Christi, at Cambridge, Num. 221. The original was found to be defective, however,
Sancti Patricii,
March 17. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 403
and, by some of the most judicious critics,^^ they have been attributed to St.
Patrick, the Apostle of Ireland, while other writers contend, they were drawn up, by a St. Patrick, called the Junior. ^9 Some Synodal Decrees3° are stated
tohavebeenpenned,byoursaint; but,greatdoubtsareentertained,regard- ing their authenticity.
3^ However, Father Joachim Lorenzo Villanueva be- lieved in their genuineness, at least, so far as some are concerned. 3=^ St. Patrick is said to have left behind him certain Proverbs, in the Irish language, which were afterwards rendered into Latin. 33 Another work, attri-
34 as also " De Tri- one,
or " De Epistola,
opening In the Irish language, likewise, there are several prose and poetic tracts, which purport, and are stated, to have been written by St. Patrick. However, we have no sufficient evidence
in some passages, which required great 34 Among the works of St. Cyprian, Jaco- critical care for a restoration. bus Pamelius has printed this Tract ; and,
*®
buted to is a " De Abusionibus him, book,
Sseculi," that the
bus Habitaculis. " 35 It —is
quite apparent, notwithstanding
Charta,
the assertion in the
—Avallonica" Antiquitate
3^
sentence cannot be ascribed to our saint.
Among these may be noted, Arch- it has appeared, also, among the supposi-
bishop Ussher, Sir James Ware, Fresne, Colgan, Martene, D'Achery, Lanigan, &c.
*' According to a theory of some writers, in this case, there might be no contradiction, since they make Palladius, the old Patrick, and the Irish Apostle, the junior Patrick.
3° These were taken, in
tious works of St. Augustine, edited by the
attributed,
Canons, Tit. Ixvi. of the Cottonian collec-
tion. Edmund Martene has edited the
429,
Tribus Habitaculis, coeli, mundi et inferni,"
Frag- ment of an Irish Synodal Decree, thought to have come down from the time of St.
having
This Archbishop Ussher states, and he had
Patrick,
begins with,
Synodus
included, among
Appendix, col. 639.
and which
the works of St. Augustine, as edited by the Benedictine
Ibernensis decrevit," and, seven other
Canons, referring to the payment of Tithes,
part, Augustine,
"i. Dicuntauctoresde-
Ware that it shows,
which
cimas," &c. Both were taken, " ex Cod. Bibliothecse Bigotianse," and they were written more than eight hundred years ago.
"
the original Manuscript. That Treatise has
from the
it possible, may
Monastic
Canterbury, as appears from a prefixed in-
scription. They have been edited, by Sir Patricii, cap. clxxxv. See also, Sir James
Library
of St.
at
to which — sedifica- verbs, Jocelyn alludes,"
in" S. " De lib. James Ware, Opuscula Adscripta Ware, Scriptoribus Hibemias,"
Patricio," p. 87, and, after him, by Wil- kins, in "Concilia Magnse Britannias et Hibemias. " These are preserved, in the old Codex Manuscript of Canons, under the title Ixvi. , and classed, Otho, E. 13. , in the Cottonian collection. This Codex is sup- posed, as dating back to the Anglo-Saxon times. Again, in part, two unauthenticated Patrician Canons are found, in a Cambridge Codex. There are nine Canons, similarly
ii. , cap. i. , p. 102.
35 See ibid. , pp. loi, 102. John Boston,
a Benedictine monk of St. Edmund's Mon- astery, at Bury, who flourished in the be-
ginning of the fifteenth century, under King Henry IV. , and who visited nearly all the chief Libraries of England and Scotland, afterwards wrote a work, " De Scriptoribus
and found in the Codex of in the of Christ year
and " De wrote,
Sir
cannot be the work, either of St. Patrick, or
of St. Augustine ; since, in their times, St. Jerome's version of the Sacred Scriptures had not appeared, and, yet, all the Scrip- tural text, quoted in the Treatise, are taken from his version.
3* See the ScJiolion, subjoined to it, in
cula," &c. Scholia, n. i, p. 146, n. 7, p. 155. Father Joachim Lorenzo Villanueva's
3=^ •' See ibid. , n. i, p. 160, n. i, p. 170, and
begins with,
However,
James
" Anecdotorum," tomus iv. , pp. i, et seq.
3' See Villanueva's " Sancti
They are published, in
Thesaurus Novus
Iber- norum Apostoli, Synodi, Canones, Opus-
on the
Irish Church," Appendix, Nos. vi. , vii. , pp.
di'x to i. , pp. 297
304 to 320.
33 Such is the opinion of Sir James Ware,
in a note to Liber, "De Abusionibus Sseculi," p. 139.
Essays
Early
306.
published the works of St. Patrick, Apostle
of the Irish, in his very voluminous edition,
"Patrilogiae Cursus Com- pletus," &c. , tomus liii.
3? He is assigned a double festival, one on
Patricii,
Sancti Patricii, Ibernorum Apostoli, n. p. 173. See also, on this subject, Rt. Synodi, Canones, Opuscula," &c. Appen-
Rev. Moran's " Bishop
The Abbe has Migne
"De duodecim abusionibus gradibus," tomus vi,, col. 691. Sir James Ware has doubts, as to whether this Treatise should be ascribed or not to St. Patrick ; and, yet, he thinks it be that Irish Book of Pro-
Benedictine Maurists, under this title,
tione plurima plenum. " Sexta Vita S.
"
Patrick, Archbishop of Ibernia, flourished,
Ecclesiasticis.
In this, he stales, that
for its "Tria sunt. " beginning,
also been
Maurists, tomus vi.
404 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [March 17.
to establish their authenticity, and their consequent value, as biographical authorities ; but, hereafter, more at length, shall we endeavour to examine their nature and origin. Many of these were written, apparently at a remote period. Notwithstanding, than those tracts already indicated, we must receive with greater hesitancy the traditional accounts, which profess to con- nect others, with the genuine writings of our saint.
We can have no reason whatever to doubt, that soon after the departure
of our illustrious St. Patrick from earth, many of his disciples and relations
undertook the appropriate and pleasing duty of recording his miracles, virtues, and actions ; indeed, we have assurances, that such was the case, and, therefore, we must refer to the accounts left, regarding his earlier bio-
graphers. It is stated, that St. Loman,37 one of our saint's nephews, and a Bishop of Trim, in Meath, wrote some tract respecting his holy uncle, even while the latter was living. Loman flourished about the middle of the fifth
century. St. Secundinus,38 Bishop of Dunshaughlin,39 in Meath, and another of St. Patrick's nephews, composed a hymn, in praise of his uncle. Colgan has published this composition. It has also been generally thought, St. Cianan,4° or Kienan, Bishop of Damhlaig, or Duleek,^' in East Meath, lived about 480, and that he wrote a Life of St. Patrick. It has been asserted, that St. Maol, or Moel,^^ thought by some, to have been one of St. Patrick's nephews, and the first Bishop of Ardagh,43 wrote a book, on the virtues and miracles of his reputed uncle. He departed, towards the close of the fifth century. —It is said, St. Patrick the Younger 44—by some called a nephew of our saint wrote his Acts, and flourished about the same time. St. Benig- nus,45 Archbishop of Armagh, is accounted to have been one of St. Patrick's earliest biographers, as also St. Fiach,'*^ Bishop of Sletty. St. Evin, or Emhin,47 is also considered to have been the writer of his Acts ; yet, it seems probable, these have been interpolated, by later compilers. The Scholiast on St. Fiach's biography is supposed to have \vritten, in the sixth, or, at latest, in the seventh, century. Again, St. Ultan was one of our Apostle's biographers, andhewasBishopofArdbraccan. Hedepartedthislifeonthe4thofSeptem- ber,48 ^ j3 656. '»9 The Annotations, or Life of St. Patrick, by Tirechan,5° had beeninUssher'spossession. HeusedtheseNotes,incompilingthe"Primor- dia. " Tirechan flourished, towards the middle of the seventh century, or before his master's release. The alumnus wrote, perhaps, before this date,
the 17 th of February, and, another, at the Ilth of October.
3^ His feast occurs, at the 27th of Novem- ber.
39 This is now a parish, in the barony of Ratoath, and its bounds are defined, on the
"
Ordnance Survey Townland Maps for the County of Meath," Sheets 38, 44. The Town proper is on the latter Sheet,
*^ The parish of Ardagh is in the baronies of Ardagh and Moydow. It is shown, on the " Ordnance Survey Townland Maps for the County of Longford," Sheets 14, 19, 20. The town proper is on Sheet 19.
'4 He is thought to have retired to Glas- tonbury, after the death of his uncle, St. Patrick, and to have died there. See re- garding him Ussher's " Britannicarum Ec-
*° His festival is held, on the 24th of clesiarum Antiquitates," chap, xvii. , pp.
November.
4' There are two distinct parishes, one
Duleek, in the baronies of Lower and Upper
''
426, 429, 460 to 464.
^s His feast occurs, at the 9th of November. ^6 His festival is held, on the 12th of
October.
*' His feast is on the 22nd of December. ^^ This is also the date for his festival.
4' See Dr. O'Donovan's " Annals of the
Four Masters," vol. i. , pp. 268, 269.
5= He was a bishop, and by some of our writers, he was classed among the saints. His
feast has been assigned to the 3rd of July, si See " Fac-Similes of National Manu-
Duleek, and this is shown on the
nance Survey Townland Maps for the County of Meath," Sheets 19, 20, 26, 27, 32, 33 ; the other is Duleek Abbey, Upper Duleek barony, shown on Sheets 27, 33.
The tovm of Duleek is on Sheet 27. See ibid.
^
*' niary.
His feast takes place, on the 6th of Feb-
Ord-
March 17. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 405
as stated in the copy, found in the Book of Armagh,si for, it is there said,s« the author obtained his information, from the book or from the oral instruc- tion of his preceptor, St. Ultan. ss Various other biographers succeeded, but many of their compositions are said to have perished, during the wars of the Danes and Northmen. Indeed, no less than sixty-six different Lives of Ire- land's illustrious Patron had already appeared, before the close of the twelfth century, when Jocelyn composed his Acts. S4
The most complete and useful work for information, regarding this great Apostle's career, will be found, in those seven ancient Lives or Tracts,5s pre- pared for the press, and edited, by the learned Father John Colgan. 5S These we shall endeavour to describe, in their order of position. Our celebrated Irish Hagiologist, no doubt, has fallen into various mistakes, while endeavour- ing to investigate the authorship of St. Patrick's several biographies, as in- cluded in his great collection. 57 Considering his foreign residence and position, with the want of aids subsequently provided, his misconceptions were almost inevitable. So far as possible, we shall make some corrections. The First Life, contained in the collection, has been attributed to St. Fiech, or Fiacc,5S regarded as the disciple of St. Patrick. He was the first Bishop of Sletty, and, afterwards, he was recognized, as chief Bishop of Leinster. He
is said to have written a Hymn, partly panegyrical, and partly historical, in which he briefly relates some principal incidents of St. Patrick's life. This
composition, Colgan translated, from the original Irish, into Latin. He printedbothversions,incollateralcolumns. 59 Amuchmorecorrectversionof
this Hymn has recently appeared,^" with interesting illustrations, by a highly competent translator and writer. ^^ If this Poem be really Fiecc's composi-
tion, it is the oldest monument extant, for the illustrating of St. Patrick's memoirs. ^^ There are thirty-four Irish stanzas, in this Hymn. ^3 Colgan drew
"
his version, from the Franciscan
Liber Hymnorum," ^^ and, he endeavoured
scripts of Ireland," selected and edited under the direction of the Rt. Hon. Edward Sullivan, Master of the Rolls in Ireland, by
J. T. Gilbert, F. S. A. , M. R. I. A.
S'^Atfol. 16.
53 See Ussher's " Britannicarum Ecclesia-
rum Antiquitates," cap. xvii. , p. 426.
S'* See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga,"
Sexta Vita S. Patricii, cap.
Muirchu-Maccu-Mactheni, who relates, that
he composed this tract, by command of
who died A. D. tiones Aidi," has been placed, at the end of
the Life, and closing it is the note " Hsec
:
pauca de Sancti Patricii peritia et virtutibus Muirchu Maccu Machtheni dictante Aiduo
Slebtiensis civitatis episcopo conscripsit. " A comparison of the Lives will serve to show, that the Life of St. Patrick, by Pro- bus, the Fifth in Colgan's collection, is only an amended version of that, by Machtheni, in the Book of Armagh. A folio has been lost from it, but identity of subject and com- position enables us to supply this deficiency, from the Life of Probus. In the year 937, the Canon of Patrick was encased by Uo- nough, son of Flann, King of Ireland. This case was perhaps the leathern satchel, still with and which is of
" ofthe Irish Proceedings Royal Academy,"
vol. iii. , pp. 259, 260, 316 to 324. See Dr.
"
of
A summary of contents, headed " Annota-
Aedh, Bishop
Sletty,
692.
preserved it,
antiquity. Dr. Petrie has given drawings of this, with a description of the Book itself.
In the of the eleventh beginning
century, whenBryan Boroimhe, Kingof Ireland,visited Armagh, his Secretary and Confessor, Maol- suthian. Latinized, Calvus Ferennis, made an entry in it, in Bryan's presence. The Book was often used, for the administration of solemn oaths. A keeper was appointed, and eight townlands, known as Balli Moyre, were near Armagh, and conferred on the hereditary keepers, the Mac Moyers, who held them, in 1656, when Sir James Ware wrote. Florence Mac Moyer was one of the suborned witnesses, who gave evidence against Dr. Oliver Plunket, and in a blank
very great
fol. , xi. cent. , Conf. S. Pat. , ff. 158-166.
'3 A considerable portion of the " Confes- sion," as given by the writers of the British Museum and Bodleian Library copies, is not contained in the Book of Armagh version. It seems probable, that the latter, being the oldest copy, is also the most authentic. In page is found the entry, Liber Florentini her version of this. Sister Mary Francis Muire, June 29, 1662. Edward Lhuyd, the Clare Cusack has very properly enclosed, eminent Welsh Philologist, who died in within brackets, those portions she added
Dublin. See Sister Mary Francis Clare
Cusack's " Life of St. Patrick, Apostle ot
Ireland," chap, ii. , pp. 59 to 68. See also
Ecclesiastical Architecture of Ire- land, anterior to the Anglo-Norman In- vasion," &c. , part ii. , sect, iii. , subsect. i. , pp. 332 to 338.
7 A version of it has been published, in Sir William Betham's "Antiquarian Re- searches," vol. i. , part ii. , pp. 417 to 432. A description of The Book of Armagh is to be found in his Vol. i. , pp. 243 to 442. In J. T. Gilbert's " Facsimiles of National Manu-
scriptsof Ireland," partii. , there is to be found a version of St. Patrick's "Confession," as taken from the Book of Armagh, which is in course of editorial preparation by Very Rev. Dean Reeves, with a view of its being pub- lished.
^ It was at the time of the destroyed,
French Revolution.
9 This is described, as a vel. fol. 3. 16.
'° avel. xi. It is classed, Nero E. i. , fol. ,
cent, ff. 1676-1726.
" See Rev. Dr. Charles O'Conor's
"Rerum Hibernicarum Scriptores," tomus
i. Prolegomena, pars, i. , p. cxx.
" These are classed, Fell, i, in a vel fol. ,xi. cent. Conf. S. Pat. , ff. 7-13. , and, 3, in a vel.
Petrie's
2C
4^2 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [March 17.
There are other different copies of this One of those editions, by Sir James
"
Besides these, English translations of St. Patrick's
pubHshed. One of these appeared,^? * in Dublin, edited by the late Ven. Archdeacon, John Hamilton ;=^° and, later still, at Kenmare, Sister Mary Francis Clare Cusack has presented one, very correctly rendered, with the Latin text, in parallel columns. ^^ This latter is one of the most authentic and valuable editions of it, as yet printed. ''^ In addition to St. Patrick's
the Bollandists/+ in the year 1668. work, pubHshed by various persons.
^s
Dr. Charles was O'Conor,^^
in the
issued, in the year 1814 ;'? a third, by Sir William Betham, saw the light, in the year 1826, while a fourth,'^ by Rev. Dr. Joachim Lorenzo Villanueva, was published, in the year 1835, in Dublin. These several versions have been made, from one or other of the ancient manuscripts, already described.
Ware, appeared,
year 1656 ;
another, by
" his letter to Confession,"
or as also the Canons Carotic,
King Coroticus,^3
of two Councils, which he is said to have held, are considered, by some of
the best critics, to have been written by him. A Cottonian Manuscript, in the British Museum, contains the text of the Epistle to Caroticus. ^* It has been published, and even with an English version. ^s Certain Synodal Canons are attributed to St. Patrick's authorship alone f^ and, again, there are others, which are ascribed to St. Patrick, to St. Auxilius, and to St. Iserni- nus. '7 Canons—differing from the foregoing—have been edited, likewise ;
from the Bodleian copy. The " Confes- St. Patrick's Life.
" ^' sion of St. Patrick, she has carefully and
See her admirable and interesting work,
conscientiously edited, while the marginal notes are collations, with five different
copies, viz. : B, representing the Cotton MS. , British Museum, F, denoting copies I or 3, Fell. Bodleian Library, V, signifying Villaneuva, corresponding with the BoUan- dists, and W, standing for Sir James Ware's version.
"The Life of St. Patrick, Apostle of Ire-
'* From a
cop5r, procured by
Father
'3 A of this was Rev. copy published by
Andrew Denis, Atrebas, of the Society of
Jesus, from St. Vedast's Monastery.
•'
'5 In
cio. " Confessio S. Patricii, pp. i to 23. —
Dr. Charles O'Conor, in " Rerum Hiberni-
Opuscula adscripta Sancto Patri-
carum Scriptores," tomus i. Prolegomena, pars, i. , pp. cxvii. to cxx. The editor adds some notes to the foregoing Epistle. The
•^ Compare MS. Bodl. , Rawl. , B. 505. ""
Rev. John Lynch, P. P. of Ballymena, has Lives of the Irish Saints," in Irish. See appended the Confessio," in five chapters, also Dr. O'Conor's Catalogue of Stowe and the'* "Epistola," to his "Life of St.
MSS. and MS. Laud. 95. See Sir Thomas Patrick. "
Duffus Hardy's "Descriptive Catalogue of ^* There are two other Manuscript copies Materials relating to the History of Great extant. Fell, i, and 3, in the Bodleian
Britain and Ireland to the end of the reign of Henry VII. ," vol. i. , part i. , p. 71.
Library, Oxford.
'7 See " Remm Hibernicarum
" Life of St of
Patrick, Apostle Ireland,"
chap, xi. , pp. 612 to 620. Her text is from the Cotton Manuscript, in the British Museum.
tores," tomus i. cvii. to cxvii.
'^
Scrip- Prolegomena, pars, i. , pp.
This version coincides with the BoUan- dists' one, and he gives various readings, from other Codices, without however indi- cating the sources.
'9 See " The Confession of St. Patrick,
These are found, in an old book of
concerning his Life and Conduct.
"
Trans-
lated from the original Latin, as contained
in an ancient Manuscript, over 1,000 years
old. Dublin, 8vo.
'"' He was then P. P. of St. Michan's
Church, and it was written a short time pre-
vious to his death, and published in 1859. To this had been prefixed, a Dedication to
his parishioners, as likewise a summary of
^s
See Sister Mary Francis Clare Cusack's
Confession" have been
land," chap, xi. , pp. 580 to 611. ^' ''
Her copy of the Confession" is taken
from the Book of Armagh, as transcribed by
the Rev. T. O'Mahony of Trinity College, with various readings, from copies, found in the British Museum, in the BodleianLi brai ies, and in that copy, printed by the Bollandists.
**
Canons, belonging to the Cottonian Library,
"
Tit. Ixvi. See Villanueva's
Ibernorum Apostoli, Synodi, Canones, Opuscula," &c. Scholia, n. 2, p. 20.
^'^ See Sir Henry Spelman's "Concilia, Decreta, Leges, Constitutiones in Re Eccle-
siarum Orbis Britannici," published in 1639. These Canons were copied by Wilkins, Ware and Villaneueva. They are taken from a Codex of the Benedictine Library,
and preserved, in the College of Corpus Christi, at Cambridge, Num. 221. The original was found to be defective, however,
Sancti Patricii,
March 17. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 403
and, by some of the most judicious critics,^^ they have been attributed to St.
Patrick, the Apostle of Ireland, while other writers contend, they were drawn up, by a St. Patrick, called the Junior. ^9 Some Synodal Decrees3° are stated
tohavebeenpenned,byoursaint; but,greatdoubtsareentertained,regard- ing their authenticity.
3^ However, Father Joachim Lorenzo Villanueva be- lieved in their genuineness, at least, so far as some are concerned. 3=^ St. Patrick is said to have left behind him certain Proverbs, in the Irish language, which were afterwards rendered into Latin. 33 Another work, attri-
34 as also " De Tri- one,
or " De Epistola,
opening In the Irish language, likewise, there are several prose and poetic tracts, which purport, and are stated, to have been written by St. Patrick. However, we have no sufficient evidence
in some passages, which required great 34 Among the works of St. Cyprian, Jaco- critical care for a restoration. bus Pamelius has printed this Tract ; and,
*®
buted to is a " De Abusionibus him, book,
Sseculi," that the
bus Habitaculis. " 35 It —is
quite apparent, notwithstanding
Charta,
the assertion in the
—Avallonica" Antiquitate
3^
sentence cannot be ascribed to our saint.
Among these may be noted, Arch- it has appeared, also, among the supposi-
bishop Ussher, Sir James Ware, Fresne, Colgan, Martene, D'Achery, Lanigan, &c.
*' According to a theory of some writers, in this case, there might be no contradiction, since they make Palladius, the old Patrick, and the Irish Apostle, the junior Patrick.
3° These were taken, in
tious works of St. Augustine, edited by the
attributed,
Canons, Tit. Ixvi. of the Cottonian collec-
tion. Edmund Martene has edited the
429,
Tribus Habitaculis, coeli, mundi et inferni,"
Frag- ment of an Irish Synodal Decree, thought to have come down from the time of St.
having
This Archbishop Ussher states, and he had
Patrick,
begins with,
Synodus
included, among
Appendix, col. 639.
and which
the works of St. Augustine, as edited by the Benedictine
Ibernensis decrevit," and, seven other
Canons, referring to the payment of Tithes,
part, Augustine,
"i. Dicuntauctoresde-
Ware that it shows,
which
cimas," &c. Both were taken, " ex Cod. Bibliothecse Bigotianse," and they were written more than eight hundred years ago.
"
the original Manuscript. That Treatise has
from the
it possible, may
Monastic
Canterbury, as appears from a prefixed in-
scription. They have been edited, by Sir Patricii, cap. clxxxv. See also, Sir James
Library
of St.
at
to which — sedifica- verbs, Jocelyn alludes,"
in" S. " De lib. James Ware, Opuscula Adscripta Ware, Scriptoribus Hibemias,"
Patricio," p. 87, and, after him, by Wil- kins, in "Concilia Magnse Britannias et Hibemias. " These are preserved, in the old Codex Manuscript of Canons, under the title Ixvi. , and classed, Otho, E. 13. , in the Cottonian collection. This Codex is sup- posed, as dating back to the Anglo-Saxon times. Again, in part, two unauthenticated Patrician Canons are found, in a Cambridge Codex. There are nine Canons, similarly
ii. , cap. i. , p. 102.
35 See ibid. , pp. loi, 102. John Boston,
a Benedictine monk of St. Edmund's Mon- astery, at Bury, who flourished in the be-
ginning of the fifteenth century, under King Henry IV. , and who visited nearly all the chief Libraries of England and Scotland, afterwards wrote a work, " De Scriptoribus
and found in the Codex of in the of Christ year
and " De wrote,
Sir
cannot be the work, either of St. Patrick, or
of St. Augustine ; since, in their times, St. Jerome's version of the Sacred Scriptures had not appeared, and, yet, all the Scrip- tural text, quoted in the Treatise, are taken from his version.
3* See the ScJiolion, subjoined to it, in
cula," &c. Scholia, n. i, p. 146, n. 7, p. 155. Father Joachim Lorenzo Villanueva's
3=^ •' See ibid. , n. i, p. 160, n. i, p. 170, and
begins with,
However,
James
" Anecdotorum," tomus iv. , pp. i, et seq.
3' See Villanueva's " Sancti
They are published, in
Thesaurus Novus
Iber- norum Apostoli, Synodi, Canones, Opus-
on the
Irish Church," Appendix, Nos. vi. , vii. , pp.
di'x to i. , pp. 297
304 to 320.
33 Such is the opinion of Sir James Ware,
in a note to Liber, "De Abusionibus Sseculi," p. 139.
Essays
Early
306.
published the works of St. Patrick, Apostle
of the Irish, in his very voluminous edition,
"Patrilogiae Cursus Com- pletus," &c. , tomus liii.
3? He is assigned a double festival, one on
Patricii,
Sancti Patricii, Ibernorum Apostoli, n. p. 173. See also, on this subject, Rt. Synodi, Canones, Opuscula," &c. Appen-
Rev. Moran's " Bishop
The Abbe has Migne
"De duodecim abusionibus gradibus," tomus vi,, col. 691. Sir James Ware has doubts, as to whether this Treatise should be ascribed or not to St. Patrick ; and, yet, he thinks it be that Irish Book of Pro-
Benedictine Maurists, under this title,
tione plurima plenum. " Sexta Vita S.
"
Patrick, Archbishop of Ibernia, flourished,
Ecclesiasticis.
In this, he stales, that
for its "Tria sunt. " beginning,
also been
Maurists, tomus vi.
404 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [March 17.
to establish their authenticity, and their consequent value, as biographical authorities ; but, hereafter, more at length, shall we endeavour to examine their nature and origin. Many of these were written, apparently at a remote period. Notwithstanding, than those tracts already indicated, we must receive with greater hesitancy the traditional accounts, which profess to con- nect others, with the genuine writings of our saint.
We can have no reason whatever to doubt, that soon after the departure
of our illustrious St. Patrick from earth, many of his disciples and relations
undertook the appropriate and pleasing duty of recording his miracles, virtues, and actions ; indeed, we have assurances, that such was the case, and, therefore, we must refer to the accounts left, regarding his earlier bio-
graphers. It is stated, that St. Loman,37 one of our saint's nephews, and a Bishop of Trim, in Meath, wrote some tract respecting his holy uncle, even while the latter was living. Loman flourished about the middle of the fifth
century. St. Secundinus,38 Bishop of Dunshaughlin,39 in Meath, and another of St. Patrick's nephews, composed a hymn, in praise of his uncle. Colgan has published this composition. It has also been generally thought, St. Cianan,4° or Kienan, Bishop of Damhlaig, or Duleek,^' in East Meath, lived about 480, and that he wrote a Life of St. Patrick. It has been asserted, that St. Maol, or Moel,^^ thought by some, to have been one of St. Patrick's nephews, and the first Bishop of Ardagh,43 wrote a book, on the virtues and miracles of his reputed uncle. He departed, towards the close of the fifth century. —It is said, St. Patrick the Younger 44—by some called a nephew of our saint wrote his Acts, and flourished about the same time. St. Benig- nus,45 Archbishop of Armagh, is accounted to have been one of St. Patrick's earliest biographers, as also St. Fiach,'*^ Bishop of Sletty. St. Evin, or Emhin,47 is also considered to have been the writer of his Acts ; yet, it seems probable, these have been interpolated, by later compilers. The Scholiast on St. Fiach's biography is supposed to have \vritten, in the sixth, or, at latest, in the seventh, century. Again, St. Ultan was one of our Apostle's biographers, andhewasBishopofArdbraccan. Hedepartedthislifeonthe4thofSeptem- ber,48 ^ j3 656. '»9 The Annotations, or Life of St. Patrick, by Tirechan,5° had beeninUssher'spossession. HeusedtheseNotes,incompilingthe"Primor- dia. " Tirechan flourished, towards the middle of the seventh century, or before his master's release. The alumnus wrote, perhaps, before this date,
the 17 th of February, and, another, at the Ilth of October.
3^ His feast occurs, at the 27th of Novem- ber.
39 This is now a parish, in the barony of Ratoath, and its bounds are defined, on the
"
Ordnance Survey Townland Maps for the County of Meath," Sheets 38, 44. The Town proper is on the latter Sheet,
*^ The parish of Ardagh is in the baronies of Ardagh and Moydow. It is shown, on the " Ordnance Survey Townland Maps for the County of Longford," Sheets 14, 19, 20. The town proper is on Sheet 19.
'4 He is thought to have retired to Glas- tonbury, after the death of his uncle, St. Patrick, and to have died there. See re- garding him Ussher's " Britannicarum Ec-
*° His festival is held, on the 24th of clesiarum Antiquitates," chap, xvii. , pp.
November.
4' There are two distinct parishes, one
Duleek, in the baronies of Lower and Upper
''
426, 429, 460 to 464.
^s His feast occurs, at the 9th of November. ^6 His festival is held, on the 12th of
October.
*' His feast is on the 22nd of December. ^^ This is also the date for his festival.
4' See Dr. O'Donovan's " Annals of the
Four Masters," vol. i. , pp. 268, 269.
5= He was a bishop, and by some of our writers, he was classed among the saints. His
feast has been assigned to the 3rd of July, si See " Fac-Similes of National Manu-
Duleek, and this is shown on the
nance Survey Townland Maps for the County of Meath," Sheets 19, 20, 26, 27, 32, 33 ; the other is Duleek Abbey, Upper Duleek barony, shown on Sheets 27, 33.
The tovm of Duleek is on Sheet 27. See ibid.
^
*' niary.
His feast takes place, on the 6th of Feb-
Ord-
March 17. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 405
as stated in the copy, found in the Book of Armagh,si for, it is there said,s« the author obtained his information, from the book or from the oral instruc- tion of his preceptor, St. Ultan. ss Various other biographers succeeded, but many of their compositions are said to have perished, during the wars of the Danes and Northmen. Indeed, no less than sixty-six different Lives of Ire- land's illustrious Patron had already appeared, before the close of the twelfth century, when Jocelyn composed his Acts. S4
The most complete and useful work for information, regarding this great Apostle's career, will be found, in those seven ancient Lives or Tracts,5s pre- pared for the press, and edited, by the learned Father John Colgan. 5S These we shall endeavour to describe, in their order of position. Our celebrated Irish Hagiologist, no doubt, has fallen into various mistakes, while endeavour- ing to investigate the authorship of St. Patrick's several biographies, as in- cluded in his great collection. 57 Considering his foreign residence and position, with the want of aids subsequently provided, his misconceptions were almost inevitable. So far as possible, we shall make some corrections. The First Life, contained in the collection, has been attributed to St. Fiech, or Fiacc,5S regarded as the disciple of St. Patrick. He was the first Bishop of Sletty, and, afterwards, he was recognized, as chief Bishop of Leinster. He
is said to have written a Hymn, partly panegyrical, and partly historical, in which he briefly relates some principal incidents of St. Patrick's life. This
composition, Colgan translated, from the original Irish, into Latin. He printedbothversions,incollateralcolumns. 59 Amuchmorecorrectversionof
this Hymn has recently appeared,^" with interesting illustrations, by a highly competent translator and writer. ^^ If this Poem be really Fiecc's composi-
tion, it is the oldest monument extant, for the illustrating of St. Patrick's memoirs. ^^ There are thirty-four Irish stanzas, in this Hymn. ^3 Colgan drew
"
his version, from the Franciscan
Liber Hymnorum," ^^ and, he endeavoured
scripts of Ireland," selected and edited under the direction of the Rt. Hon. Edward Sullivan, Master of the Rolls in Ireland, by
J. T. Gilbert, F. S. A. , M. R. I. A.
S'^Atfol. 16.
53 See Ussher's " Britannicarum Ecclesia-
rum Antiquitates," cap. xvii. , p. 426.
S'* See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga,"
Sexta Vita S. Patricii, cap.
