73 A copperplate
engraving
of this character has been inserted in his Acts, as furnished by the Bollandists.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v7
Insula, spatio terrarum angustior, sed situ fcecundior.
Hsec
ab Africo in Boream porrigitur, cujus partes
3° We are not to take in a too literal sense the statement of some writers that all the At a. d. 407, Miraeus writes, "in- foregoing were brothers of St. Fursey, ex- numerabiles et ferocissimae nationes univer- cept in a religious sense. Even the writer
sas Gallias occuparunt. Quidquid inter of our saint's Acts, alluding to persons "
priores ab Hibernia et Cantabrico oceano
Alpes et Pireneum est, quod Oceano et named in the text, observes, licet de omni-
Rhodano includitur, Quadus, Vandalus, Sarmata, Alani, Gepides, Heruli, Saxones, Burgundiones, Alemanni et hostes Pannonii vastarunt. "—"Rerum Belgicarum Chroni- con, ab Julii Caesaris in Galliam Adventu,
usque ad vulgarem Christi Annum 1636," &c. Antverpiae, 1636, fol.
bus non simus certi, utrum fuerunt carnali nativitate germani," &c.
21 His feast occurs, at the 31st of Octo- Saints," tome viii. , xe Jour de Juillet,
ber.
22 At the 1st of May, his feast is com-
memorated.
33 His festival is held, on the 18th of
November.
3* His Acts are at the 3rd of December. 25 His feast is on the nth of Novem-
ber.
p. 238.
34 See "Natales Sanctorum Belgii," at
x.
35 See Rev. Dr. Lanigan's "Ecclesiastical
History of Ireland," vol. ii. , chap, xvi. , sect. x. , p. 462, and n. 98, p. 464.
3* Also called Maconia, in the territory of Liege.
3I See further notices of him, at July 14th
—his feast-day—
32 See her Life, in the Fourth Volume of
in the volume, present
this work, at the 9th of April, Art. i.
Julii
33 See Les Petits Bollandistes,
"
Vies des
i84 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July io.
should take possession of it. Jovinus railed at the holy man, nor would he enter upon any terms of compromise, until convinced by a miracle, that he shouldyield,andmakeanhumbleapologytoEtto. Thereoursainterected a church, under the patronage of St. Peter, chief of the Apostles. He used to visit the Abbey of Hautmont, where under St. Ansbert,3? Madelgarius lived j andtherehenietSt. Amandus,38St. Wasno,andSt. Humbert. 39 There,too,
1
met him ; as also St. and St. Gertrude/s Besides these, St. Foillan and St. Ultan came to meet him from the monastery of Fosse,*6 as likewise many other celebrated fathers of the Church, who were living in
France during his time.
Throughout all that region, St. Etto zealously laboured to spread the Gospel seed. As a light placed on a pedestal cannot be hidden, so did the- fame of his virtues spread on all sides. To the place of his abode came numerous visitors, to ask his counsel in spiritual affairs, as also to obtain the succours of religion. But, Etto was exceedingly humble in his own estima- tion, nor could he bear that others should think highly concerning him. One of the miracles recorded of our saint is that one day, and while walking in a
field, he saw a mute cow-herd sleeping. Touching him gently with a staff, 4 ? the man arose, and immediately found the use of speech. Fiscau or Fescau,48
afterwards a priory, and depending on the Abbey of Liessy, near Avesnes, in Hainault, was the place noted in connexion with St. Etto's demise. Here he
lived for a considerable time, constantly engaged in prayer, and crucified to the world. Daily did he offer the Holy Victim in Sacrifice to the Lord. He became a father of the poor, a protector of the widow, an aid of the orphan, a consoler of those in sorrow and tribulation, aransomer of captives, and an intercessor for all who were reduced in circumstances. Finding his last days on earth about to close, St. Etto called his disciples to him, and then gave them special instructions, to observe the precepts of charity and peace towards one another, as also to fulfil with great care the duties of a Christian and a religious life. Receiving from him an intimation, that he
St. Ursmar <° and his assistant bishop Erminus -*
2 St. St.
Wasnulph,* Gissen/3 Aldegunde,^
37 This holy bishop has a festival at the
9th of February.
38 His feast occurs at the 6th of February.
From him the town of St. Amand in Flan- ders has been Darned.
39 See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's "Lives of the Saints," vol. vii. , July 10, p. 261.
40 His feast has been assigned to the 18th
of April,
*' Hehasafeastatthe25thofApril,but
it does not seem probable, he could have been a bishop, during the lifetime of St. Etto. He died in the year 737.
42 His feast occurs on the 1st of Octo- ber.
43 His festival is at the 9th of October.
44 Her feast is at the 30th of January.
4s Her festival is held on the 17th of
March.
46 The fiollandists remark, that all the
holy persons named in the Latin Acts of oursaint,aspublishedbythem,maybecom- bined whether as contemporaries or as locals.
4? This anecdote is thus introduced, where related in St. Et—to's Acts, and in Latin hexameter lines:
"
Mutus ad haec coeptis instabat talia dictis :
Quid mirando stupes? metritis quid
vero perhorres,
Muta tuis tacitas si fudit lingua loque-
las?
Numne recordarisDominantis, Sancte fidelis
Angelecis tremefacta minis quia fatur asella
Sessori per verba suo ; linguaque rudenti
Edidit humanas animal pecualeloque- las?
Immemor es rerum, quoniam Sapien- tia mutum
Saepius os reserare solet, puerisque disertas
Efficiens linguas, cogit depromere laudes ?
Talia fante viro, gratulans venerabi- lis Etto,
Congrua pro facto referebat munia Christo. "
*'~ This
of Picardyand Artois.
place
is situated on the confines
July io. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 185
should soon leave this world, his monks were moved to tears, and they
naturally gave way to sorrow. However, they felt consoled when Etto
impartedaspecialblessingonthem. Forimmediatepreparation,tomeet
death, the holy man redoubled his prayers and vigils, fasting with still greater
strictness and giving alms most bountifully. The night before his departure,
Etto had a vision regarding the place of his sepulture ; and, on waking, he desired one of his friends to meet another, who was then in an adjoining wood,
preparing a coffin, although he knew not for whom it was destined. This coffin that man was engaged in bringing away on a cart, drawn by a bullock. The coffin was brought to Etto, who had desired to see it. Afterwards, he devoutly received the Body and Blood of our Lord in the Holy Sacrament. Then, in the presence of his disciples, who were standing round, his soul passed away to the company of the Holy Angels and Saints. * He is said to have departed, in the sixty-fifth year of his age. His death has been assigned to about a. d. 670. 5°
On the 10th of July, various ecclesiastical authors commemorate St. Etto.
His feast has been noted, in the Belgian, Gallican and Benedictine Martyr-
1 52
ologies. Thus, Saussay,* Molanus, Miraeus,53 Ferrarius,** Wion, Dorgan,
6
Menard, Bucelin,55 Castellan,5
and Baldericus, have notices of him. In
Convaeus' list, at the same date, we find Etto set as " Fasciaci et down, Epis.
Laetiarum patronus. "57 He is noticed, likewise, by Thomas Dempster^8 His festival was celebrated on this day, with a proper office, in the church of Buinvilliers. 59 There is extant, likewise, an office with Eight Lessons,60 and these profess to give the Acts of St. Etto, but some of them are only foolish
legends.
The forty-second Bishop of Cambrai, Nicholas, in 1162, issued a diploma,
whereby certain possessions were confirmed to the abbacy of Leisse, with a provision for the maintenance of so many monks as might be required to serve
the church of Dompierre, and a prohibition against removing the body of
the saint from that 01 Other donations to are on record. 02 place. Dompierre
The monastery of Fiscau, was in the village of Dompierre. 63 There and in all the surrounding country, St. Etto's name was held in very special rever-
49 See the Bollandists' "Acta Sancto- rum," tomus iii. , Julii x. De S. Ettone Ep. et Conf. Lsetiis in Belgio, Vita, &c, pp.
"
per aliquot annos ibidem haeserat, ML. F. " —Bishop Forbes' " Kalendars of Scottish Saints," p. 205.
to 62.
S9 A of this was sent to Father copy
59
50 See Les Petits Bollandistes,
e
John Boland by Rev. D. Luytens, sub-prior and master of novices at Liesse, in the month of
Vies des Saints," tome viii. , x Jour de Juillet, p.
239.
s* In " Martyrologium Gallicanum. " s2 In " Natalibus Sanctorum Belgii. "
November, 1637. This has been published in all its chief parts by Father John Pinius, who has edited the Acts of our saint, in his Previous Commentary, sect. ii.
These were copied from an old Manu-
script Codex belonging to the Monastery of St. Lambert, at Liesse, and they were sent to Father Rosweyde, by Father Peter Lorig- nairt, Librarian and monk of that place. See ibid. , sect. i.
53 In Fastis Belgicis et Burgundicis.
" 6o
54 In Catalogus Generalis Sanctorum. "
ss In their several Benedictine Martyrolo-
gies.
s6 In his Universal Martyrology.
"
57 See O'Sullevan Beare's Historic
Catholicse Ibernias Compendium," tomus i. ,
lib. iv. , cap. x. , p. 48.
s8 In his " Menologium Scoticum " thus :
6l
Chronicon Lretiense.
" 62 Laetiis Ettonis episcopi et confessoris,
Germanise infcrioris Apostoli, qui in Hiber-
niamad regenda monasteria concessit, et inde
in Belgium eductus per Maldegarum Han-
nonise comitem, qui Sanctorum albo ad- in the Department of Nord, canton of scriptus Vincentius dictus, et Hirlandiae Avesnes. See "Gazetteer of the World," gubernator destinatus ab aula a rege Pipino, vol. v. , p. 43.
Allusion is made to this charter in the
See the Previous Commentary to St. Etto's Acts in the Bollandists' "Acta Sane- torum," sect. iii.
63 Now a commune, and town of France,
1 86 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [J uly i o.
ence. 6« However, the disturbances occasioned by the new Reformation caused his body to be removed to a place of greater security. His relics were translated to Mons,6* with those of other saints, during the wars about the middle of the sixteenth century. They were temporarily placed in a house of to that
bishop
ofArras in a
letter,
written
its — June 16th, 1630; but, inauguration
66 when order had Abbey. Afterwards,
refuge, belonging
been restored, St. Etto's remains were removed to the Abbey of Liesse, or
6
Liessies, ? a suitable receptacle having been prepared for their reception,
while the coffin or shrine was newly decorated and restored, as time's effacing
traceshadbeguntoshowmarksoffadinganddecay. Othersmallerreliqua-
ries of the saint were repaired at the same time. To this resting-place, St.
Etto's body was translated, by Louis de Blois, then its Abbot, and placed in
the church of his on the 22nd of a. d. 68 This monastery, day June, 1559.
establishmentwassubsequentlyanabbeyofCanonsRegular. Therethebody was kept, with great veneration, and St. Etto's feast has become a great solem- nity, on the anniversary ofhis death, iothofJuly. In like manner is he com- memorated, in the priory of Fiscau. 6^ On that day, the people assembled in great numbers, and assisted at Mass, while a vast procession on foot and on horseback accompanied a shrine containing the relics of our saint. On that day, too, the people abstained from servile works, regarding it as a superior feast. The office of his Natalis was recited in the'parish, and it was sung in themonasteryofLeisse,duringtheentireoctave. ? However,inthechurch of Dompierre, the body of St. Etto is now preserved, and there is a tomb on which he is figured with a mitre, a cross in his hand, and clothed in episco- pal vestments. At some distance from the church, there is a fountain, which bears the name of St. Ze'. ? 1 In the parish of Dompierre, for many ages past, as also in that of Buinvilliers, diocese of Arras, a confraternity has been established in honour of St. Ze\ The latter was ordered to be erected, by the
was deferred, owing to the fact of two churches being in the same town
the congregation of each contending for their respective church as being the
parochial one. An arm-bone of St. Etto is preserved at Buinvilliers, near
3
Arras. ?
by cow-herds and cattle-drivers.
73 A copperplate engraving of this character has been inserted in his Acts, as furnished by the Bollandists. 74
Since the time St. Etto departed from this life to our Lord's happy inherit- ance, in the seventh century, the people who lived after him had great faith in his intercession. Those who had been afflicted with various diseases were taught to believe, that through a devout invocation of his patronage, the Almighty would be pleased to remove their ailments and to prolong their
6* See Les Petits Bollandistes, "Viesdes ? ° See the Bollandists' "Acta Sancto- Saints," tome viii. , xe Jour de Juillet, p. 239. rum," tomus iii. , Julii x. De S. Ettone Ep. 65 See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's " Lives of et Conf. Laetiis in Belgio. Commentarius
St. Etto is represented with oxen at his feet, as he is invoked
the Saints," vol. vii. , July 10, p. 261. Pircvius, sect, iii. , num. 16, p. 53. 6""
•J
See Les Petits Bollandistes, Vies des
n See Les Petits Bollandistes, Vies des Saints," tome viii,, xe Jour de Juillet, p. 239.
? 2 See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's "Lives of the Saints," vol. vii. , July 10, p. 261.
73 See Very Rev. Dr. F. C. Ilussenbeth's
" Emblems of Saints," edited by Rev. Dr.
Augustus Jessopp, p. 73.
74 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. ,
Julii x. De S. Ettone Ep. et Conf. Lcetiis in Belgio. Commentarius Prsevius, sect, ii. , p. 52.
e
Saints," tome viii. , x Jour de Juillet, p.
239.
6? Now a commune and town, in the De-
"
partment of Nord, France. See Gazetteer
of the World," vol. v. , p. 730.
68 The Bollandists give a detailed account
of the foregoing general statements in their Previous Commentary to the Acts of our saint, sect. iv.
69 See Les Petits Bollandistes, " Vies des Saints,"tome viii. , xeJour deJuillet, p. 239.
July io. ] LIVESOFTHEIRISHSAINTS. 187
lives. Even he was supposed to hear the prayers of country people, who intreated him to avert distempers from their cattle and other animals.
Article II. —St. Cuain or Cuan, of Airbhre, in Hy Kinsellagh. At the 10th of July, the festival of Cuan is found in the "Feilire" of St.
^Engus.
1 A
commentary
annexed 2 that he was Cuan Airbre in Ui- states,
Cennselaig, and he is the same as Cuan of Maethail Broccain in Desi of
Munster. This latter place, as we are told, 3 was in the deaconate of Kill-
barrimedin, in the diocese of Lismore, and where there was a church and a
well dedicated to St. Cuan. The Martyrology of Tallagh < registers a festival
at the 10th of July, in honour of Cuain of Airbir, in h Cendselaigh. The
Martyrology of Marianus O'Gorman has a similar identification, according
to Father O'Sheerin, when furnishing some particulars regarding the present
saint to the Bollandists,* who allude to him at the present date. We are
informed by Dr. O'Donovan, that Kilquan, in the county of Wexford, takes
its name from a church dedicated to the present holy man. Tobar Cuan
was situated five chains south-west from the ruins of Kilcowanmore, as we
learnfromthesamegentleman. NoticesofareligiousmannamedCuanare
introduced in the Acts of St. Fintan of Dunbleisque, and Colgan thinks he
must be identical with the present saint. 6 At this date, in the Martyrology
of Donegal,? is recorded Cuan, of Airbhre, in Ui Ceinnsealaigh, in
Leinster; andheisthesame,wearetold,asCuan,ofMaethailBrogain,in
Deisi Mumhan. Among many other saints bearing the same name, he is
mentioned 8 His
has been identified 9 with Cuain
"
In Fraser's Statistical Survey of the Declare the suffering of seven brethren County of Wexford. " part i. , p. 16, the
by Colgan.
Airbhre, in Hy Kinsellagh, a place now called Ballybrennan, at Kilcowanmore, barony of Bantry, and county of Wexford. This part of Ireland, it would appear, formerly abounded in silver. 10 The Kalendar of Drummond " has
notices of St. Cuain, at the 10th of July.
Article III. —Deacon Aedh, of Cuil-Maine, now Clonmany, County
ofDonegal. Venerationwasgiven,atthe10thofJuly,toAodhDeochain
1
in Crichmaine, according to the Martyrology of Tallagh. Elsewhere this
Article ii. — x In the " Leabhar Breac" copy is the following rami rendered into English by Whitley Stokes, LL. D. :—
Januarii, Vita S. Fintani Abb. , cap. ix. , and n. 17, pp. IX, 13.
* Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp. 192, 193.
Slti-irco cejwo tni. rnb|AAich|\e "OiAtnbo epoch Cpifc capcAip
Cuan ttlAj\ce morxfofCAn "Datti. milemArvCAp.
See "Acta Sanctorum Hiberniae," Feb-
place
unto whom Christ's cross was a dungeon, Cuan, Mark, a gre—at rest : twice six
thousand
the Royal Irish Academy," Irish Manu- that during the times of the Danes or
4
martyrs. "
"Transactions of
which there was a statement to the
script series, vol. i. , part i. of Oengus, p. ex.
On the Calendar
effect,
Ostmen, and when they possessed the sea- coasts of Wexford County, such abundance of silver was found there, that a mint was erected, and silver coins were formed to a considerable amount.
" Thus: vi. Idus—. In " Hibernia Sancti Confessoris Cuain. " Bishop Forbes' "Ka-
2
3 By Father O'Sheerin.
See ibid. , p. cxviii.
Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xxix. 5 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus
hi. , Julii x. Among the pretermitted saints,
p. 3. lendars of Scotti—sh Saints," p. 18.
6*
See "Acta Sanctorum Hibernne," iii.
Article hi. Edited Rev. Dr. by
8
ruarii iv. De S. Cvanna sive Cvannacheo, n. 2, p. 251.
' ByWilliamM. Hennessy. 10 "
author tells us, he saw a Manuscript in the archiepiscopal library at Lambeth, and in
i88 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
[July io.
record styles him Mac Maine. 3 Marianus O'Gorman remits his feast to the 31st of August, as the Bollandists,3 who notice him at the 10th of July, observe. At the the same date, an entry appears in the Martyrology of Donegal,* regarding Deacon Aedh, of Cuil-Maine. This was the ancient name of the parish of Clonmany, in the north-western part of the barony of
Inishowen, and county of Donegal. s
This church was served by a vicar, to
the close of the fifteenth 6 The here 7 is situated century. village pleasantly
Clonmany, County of Donegal.
on a small rivulet, which rising in the adjoining mountains 8 finds its course to the Atlantic Ocean. Another festival, in honour of the present saint, seems to have been observed, on the 31st of August.
Article IV. —St. Senan. The name of Senan is set down in the
of x andof Martyrologies Tallagh
2atthe10thof Withother July.
Donegal,
saints of this name, Colgan notes him,3 but without any further distinction. 4
The Bollandists have an entry, at this date, regarding him. s
Kelly, p.
2
xxix.
Article iv. —• Edited Rev. Dr by
See at the 31st of August. 32
See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii x. Among the pretermitted saints, P- 3-
4 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
192, 193.
5 It is described on the "Ordnance Sur-
vey Townland Maps for the County of Donegal," sheets 3, 4,9, 10, 11, 18, 19.
Kelly, p. xxix.
Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
192, 193.
3 See "Acta Sanctorum Hibernian," viii.
Mai tii, Appendix ad Acta S. Senani, cap. i. , p. 541 (recte) 537.
4 In the Irish Calendar, preserved in the Royal Irish Academy, at the vi. of the Ides
of July (July 10th), I find only a simple entry, "Seanan. " Ordnance Survey Office Copy formerly, and noted "Common Place Book F," p. 62.
5 They state De Senano semper virgine
idem — ad Servanum seu dixeris, quifacile
Sernanum reducetur. " "Acta Sanctorum,"
tomus iii. , July x. Among the pretermitted feasts, p. 3.
6
See Dr. O'Donovan's "Annals of the
Four Masters," vol. iv. , n. (k), p. 1249.
7 The accompanying illustration is from a
Photograph by William Lawrence, Dublin,
William F.
ab Africo in Boream porrigitur, cujus partes
3° We are not to take in a too literal sense the statement of some writers that all the At a. d. 407, Miraeus writes, "in- foregoing were brothers of St. Fursey, ex- numerabiles et ferocissimae nationes univer- cept in a religious sense. Even the writer
sas Gallias occuparunt. Quidquid inter of our saint's Acts, alluding to persons "
priores ab Hibernia et Cantabrico oceano
Alpes et Pireneum est, quod Oceano et named in the text, observes, licet de omni-
Rhodano includitur, Quadus, Vandalus, Sarmata, Alani, Gepides, Heruli, Saxones, Burgundiones, Alemanni et hostes Pannonii vastarunt. "—"Rerum Belgicarum Chroni- con, ab Julii Caesaris in Galliam Adventu,
usque ad vulgarem Christi Annum 1636," &c. Antverpiae, 1636, fol.
bus non simus certi, utrum fuerunt carnali nativitate germani," &c.
21 His feast occurs, at the 31st of Octo- Saints," tome viii. , xe Jour de Juillet,
ber.
22 At the 1st of May, his feast is com-
memorated.
33 His festival is held, on the 18th of
November.
3* His Acts are at the 3rd of December. 25 His feast is on the nth of Novem-
ber.
p. 238.
34 See "Natales Sanctorum Belgii," at
x.
35 See Rev. Dr. Lanigan's "Ecclesiastical
History of Ireland," vol. ii. , chap, xvi. , sect. x. , p. 462, and n. 98, p. 464.
3* Also called Maconia, in the territory of Liege.
3I See further notices of him, at July 14th
—his feast-day—
32 See her Life, in the Fourth Volume of
in the volume, present
this work, at the 9th of April, Art. i.
Julii
33 See Les Petits Bollandistes,
"
Vies des
i84 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July io.
should take possession of it. Jovinus railed at the holy man, nor would he enter upon any terms of compromise, until convinced by a miracle, that he shouldyield,andmakeanhumbleapologytoEtto. Thereoursainterected a church, under the patronage of St. Peter, chief of the Apostles. He used to visit the Abbey of Hautmont, where under St. Ansbert,3? Madelgarius lived j andtherehenietSt. Amandus,38St. Wasno,andSt. Humbert. 39 There,too,
1
met him ; as also St. and St. Gertrude/s Besides these, St. Foillan and St. Ultan came to meet him from the monastery of Fosse,*6 as likewise many other celebrated fathers of the Church, who were living in
France during his time.
Throughout all that region, St. Etto zealously laboured to spread the Gospel seed. As a light placed on a pedestal cannot be hidden, so did the- fame of his virtues spread on all sides. To the place of his abode came numerous visitors, to ask his counsel in spiritual affairs, as also to obtain the succours of religion. But, Etto was exceedingly humble in his own estima- tion, nor could he bear that others should think highly concerning him. One of the miracles recorded of our saint is that one day, and while walking in a
field, he saw a mute cow-herd sleeping. Touching him gently with a staff, 4 ? the man arose, and immediately found the use of speech. Fiscau or Fescau,48
afterwards a priory, and depending on the Abbey of Liessy, near Avesnes, in Hainault, was the place noted in connexion with St. Etto's demise. Here he
lived for a considerable time, constantly engaged in prayer, and crucified to the world. Daily did he offer the Holy Victim in Sacrifice to the Lord. He became a father of the poor, a protector of the widow, an aid of the orphan, a consoler of those in sorrow and tribulation, aransomer of captives, and an intercessor for all who were reduced in circumstances. Finding his last days on earth about to close, St. Etto called his disciples to him, and then gave them special instructions, to observe the precepts of charity and peace towards one another, as also to fulfil with great care the duties of a Christian and a religious life. Receiving from him an intimation, that he
St. Ursmar <° and his assistant bishop Erminus -*
2 St. St.
Wasnulph,* Gissen/3 Aldegunde,^
37 This holy bishop has a festival at the
9th of February.
38 His feast occurs at the 6th of February.
From him the town of St. Amand in Flan- ders has been Darned.
39 See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's "Lives of the Saints," vol. vii. , July 10, p. 261.
40 His feast has been assigned to the 18th
of April,
*' Hehasafeastatthe25thofApril,but
it does not seem probable, he could have been a bishop, during the lifetime of St. Etto. He died in the year 737.
42 His feast occurs on the 1st of Octo- ber.
43 His festival is at the 9th of October.
44 Her feast is at the 30th of January.
4s Her festival is held on the 17th of
March.
46 The fiollandists remark, that all the
holy persons named in the Latin Acts of oursaint,aspublishedbythem,maybecom- bined whether as contemporaries or as locals.
4? This anecdote is thus introduced, where related in St. Et—to's Acts, and in Latin hexameter lines:
"
Mutus ad haec coeptis instabat talia dictis :
Quid mirando stupes? metritis quid
vero perhorres,
Muta tuis tacitas si fudit lingua loque-
las?
Numne recordarisDominantis, Sancte fidelis
Angelecis tremefacta minis quia fatur asella
Sessori per verba suo ; linguaque rudenti
Edidit humanas animal pecualeloque- las?
Immemor es rerum, quoniam Sapien- tia mutum
Saepius os reserare solet, puerisque disertas
Efficiens linguas, cogit depromere laudes ?
Talia fante viro, gratulans venerabi- lis Etto,
Congrua pro facto referebat munia Christo. "
*'~ This
of Picardyand Artois.
place
is situated on the confines
July io. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 185
should soon leave this world, his monks were moved to tears, and they
naturally gave way to sorrow. However, they felt consoled when Etto
impartedaspecialblessingonthem. Forimmediatepreparation,tomeet
death, the holy man redoubled his prayers and vigils, fasting with still greater
strictness and giving alms most bountifully. The night before his departure,
Etto had a vision regarding the place of his sepulture ; and, on waking, he desired one of his friends to meet another, who was then in an adjoining wood,
preparing a coffin, although he knew not for whom it was destined. This coffin that man was engaged in bringing away on a cart, drawn by a bullock. The coffin was brought to Etto, who had desired to see it. Afterwards, he devoutly received the Body and Blood of our Lord in the Holy Sacrament. Then, in the presence of his disciples, who were standing round, his soul passed away to the company of the Holy Angels and Saints. * He is said to have departed, in the sixty-fifth year of his age. His death has been assigned to about a. d. 670. 5°
On the 10th of July, various ecclesiastical authors commemorate St. Etto.
His feast has been noted, in the Belgian, Gallican and Benedictine Martyr-
1 52
ologies. Thus, Saussay,* Molanus, Miraeus,53 Ferrarius,** Wion, Dorgan,
6
Menard, Bucelin,55 Castellan,5
and Baldericus, have notices of him. In
Convaeus' list, at the same date, we find Etto set as " Fasciaci et down, Epis.
Laetiarum patronus. "57 He is noticed, likewise, by Thomas Dempster^8 His festival was celebrated on this day, with a proper office, in the church of Buinvilliers. 59 There is extant, likewise, an office with Eight Lessons,60 and these profess to give the Acts of St. Etto, but some of them are only foolish
legends.
The forty-second Bishop of Cambrai, Nicholas, in 1162, issued a diploma,
whereby certain possessions were confirmed to the abbacy of Leisse, with a provision for the maintenance of so many monks as might be required to serve
the church of Dompierre, and a prohibition against removing the body of
the saint from that 01 Other donations to are on record. 02 place. Dompierre
The monastery of Fiscau, was in the village of Dompierre. 63 There and in all the surrounding country, St. Etto's name was held in very special rever-
49 See the Bollandists' "Acta Sancto- rum," tomus iii. , Julii x. De S. Ettone Ep. et Conf. Lsetiis in Belgio, Vita, &c, pp.
"
per aliquot annos ibidem haeserat, ML. F. " —Bishop Forbes' " Kalendars of Scottish Saints," p. 205.
to 62.
S9 A of this was sent to Father copy
59
50 See Les Petits Bollandistes,
e
John Boland by Rev. D. Luytens, sub-prior and master of novices at Liesse, in the month of
Vies des Saints," tome viii. , x Jour de Juillet, p.
239.
s* In " Martyrologium Gallicanum. " s2 In " Natalibus Sanctorum Belgii. "
November, 1637. This has been published in all its chief parts by Father John Pinius, who has edited the Acts of our saint, in his Previous Commentary, sect. ii.
These were copied from an old Manu-
script Codex belonging to the Monastery of St. Lambert, at Liesse, and they were sent to Father Rosweyde, by Father Peter Lorig- nairt, Librarian and monk of that place. See ibid. , sect. i.
53 In Fastis Belgicis et Burgundicis.
" 6o
54 In Catalogus Generalis Sanctorum. "
ss In their several Benedictine Martyrolo-
gies.
s6 In his Universal Martyrology.
"
57 See O'Sullevan Beare's Historic
Catholicse Ibernias Compendium," tomus i. ,
lib. iv. , cap. x. , p. 48.
s8 In his " Menologium Scoticum " thus :
6l
Chronicon Lretiense.
" 62 Laetiis Ettonis episcopi et confessoris,
Germanise infcrioris Apostoli, qui in Hiber-
niamad regenda monasteria concessit, et inde
in Belgium eductus per Maldegarum Han-
nonise comitem, qui Sanctorum albo ad- in the Department of Nord, canton of scriptus Vincentius dictus, et Hirlandiae Avesnes. See "Gazetteer of the World," gubernator destinatus ab aula a rege Pipino, vol. v. , p. 43.
Allusion is made to this charter in the
See the Previous Commentary to St. Etto's Acts in the Bollandists' "Acta Sane- torum," sect. iii.
63 Now a commune, and town of France,
1 86 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [J uly i o.
ence. 6« However, the disturbances occasioned by the new Reformation caused his body to be removed to a place of greater security. His relics were translated to Mons,6* with those of other saints, during the wars about the middle of the sixteenth century. They were temporarily placed in a house of to that
bishop
ofArras in a
letter,
written
its — June 16th, 1630; but, inauguration
66 when order had Abbey. Afterwards,
refuge, belonging
been restored, St. Etto's remains were removed to the Abbey of Liesse, or
6
Liessies, ? a suitable receptacle having been prepared for their reception,
while the coffin or shrine was newly decorated and restored, as time's effacing
traceshadbeguntoshowmarksoffadinganddecay. Othersmallerreliqua-
ries of the saint were repaired at the same time. To this resting-place, St.
Etto's body was translated, by Louis de Blois, then its Abbot, and placed in
the church of his on the 22nd of a. d. 68 This monastery, day June, 1559.
establishmentwassubsequentlyanabbeyofCanonsRegular. Therethebody was kept, with great veneration, and St. Etto's feast has become a great solem- nity, on the anniversary ofhis death, iothofJuly. In like manner is he com- memorated, in the priory of Fiscau. 6^ On that day, the people assembled in great numbers, and assisted at Mass, while a vast procession on foot and on horseback accompanied a shrine containing the relics of our saint. On that day, too, the people abstained from servile works, regarding it as a superior feast. The office of his Natalis was recited in the'parish, and it was sung in themonasteryofLeisse,duringtheentireoctave. ? However,inthechurch of Dompierre, the body of St. Etto is now preserved, and there is a tomb on which he is figured with a mitre, a cross in his hand, and clothed in episco- pal vestments. At some distance from the church, there is a fountain, which bears the name of St. Ze'. ? 1 In the parish of Dompierre, for many ages past, as also in that of Buinvilliers, diocese of Arras, a confraternity has been established in honour of St. Ze\ The latter was ordered to be erected, by the
was deferred, owing to the fact of two churches being in the same town
the congregation of each contending for their respective church as being the
parochial one. An arm-bone of St. Etto is preserved at Buinvilliers, near
3
Arras. ?
by cow-herds and cattle-drivers.
73 A copperplate engraving of this character has been inserted in his Acts, as furnished by the Bollandists. 74
Since the time St. Etto departed from this life to our Lord's happy inherit- ance, in the seventh century, the people who lived after him had great faith in his intercession. Those who had been afflicted with various diseases were taught to believe, that through a devout invocation of his patronage, the Almighty would be pleased to remove their ailments and to prolong their
6* See Les Petits Bollandistes, "Viesdes ? ° See the Bollandists' "Acta Sancto- Saints," tome viii. , xe Jour de Juillet, p. 239. rum," tomus iii. , Julii x. De S. Ettone Ep. 65 See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's " Lives of et Conf. Laetiis in Belgio. Commentarius
St. Etto is represented with oxen at his feet, as he is invoked
the Saints," vol. vii. , July 10, p. 261. Pircvius, sect, iii. , num. 16, p. 53. 6""
•J
See Les Petits Bollandistes, Vies des
n See Les Petits Bollandistes, Vies des Saints," tome viii,, xe Jour de Juillet, p. 239.
? 2 See Rev. S. Baring-Gould's "Lives of the Saints," vol. vii. , July 10, p. 261.
73 See Very Rev. Dr. F. C. Ilussenbeth's
" Emblems of Saints," edited by Rev. Dr.
Augustus Jessopp, p. 73.
74 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. ,
Julii x. De S. Ettone Ep. et Conf. Lcetiis in Belgio. Commentarius Prsevius, sect, ii. , p. 52.
e
Saints," tome viii. , x Jour de Juillet, p.
239.
6? Now a commune and town, in the De-
"
partment of Nord, France. See Gazetteer
of the World," vol. v. , p. 730.
68 The Bollandists give a detailed account
of the foregoing general statements in their Previous Commentary to the Acts of our saint, sect. iv.
69 See Les Petits Bollandistes, " Vies des Saints,"tome viii. , xeJour deJuillet, p. 239.
July io. ] LIVESOFTHEIRISHSAINTS. 187
lives. Even he was supposed to hear the prayers of country people, who intreated him to avert distempers from their cattle and other animals.
Article II. —St. Cuain or Cuan, of Airbhre, in Hy Kinsellagh. At the 10th of July, the festival of Cuan is found in the "Feilire" of St.
^Engus.
1 A
commentary
annexed 2 that he was Cuan Airbre in Ui- states,
Cennselaig, and he is the same as Cuan of Maethail Broccain in Desi of
Munster. This latter place, as we are told, 3 was in the deaconate of Kill-
barrimedin, in the diocese of Lismore, and where there was a church and a
well dedicated to St. Cuan. The Martyrology of Tallagh < registers a festival
at the 10th of July, in honour of Cuain of Airbir, in h Cendselaigh. The
Martyrology of Marianus O'Gorman has a similar identification, according
to Father O'Sheerin, when furnishing some particulars regarding the present
saint to the Bollandists,* who allude to him at the present date. We are
informed by Dr. O'Donovan, that Kilquan, in the county of Wexford, takes
its name from a church dedicated to the present holy man. Tobar Cuan
was situated five chains south-west from the ruins of Kilcowanmore, as we
learnfromthesamegentleman. NoticesofareligiousmannamedCuanare
introduced in the Acts of St. Fintan of Dunbleisque, and Colgan thinks he
must be identical with the present saint. 6 At this date, in the Martyrology
of Donegal,? is recorded Cuan, of Airbhre, in Ui Ceinnsealaigh, in
Leinster; andheisthesame,wearetold,asCuan,ofMaethailBrogain,in
Deisi Mumhan. Among many other saints bearing the same name, he is
mentioned 8 His
has been identified 9 with Cuain
"
In Fraser's Statistical Survey of the Declare the suffering of seven brethren County of Wexford. " part i. , p. 16, the
by Colgan.
Airbhre, in Hy Kinsellagh, a place now called Ballybrennan, at Kilcowanmore, barony of Bantry, and county of Wexford. This part of Ireland, it would appear, formerly abounded in silver. 10 The Kalendar of Drummond " has
notices of St. Cuain, at the 10th of July.
Article III. —Deacon Aedh, of Cuil-Maine, now Clonmany, County
ofDonegal. Venerationwasgiven,atthe10thofJuly,toAodhDeochain
1
in Crichmaine, according to the Martyrology of Tallagh. Elsewhere this
Article ii. — x In the " Leabhar Breac" copy is the following rami rendered into English by Whitley Stokes, LL. D. :—
Januarii, Vita S. Fintani Abb. , cap. ix. , and n. 17, pp. IX, 13.
* Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp. 192, 193.
Slti-irco cejwo tni. rnb|AAich|\e "OiAtnbo epoch Cpifc capcAip
Cuan ttlAj\ce morxfofCAn "Datti. milemArvCAp.
See "Acta Sanctorum Hiberniae," Feb-
place
unto whom Christ's cross was a dungeon, Cuan, Mark, a gre—at rest : twice six
thousand
the Royal Irish Academy," Irish Manu- that during the times of the Danes or
4
martyrs. "
"Transactions of
which there was a statement to the
script series, vol. i. , part i. of Oengus, p. ex.
On the Calendar
effect,
Ostmen, and when they possessed the sea- coasts of Wexford County, such abundance of silver was found there, that a mint was erected, and silver coins were formed to a considerable amount.
" Thus: vi. Idus—. In " Hibernia Sancti Confessoris Cuain. " Bishop Forbes' "Ka-
2
3 By Father O'Sheerin.
See ibid. , p. cxviii.
Edited by Rev. Dr. Kelly, p. xxix. 5 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus
hi. , Julii x. Among the pretermitted saints,
p. 3. lendars of Scotti—sh Saints," p. 18.
6*
See "Acta Sanctorum Hibernne," iii.
Article hi. Edited Rev. Dr. by
8
ruarii iv. De S. Cvanna sive Cvannacheo, n. 2, p. 251.
' ByWilliamM. Hennessy. 10 "
author tells us, he saw a Manuscript in the archiepiscopal library at Lambeth, and in
i88 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
[July io.
record styles him Mac Maine. 3 Marianus O'Gorman remits his feast to the 31st of August, as the Bollandists,3 who notice him at the 10th of July, observe. At the the same date, an entry appears in the Martyrology of Donegal,* regarding Deacon Aedh, of Cuil-Maine. This was the ancient name of the parish of Clonmany, in the north-western part of the barony of
Inishowen, and county of Donegal. s
This church was served by a vicar, to
the close of the fifteenth 6 The here 7 is situated century. village pleasantly
Clonmany, County of Donegal.
on a small rivulet, which rising in the adjoining mountains 8 finds its course to the Atlantic Ocean. Another festival, in honour of the present saint, seems to have been observed, on the 31st of August.
Article IV. —St. Senan. The name of Senan is set down in the
of x andof Martyrologies Tallagh
2atthe10thof Withother July.
Donegal,
saints of this name, Colgan notes him,3 but without any further distinction. 4
The Bollandists have an entry, at this date, regarding him. s
Kelly, p.
2
xxix.
Article iv. —• Edited Rev. Dr by
See at the 31st of August. 32
See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus iii. , Julii x. Among the pretermitted saints, P- 3-
4 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
192, 193.
5 It is described on the "Ordnance Sur-
vey Townland Maps for the County of Donegal," sheets 3, 4,9, 10, 11, 18, 19.
Kelly, p. xxix.
Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
192, 193.
3 See "Acta Sanctorum Hibernian," viii.
Mai tii, Appendix ad Acta S. Senani, cap. i. , p. 541 (recte) 537.
4 In the Irish Calendar, preserved in the Royal Irish Academy, at the vi. of the Ides
of July (July 10th), I find only a simple entry, "Seanan. " Ordnance Survey Office Copy formerly, and noted "Common Place Book F," p. 62.
5 They state De Senano semper virgine
idem — ad Servanum seu dixeris, quifacile
Sernanum reducetur. " "Acta Sanctorum,"
tomus iii. , July x. Among the pretermitted feasts, p. 3.
6
See Dr. O'Donovan's "Annals of the
Four Masters," vol. iv. , n. (k), p. 1249.
7 The accompanying illustration is from a
Photograph by William Lawrence, Dublin,
William F.
