41 His feast has been
assigned
to April 25th.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v7
i.
I3 See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Sexta Vita S. Patricii, cap. xcii. , p. 86.
m See Ussher's "Britannicarum Ecclesia-
rum Antiquitates," Index Chronologicus, p. 518.
Js See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga,"
This holy Bishop is venerated, on the
but the labourers T 3 St. few,
By Jocelyn, the monk of Furness. ""
See Colgan's Trias Thaumaturga," Quinta Appendix ad Acta S. Patricii, cap. xxiii. , p. 266.
Sexta Vita S. Patricii, cap. xcii. , p. 86. ,6 "
See Gazetteer of the World," vol. ix. ,
p. 85.
"7 According to Paulus Orosius, in his
July 3. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 39 inhabited Monaor Mevania 18—ajncient names for Man 1 ? —as also Hibernia.
To reclaim its inhabitants from their 30 as also from their superstitions,
mystic and druidic rites, the Irish Apostle turned his attention to this Isle, when he
had laboured with success in Ireland. He thereupon sailed over t—o Man.
who lived for
—some time on an Island or Peninsula
which
St.
afterwards bore his name wrought miracles while he was there, and he
people
33
the Isle of Man. - His mission was consolidated, by the erection of a church,
2
some are of opinion, that Sodor had been situated in the celebrated Isle of Iona, others state, that it was in Man itself. Again, it has been asserted, that after the Danes and Norwegians held sway over this Island in the eleventh century, as also over Dublin and Fingal, together with the Hebrides of Scot-
"
Patrick,
laboured to the gain
2I over to the truths of
22 He then
religion.
pointed one of his disciples, named Germanus, a wise and holy man, to be direc- tor over this new church. He is said to have been consecrated as first Bishop of
which was the first known to exist in the Isle
and this formed the nucleus of a See, Sodor and Man, * the origin of which is rather obscure, but it is said to have been so constituted by Pope Gregory IV. ,25 at Sodor. While
land \ these western clusters were divided into Norder, meaning
northern,"
and Sudor, meaning " southern," in the Norwegian language, Man being included in the Sudor, and Sodor thus became the title for its See. 20
The church of St. Germanus was built on an Island promontory, called after St. Patrick. 2 7 It has also been called Kirck-Jarmans, and it is situated near Peel Castle, being nearly surrounded by the sea, and isolated in posi-
but, when the tide is out, the water is scarcely mid-leg deep, being only separatedbyalittlerivulet,whichflowsfromKirk-JarmynMountains. The present ruinous cathedral 20 is thought to have stood on the site of a more ancient church. It was constructed, about the year 1245,3° and it is built in
28 on the western side of the
near the
The channel which divides it from the mainland at high water is very deep ;
tion,
Isle,
margin
of a
spacious bay
"
Universelle Ancienne et Mo-
" 22 "
work, Adversus Paganos Historiarum
Libri VII. ," lib. i. , cap. 2. This work only
comes down to a. d. 316. Leyden, 1738 or
1767, 4to. This writer flourished about the
beginning of the fifth century. See Michaud's
According to the Chronicon Manniae," St. Patrick was the first to preach the Catho- lie Faith to the Maux. See Ussher's "Bri- tannicarum Ecclesiarum Antiquitates," cap. xv. , p. 335.
23 See "The Beauties of and England
Wales ; or Delineations, Topographical, Historical and Descriptive," vol. iii. The Isle of Man, p. 269.
24 According to Gough's Camden's "Bri- tannia," vol. iii. , p. 701.
Biographie
derne," tome xxxi. , p. 409.
18 " The ancients were acquainted with it
under various names. Caesar distinguishes it
by that of Mona ; Ptolemy calls it Monczda,
or the more remote Mona, to distinguish it
from the Mona of Tacitus. Anglesea, Pliny
History
By John Britton and Edward Wedlake ecclesiastical antiquities of this Island.
styles it Monabia; Orosius, Mevania; and Nennius, Eubonia and Manaw. The appel- lation given to it by the Britons was Menaw; the natives call it Manning. " —" The Beau- ties of England and Wales
"
26 " See
Chronology of History," p. 209. Gazetteer of the World," vol. ix. ,
Topographical, Historical and Descriptive. "
vol. iii. The Isle of Man,
19 See Ussher's " Britannicarum Ecclesia-
Brayley,
rum Antiquitates," cap. xv. , p. 335.
p. 248.
20
Some of these are pleasingly introduced
by the great master of historic romance, Sir
Walter Scott, in his " Peveril of the Peak,"
chap, xvi. , with historic notes appended.
21
;
or Delineations,
of the Isle of Man is a work of great research, in reference to the
28 The view is from accompanying copied
an approved illustration, by William F. Wakeman, and drawn on the wood, en- graved by Mrs. Millard.
29 A south-east view of it with various other illustrations in detail, may be found, in the "Archaeological Journal," vol, iii. See
AccordingtoJocelyn,theformername J. L. Petit'sEcclesiasticalAntiquitiesofthe of Man was Eubonia. Isle of Man, pp. 49 to 58.
;
25 He ruled over the See of St.
from A. D. 828 to 844. See Sir Harris
Nicolas'
p. 85.
27 Train's
""
ap-
Peter,
40 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 3.
1
the form of a cross, with a coarse grey stone j*
cases and arches are coigned, formed with a stone found in the neighbour- hood, and almost as red as brick. 3 2 A little to the west are the ruins of St. Patrick's church. This is of ancient style with round-arched windows. A small round tower—like the Irish or Brechin round towers—lies near it westwards. A flight of steps ascends to the door, and within it are stairs for ascending to
the top of that building. 33 Beside it are the ruins of a quadrangular church, having features in common with many of our old Irish churches. 34
St. German's Cathedral, Isle of Man.
St. Germanus is said to have laboured in the work of his ministry, until the time of his death, in the Isle of Man. 35 On St. Patrick's return from Britain, he visited the islands, in order to gain them over to Christ. In par- ticular, he preached the Christian faith with great success in the Isle ofMan. 36 Nevertheless, it is thought, that he left mainly to Germanus the task of com- pleting his mission. The date for St. German's death has been assigned to a. d. 474. 37 In the ancient Martyrologies, however, we are at a loss to dis- cover the name of this Germanus. On this day, July 3rd, his festivity is usually recorded. 38 St. Patrick consecrated two others of his disciples, St.
30 See Grose's "Antiquities of England," toI. vi.
dimensions are minutely given, in J. L. Petit's paper, already mentioned.
32 A ground plan of the cathedral church of St. German in Peel Castle in the Isle of Man, as also an effective copperplate engrav-
1775, may
Wales ; or Delineations, Topographical, script Chronicle of that Island.
of that ruined taken in
See vol. " Peveril of the Peak. " vii. ,
ing
be found in
fane,
The Beauties of England and
"
Historical and Descriptive," vol. ii. , The Isle of Man, pp. 288, 289.
33 See Gough's Camden's " Britannia," vol. iii. , p. 703.
36 This account is confirmed, by a Manu-
34 A well-executed wood
ancient church and the round tower may be
des iii c Saints," tome viii. ,
p. 2.
Les Vies Juillet,
engraving
of this
Jour
Petit for the
Archaeological Journal," enti-
however, the angles, window-
seen prefixed to the article, written by J. L.
"
tled Ecclesiastical Antiquities of the Isle of
Man, vol. iii. , p. 49.
35 Several beautiful illustrations of this
Island may be found, in the Abbotsford edi-
tion of Sir Walter Scott's Waverly Novels.
37 See Ussher's " Britannicarum Ecclesia-
rum Antiquitates," Index Chronologicus,
A. D. CCCCLXIV. , p. 522.
38 See Les Petits Bollandistes,
" de
July 3. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 41
Conindrius39 and St. Romulus4° to be Bishops of Man, when our saint
After their death these were succeeded by St.
1 Macaldus. 42
his sanctity and for his miracles. These were the first fathers and founders of the church, which was established in the Isle of Man, by our great Apostle. In later times, and after the Reformation, while the Protestant Bishops of Sodor and Man «3 became suffragans to the Archbishop of York, the Catholics on the Island were subjects of the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin; in the present century, however, they have been annexed to the See of Liver- pool, England.
ArticleII. —St. Guthagon,Confessor,inBelgium. [Probablyin
the Eighth Ctntury. '] Incidentally we are informed, that the Belgian
Flemings were formerly accustomed to bestow the name of Scots on strangers
to their own country, and who differed from the Belgians in manners and
passed away to bliss.
Maguil,*
After conversion, this latter was eminent for prelate
customs much after the habit of the Romans, who called all other extern ;
——
people except those living in Italy or Greece by the depreciating title of
1 barbari or "barbarians. " Wherefore, an insinuation is conveyed, that
several of the Belgian saints called Scoti may have been strangers only, and not necessarily natives either of Ireland or Scotland. However, in the pre-
sent case, no argument is sought to be drawn against the generally received
statement, that Guthagon had been a native of Scotia ; whether of the greater
or lesser Scotia has been controverted, but it is left to the decis—ion of the
investigator. The—most ancient authority for St. Guthagon's Acts briefly as
theyarerecorded seemstohavebeenanoldoffice,belongingtothechurch
at Oostkerke, near Bruges, in Belgium. From it, Jean Ver-Meulen,2 better
known by the Latinized form of Molanus, probably copied that relation of
the present saint in his Indiculus of the holy persons connected with the
Netherlands. Notices of St. Guthagon are to be found, likewise, in the
"
Natales Sanctorum Belgii et eorum Chronologica Recapitulatio," at the 3rd of July. 3 Jean Cousin, also denominated Canonicus Joannes Cognatus, has copiedfromhim/whathadbeenrelatedaboutthepresentholyman. The
Bollandists s have some particulars regarding this saint, and prefixed in a commentary6 oftenparagraphs,toanofficereadinthechurchatOostkerk. Therearenoticesofhim,atthe3rdofJuly,byBishopChallenor. ? Atthis date,also,heiscommemoratedasarecluse,bytheRev. AlbanButler. 8 He
39 According to Colgan, he is more cor- rectly to be named Condirius, who is vene- rated in our Irish Calendars, at the 17th of November. See "Trias Thaumaturga," Quarta Vita S. Patricii, nn. 63, 64, p. 50.
2 He was born at Lille, A. D. 1553, and
being distinguished as a learned theologian and ecclesiastical historian in the University
of Louvain, he died prematurely, on the 1 8th
of September, 1585. See an account ofhim 40 "
Colgan states, that he had another name, Romanus, and that his feast is to be found, at the 1 8th of November. See ibid.
41 His feast has been assigned to April 25th. At that date, his Acts are to be found in the fourth Volume of this work, Art. i.
and of his works in Michaud's Biographie Universelle, Ancienne et Moderne," tome xxviii. , pp. 516, 517.
3 In two paragraphs, pp. 139, 140.
4 See " Historia Tornacensis, tomus iii. ,
p. 272.
5 See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus i. , Julii
iii. De S. Confessore Oostkerae Guthagono
apud Brugas in Flandria, pp. 668 to 670.
6 Written by Father John Baptist
42 See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga,"
Jocelyn's
clii. , pp. 98, 99.
cli. ,
" Sexta Vita S.
Patricii," cap.
43 The Protestant bishop of Sodor and
Man is the sole baron of the Island. See Soller, S. J.
" The Popular Encyclopedia ; or Conversa-
7 See " Britannia Sancta," part ii. , p. 8.
tions Lexicon,"—vol. iv. , p. 655. I
8 and
In his "Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, other principal Saints," vol. vii. ,
Article II. By Father John Baptist Soller, S. J,
July iii.
42 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 3.
is noticed, likewise, in Les Petits Bollandistes,? at the 3rd of July. This
the Irish seem to have claims for the honour of his stronger
saint, according of Scotia.
to the
Belgian traditions,
king,
King
11 man; but,
was either a
As usual, the Scottish writers contend, that he was their country-
nativity in their country. He is thought to have flourished during the eighth century. Some will have it, that he journeyed to Rome ; yet, although such pilgrimages to the shrines of the Apostles and martyrs there were undertaken by the Irish, Scots and Angles, soon after their conversion to Christianity, there does not appear to have been sufficient warrant for that statement in
referencetoSt. Guthagon. Throughreligiousmotives,however,heentered onapilgrimage,andwithacompanion,namedGillon. TheyarrivedinBel- gium, but at what period is not with certainty known. They rested at a place known as Knocken or Cnokem, which was situated on the maritime shore of Flanders. Nor was it far removed from Oostkerke. This village lay near Burges, on the sea side, between it and Slusa. " There the virtuous life of St. Guthegon gave very great edification to the people of that country. Another companion, Gildulfus, is commemorated with the foregoing, and he spent an eremitical life with them, in Belgium. ^ Here, St. Guthagon led a solitary life, «4 until the time of his death. It is not known for certain, whether he died at Cnokem or at Oostkerke. However, the clergy and people of that district reverently interred his body, according to tradition in the western part of the cemetery of Oostkerke. Those holy men, Saints Guthagon and Gillon, rest at Oist-Kerke, in Flanders. After St. Guthagon's death, miracles were wrought
at his grave. Gerald, Bishop of Tournay, in the year n59, exhumed St. Guthagon's body and placed it in a feretrum. The Abbots of Aldenburg,
DunensandofQuercetanwerepresent. 15 Itwouldseem,thatatasubsequent period, towards the end of a. d. 1444, there was another translation of St.
Guthagon's remains. In the succeeding century, Jean Ver-Meulen relates, that he saw these relics kept within iron gratings in the wall of the church. It has been remarked in our saint's office, that the shrine was hardly kept in a becoming manner. The Calvinists profaned the relics of St. Guthagon after the Reformation,16 and they seem to have utterly destroyed them; nothing having remained but a tooth of the holy man, which had been trans- ferred to the collegiate church of St. Saviour, at Bruges. On the case con-
:
taining it had been inscribed these words " Dens S. Guthagonis. " In the
beginning of the last century, the tooth of St. Guthagon was kept in the church at Oostkerke, and on the 3rd day of eacli July, it was there exposed
9 See "Vies des Saints," tome viii. , iiie Jour de Juillet, p. I.
10
In the ancient Office of St. Guthagon, he is called King of Scotia, as also by other writers.
" Thus, at the 3rd of July, in Adam
King's "Kalendar," he is placed in the first
century, and in the following words " S. :
Guthagon sone to ye King of Scotland con-
fess. banished for ye cathol—ik faith in flan-
Oostkerke stated to Father Soller, that this village was situated " in agio Franconatensi inter Brugas et Slusam, distans ab Utraque sesquimilliari. " Before his time it was a much more important place, while it had two pastors and llnee assistants, with five thou- sand communicants, lie adds, moreover, that he knew three villages bearing the same name in Belgium, "nempe apud Brugas, apud Furnas, et in Brabantia apud Tu-
ders vnder diocletiane, 99. " Bishop Forbes' ""
Kalendars of Scottish Saints," p. 156.
Also. at the same date, in Thomas Dempster's ""
5 See Mirseus* dici," p. 364.
Scoticum are these words "'"
Menologium
:
185. Belgici Burgun-
Oostkerkae confessoris, Guthagoni
Fasti
et
regis filii, qui divino amore tactus, regnum terre- n—um sprevit, ut cceleste obtineret B. K. ML. "
Ibid. , p. 204.
" A learned nobleman and toparch of
l6 See Bishop Sancta," part ii. , p. 8.
bise. "
I3 See Father Stephen White's Apologia
pro Hibernia," cap. iv. , p. 42.
' 4 See " Circle of the Seasons/' p.
t? Printed a. d. 1509.
10 or son to a
Challenor's "Britannia
July 3. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 43
for the veneration of the faithful. Formerly, his feast was kept there with
greatsolemnity,andonit therewasanobligationforhearingMass. This, however, had been abrogated, yet a proper office for a Confessor not a Pontiff had been recited, and he was invoked as a minor patron of that place. The feast of this saint is set down at the 3rd of July, in the enlarged edition of
Usuard's Martyrology; also, in a Manuscript Catalogue of the Saints ofScot- x
land ; as likewise, in the Breviary of Aberdeen. ? John Wilson, in his " Martyrologium Anglicanum," sets him down as an Irishman, at this day. The name of Guthagon occurs, at this date, in the anonymous Catalogue, publishedbyO'SullevanBeare,asGuthagonius. MolanusandHenryFitz-
simon set him down, as Rex et Confessor, at the Guthagonus,
18
3rd July. Again,afeasthasbeenassignedtohim,atthe1stofOctober. Thisappears
as having reference to the Translation of his Relics.
Article III. —St. Cilline or Cillen, Droicteach, Abbot of Iona, Scotland. {Eighth Century. '] Among a long line of illustrious abbots who
presided over Iona, the present holy man is classed.
In the Martyrology of
occurs. He
1 at the
is noted in the Martyrology of Marianus O'Gorman, at the
this date, the Bollandistss have noticed him, also, on the foregoing authority and on that of Sirinus. Some notices of him occur, in the work of Bishop Forbes/ ThisdistinguishedsaintderivedhisoriginfromtheraceofConall Cremthainne, son to Niall of the Nine Hostages, of the southern Hy-Neill. This saint's pedigree is thus given in the Naemhsenchas. His father's name was Dicolla, son of Cilline, son to Amalgadh, son of Feradhaigh, son to Feic,* son of Cerbaill, who was son to the aforesaid Conall Cremthainne. 6 He was born in Ireland, probably towards the close of the seventh century. The epithet, suffixed to his original name Cilline, and which was Droicteach, sig- nifying "Bridge-maker," has reference apparently to work of that kind on which he had been engaged, previous to his leaving Ireland for Scotland. It is likely, that he felt a religious inspiration to join the Columban institute in Iona, and there, too, it would seem, that he chose to live as an ancho- rite,? according to the custom of those monks, who desired to observe a very strict discipline. His virtues were so highly esteemed by that community, after the death of St. Cilline Fada, or the Tall Abbot of Iona, whick took place, a. d. 726, Cilline Droicteach was selected as his immediate successor. 8 Meanwhile, Feidhlimid or Failbhe seems to have been elected Abbot of Iona in the year 722, nor do we find that he ceased to enjoy that title, during the administrationofFaelcu,9ofCilleneFada,10 andofCillineDroicteach,until he departed this life at the very advanced age of eighty-seven years, com-
Tallagh,
3rd
of
July,
the
simply entry
of
Cilline,
Abb.
Iae,
18
Catholica Iberniae Compendium," tomus i. , lib. iv. , cap. xi. , —xii. , pp. 50, 54.
*
Article hi. Edited by Rev. Dr.
See O'Sullevan Beare's "Historia baill, King of Ireland, who reigned 21 years, and who died a. d. 565.
Kelly, p. xxviii. 2"
Royal Irish Academy.
^ In the Annals of Tighernach and of
Ulster, he is only styled ancorita.
Thus : Kellenus cognomento Droich-
theach, virgo, miles egregius. "
3 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus i. ,
Julii iii. Among the pretermitted saints, p. 631.
4 See " Kalendars of Scottish Saints,"
p. 301.
5 He was brother to Diannait Mac Cer-
8
In a gloss on his name, in the Calendar
6
According to the Leabhar Lecain, in the
of Marianus O'Gorman, he is expressly styled -Abb 1^e ColAim cible.
9 See an account of him, in the Fourth Volume of this work, at April 3rd, Art. iv.
I0
14th, Art. iii.
of 2 At 3rd July.
For a notice of him, see ibid. , at April
44 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 3.
pleted in 759, and during the administratorship of Slebhine. Whether
Feidhlimid or Failbhe " had been the principal or only a coadjutor Abbot
over Iona cannot be gleaned with any degree of distinctness from the Irish
12
Annals.
It is thought, that owing to the circumstance of Cilline Droicteach
having chosen the rigid rule of an anchorite's state, the active duties of his
presidency, over the monastic institute of Iona, had been in a great measure
discharged by his coadjutor, Fedhlimid. He continued alive, during the pre-
sidency of Cilline Droicteach. The present hoiy man brought to Erin that
shrine of the many relics,^ which Adamnan had collected, to make peace
and friendship between the Cinel-Conaill and the Cinel-Eoghain. This
appears to have occurred in the year 727. The Relics collected by Adamnan
were returned to Iona in 730. The present saint, called Cilleine Droctigh,
anchorite of la, died on the 3rd of July, a. d. 747. I4 Other accounts have
l6 He is to have been the fourteenth abbot of reputed
a. d. J s and
12
See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's "Life
751
752.
Iona, commencing with the great founder, St. Columkille. 1 ? We have him
in the of 18 at this same Martyrology Donegal,
as Cillen
recorded,
Droichtech, Abbot of la Colum Cille.
date,
Article IV. —St. Tirechan, Bishop. {Seventh Century^ It is much to be regretted, that we know very little relating to the personal history of the present distinguished bishop, so much regarded in his day, and who was remarkable, doubtless, for his holiness of life, as for his proficiency in learn- ing. Being one of St. Patrick's early biographers should alone give him a special claim on our veneration. Marianus O'Gorman has an entry of Tire- chan, at the 3rd of July, in his Calendar.
I3 See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga," Sexta Vita S. Patricii, cap. xcii. , p. 86.
m See Ussher's "Britannicarum Ecclesia-
rum Antiquitates," Index Chronologicus, p. 518.
Js See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga,"
This holy Bishop is venerated, on the
but the labourers T 3 St. few,
By Jocelyn, the monk of Furness. ""
See Colgan's Trias Thaumaturga," Quinta Appendix ad Acta S. Patricii, cap. xxiii. , p. 266.
Sexta Vita S. Patricii, cap. xcii. , p. 86. ,6 "
See Gazetteer of the World," vol. ix. ,
p. 85.
"7 According to Paulus Orosius, in his
July 3. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 39 inhabited Monaor Mevania 18—ajncient names for Man 1 ? —as also Hibernia.
To reclaim its inhabitants from their 30 as also from their superstitions,
mystic and druidic rites, the Irish Apostle turned his attention to this Isle, when he
had laboured with success in Ireland. He thereupon sailed over t—o Man.
who lived for
—some time on an Island or Peninsula
which
St.
afterwards bore his name wrought miracles while he was there, and he
people
33
the Isle of Man. - His mission was consolidated, by the erection of a church,
2
some are of opinion, that Sodor had been situated in the celebrated Isle of Iona, others state, that it was in Man itself. Again, it has been asserted, that after the Danes and Norwegians held sway over this Island in the eleventh century, as also over Dublin and Fingal, together with the Hebrides of Scot-
"
Patrick,
laboured to the gain
2I over to the truths of
22 He then
religion.
pointed one of his disciples, named Germanus, a wise and holy man, to be direc- tor over this new church. He is said to have been consecrated as first Bishop of
which was the first known to exist in the Isle
and this formed the nucleus of a See, Sodor and Man, * the origin of which is rather obscure, but it is said to have been so constituted by Pope Gregory IV. ,25 at Sodor. While
land \ these western clusters were divided into Norder, meaning
northern,"
and Sudor, meaning " southern," in the Norwegian language, Man being included in the Sudor, and Sodor thus became the title for its See. 20
The church of St. Germanus was built on an Island promontory, called after St. Patrick. 2 7 It has also been called Kirck-Jarmans, and it is situated near Peel Castle, being nearly surrounded by the sea, and isolated in posi-
but, when the tide is out, the water is scarcely mid-leg deep, being only separatedbyalittlerivulet,whichflowsfromKirk-JarmynMountains. The present ruinous cathedral 20 is thought to have stood on the site of a more ancient church. It was constructed, about the year 1245,3° and it is built in
28 on the western side of the
near the
The channel which divides it from the mainland at high water is very deep ;
tion,
Isle,
margin
of a
spacious bay
"
Universelle Ancienne et Mo-
" 22 "
work, Adversus Paganos Historiarum
Libri VII. ," lib. i. , cap. 2. This work only
comes down to a. d. 316. Leyden, 1738 or
1767, 4to. This writer flourished about the
beginning of the fifth century. See Michaud's
According to the Chronicon Manniae," St. Patrick was the first to preach the Catho- lie Faith to the Maux. See Ussher's "Bri- tannicarum Ecclesiarum Antiquitates," cap. xv. , p. 335.
23 See "The Beauties of and England
Wales ; or Delineations, Topographical, Historical and Descriptive," vol. iii. The Isle of Man, p. 269.
24 According to Gough's Camden's "Bri- tannia," vol. iii. , p. 701.
Biographie
derne," tome xxxi. , p. 409.
18 " The ancients were acquainted with it
under various names. Caesar distinguishes it
by that of Mona ; Ptolemy calls it Monczda,
or the more remote Mona, to distinguish it
from the Mona of Tacitus. Anglesea, Pliny
History
By John Britton and Edward Wedlake ecclesiastical antiquities of this Island.
styles it Monabia; Orosius, Mevania; and Nennius, Eubonia and Manaw. The appel- lation given to it by the Britons was Menaw; the natives call it Manning. " —" The Beau- ties of England and Wales
"
26 " See
Chronology of History," p. 209. Gazetteer of the World," vol. ix. ,
Topographical, Historical and Descriptive. "
vol. iii. The Isle of Man,
19 See Ussher's " Britannicarum Ecclesia-
Brayley,
rum Antiquitates," cap. xv. , p. 335.
p. 248.
20
Some of these are pleasingly introduced
by the great master of historic romance, Sir
Walter Scott, in his " Peveril of the Peak,"
chap, xvi. , with historic notes appended.
21
;
or Delineations,
of the Isle of Man is a work of great research, in reference to the
28 The view is from accompanying copied
an approved illustration, by William F. Wakeman, and drawn on the wood, en- graved by Mrs. Millard.
29 A south-east view of it with various other illustrations in detail, may be found, in the "Archaeological Journal," vol, iii. See
AccordingtoJocelyn,theformername J. L. Petit'sEcclesiasticalAntiquitiesofthe of Man was Eubonia. Isle of Man, pp. 49 to 58.
;
25 He ruled over the See of St.
from A. D. 828 to 844. See Sir Harris
Nicolas'
p. 85.
27 Train's
""
ap-
Peter,
40 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 3.
1
the form of a cross, with a coarse grey stone j*
cases and arches are coigned, formed with a stone found in the neighbour- hood, and almost as red as brick. 3 2 A little to the west are the ruins of St. Patrick's church. This is of ancient style with round-arched windows. A small round tower—like the Irish or Brechin round towers—lies near it westwards. A flight of steps ascends to the door, and within it are stairs for ascending to
the top of that building. 33 Beside it are the ruins of a quadrangular church, having features in common with many of our old Irish churches. 34
St. German's Cathedral, Isle of Man.
St. Germanus is said to have laboured in the work of his ministry, until the time of his death, in the Isle of Man. 35 On St. Patrick's return from Britain, he visited the islands, in order to gain them over to Christ. In par- ticular, he preached the Christian faith with great success in the Isle ofMan. 36 Nevertheless, it is thought, that he left mainly to Germanus the task of com- pleting his mission. The date for St. German's death has been assigned to a. d. 474. 37 In the ancient Martyrologies, however, we are at a loss to dis- cover the name of this Germanus. On this day, July 3rd, his festivity is usually recorded. 38 St. Patrick consecrated two others of his disciples, St.
30 See Grose's "Antiquities of England," toI. vi.
dimensions are minutely given, in J. L. Petit's paper, already mentioned.
32 A ground plan of the cathedral church of St. German in Peel Castle in the Isle of Man, as also an effective copperplate engrav-
1775, may
Wales ; or Delineations, Topographical, script Chronicle of that Island.
of that ruined taken in
See vol. " Peveril of the Peak. " vii. ,
ing
be found in
fane,
The Beauties of England and
"
Historical and Descriptive," vol. ii. , The Isle of Man, pp. 288, 289.
33 See Gough's Camden's " Britannia," vol. iii. , p. 703.
36 This account is confirmed, by a Manu-
34 A well-executed wood
ancient church and the round tower may be
des iii c Saints," tome viii. ,
p. 2.
Les Vies Juillet,
engraving
of this
Jour
Petit for the
Archaeological Journal," enti-
however, the angles, window-
seen prefixed to the article, written by J. L.
"
tled Ecclesiastical Antiquities of the Isle of
Man, vol. iii. , p. 49.
35 Several beautiful illustrations of this
Island may be found, in the Abbotsford edi-
tion of Sir Walter Scott's Waverly Novels.
37 See Ussher's " Britannicarum Ecclesia-
rum Antiquitates," Index Chronologicus,
A. D. CCCCLXIV. , p. 522.
38 See Les Petits Bollandistes,
" de
July 3. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 41
Conindrius39 and St. Romulus4° to be Bishops of Man, when our saint
After their death these were succeeded by St.
1 Macaldus. 42
his sanctity and for his miracles. These were the first fathers and founders of the church, which was established in the Isle of Man, by our great Apostle. In later times, and after the Reformation, while the Protestant Bishops of Sodor and Man «3 became suffragans to the Archbishop of York, the Catholics on the Island were subjects of the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin; in the present century, however, they have been annexed to the See of Liver- pool, England.
ArticleII. —St. Guthagon,Confessor,inBelgium. [Probablyin
the Eighth Ctntury. '] Incidentally we are informed, that the Belgian
Flemings were formerly accustomed to bestow the name of Scots on strangers
to their own country, and who differed from the Belgians in manners and
passed away to bliss.
Maguil,*
After conversion, this latter was eminent for prelate
customs much after the habit of the Romans, who called all other extern ;
——
people except those living in Italy or Greece by the depreciating title of
1 barbari or "barbarians. " Wherefore, an insinuation is conveyed, that
several of the Belgian saints called Scoti may have been strangers only, and not necessarily natives either of Ireland or Scotland. However, in the pre-
sent case, no argument is sought to be drawn against the generally received
statement, that Guthagon had been a native of Scotia ; whether of the greater
or lesser Scotia has been controverted, but it is left to the decis—ion of the
investigator. The—most ancient authority for St. Guthagon's Acts briefly as
theyarerecorded seemstohavebeenanoldoffice,belongingtothechurch
at Oostkerke, near Bruges, in Belgium. From it, Jean Ver-Meulen,2 better
known by the Latinized form of Molanus, probably copied that relation of
the present saint in his Indiculus of the holy persons connected with the
Netherlands. Notices of St. Guthagon are to be found, likewise, in the
"
Natales Sanctorum Belgii et eorum Chronologica Recapitulatio," at the 3rd of July. 3 Jean Cousin, also denominated Canonicus Joannes Cognatus, has copiedfromhim/whathadbeenrelatedaboutthepresentholyman. The
Bollandists s have some particulars regarding this saint, and prefixed in a commentary6 oftenparagraphs,toanofficereadinthechurchatOostkerk. Therearenoticesofhim,atthe3rdofJuly,byBishopChallenor. ? Atthis date,also,heiscommemoratedasarecluse,bytheRev. AlbanButler. 8 He
39 According to Colgan, he is more cor- rectly to be named Condirius, who is vene- rated in our Irish Calendars, at the 17th of November. See "Trias Thaumaturga," Quarta Vita S. Patricii, nn. 63, 64, p. 50.
2 He was born at Lille, A. D. 1553, and
being distinguished as a learned theologian and ecclesiastical historian in the University
of Louvain, he died prematurely, on the 1 8th
of September, 1585. See an account ofhim 40 "
Colgan states, that he had another name, Romanus, and that his feast is to be found, at the 1 8th of November. See ibid.
41 His feast has been assigned to April 25th. At that date, his Acts are to be found in the fourth Volume of this work, Art. i.
and of his works in Michaud's Biographie Universelle, Ancienne et Moderne," tome xxviii. , pp. 516, 517.
3 In two paragraphs, pp. 139, 140.
4 See " Historia Tornacensis, tomus iii. ,
p. 272.
5 See " Acta Sanctorum," tomus i. , Julii
iii. De S. Confessore Oostkerae Guthagono
apud Brugas in Flandria, pp. 668 to 670.
6 Written by Father John Baptist
42 See Colgan's "Trias Thaumaturga,"
Jocelyn's
clii. , pp. 98, 99.
cli. ,
" Sexta Vita S.
Patricii," cap.
43 The Protestant bishop of Sodor and
Man is the sole baron of the Island. See Soller, S. J.
" The Popular Encyclopedia ; or Conversa-
7 See " Britannia Sancta," part ii. , p. 8.
tions Lexicon,"—vol. iv. , p. 655. I
8 and
In his "Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, other principal Saints," vol. vii. ,
Article II. By Father John Baptist Soller, S. J,
July iii.
42 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 3.
is noticed, likewise, in Les Petits Bollandistes,? at the 3rd of July. This
the Irish seem to have claims for the honour of his stronger
saint, according of Scotia.
to the
Belgian traditions,
king,
King
11 man; but,
was either a
As usual, the Scottish writers contend, that he was their country-
nativity in their country. He is thought to have flourished during the eighth century. Some will have it, that he journeyed to Rome ; yet, although such pilgrimages to the shrines of the Apostles and martyrs there were undertaken by the Irish, Scots and Angles, soon after their conversion to Christianity, there does not appear to have been sufficient warrant for that statement in
referencetoSt. Guthagon. Throughreligiousmotives,however,heentered onapilgrimage,andwithacompanion,namedGillon. TheyarrivedinBel- gium, but at what period is not with certainty known. They rested at a place known as Knocken or Cnokem, which was situated on the maritime shore of Flanders. Nor was it far removed from Oostkerke. This village lay near Burges, on the sea side, between it and Slusa. " There the virtuous life of St. Guthegon gave very great edification to the people of that country. Another companion, Gildulfus, is commemorated with the foregoing, and he spent an eremitical life with them, in Belgium. ^ Here, St. Guthagon led a solitary life, «4 until the time of his death. It is not known for certain, whether he died at Cnokem or at Oostkerke. However, the clergy and people of that district reverently interred his body, according to tradition in the western part of the cemetery of Oostkerke. Those holy men, Saints Guthagon and Gillon, rest at Oist-Kerke, in Flanders. After St. Guthagon's death, miracles were wrought
at his grave. Gerald, Bishop of Tournay, in the year n59, exhumed St. Guthagon's body and placed it in a feretrum. The Abbots of Aldenburg,
DunensandofQuercetanwerepresent. 15 Itwouldseem,thatatasubsequent period, towards the end of a. d. 1444, there was another translation of St.
Guthagon's remains. In the succeeding century, Jean Ver-Meulen relates, that he saw these relics kept within iron gratings in the wall of the church. It has been remarked in our saint's office, that the shrine was hardly kept in a becoming manner. The Calvinists profaned the relics of St. Guthagon after the Reformation,16 and they seem to have utterly destroyed them; nothing having remained but a tooth of the holy man, which had been trans- ferred to the collegiate church of St. Saviour, at Bruges. On the case con-
:
taining it had been inscribed these words " Dens S. Guthagonis. " In the
beginning of the last century, the tooth of St. Guthagon was kept in the church at Oostkerke, and on the 3rd day of eacli July, it was there exposed
9 See "Vies des Saints," tome viii. , iiie Jour de Juillet, p. I.
10
In the ancient Office of St. Guthagon, he is called King of Scotia, as also by other writers.
" Thus, at the 3rd of July, in Adam
King's "Kalendar," he is placed in the first
century, and in the following words " S. :
Guthagon sone to ye King of Scotland con-
fess. banished for ye cathol—ik faith in flan-
Oostkerke stated to Father Soller, that this village was situated " in agio Franconatensi inter Brugas et Slusam, distans ab Utraque sesquimilliari. " Before his time it was a much more important place, while it had two pastors and llnee assistants, with five thou- sand communicants, lie adds, moreover, that he knew three villages bearing the same name in Belgium, "nempe apud Brugas, apud Furnas, et in Brabantia apud Tu-
ders vnder diocletiane, 99. " Bishop Forbes' ""
Kalendars of Scottish Saints," p. 156.
Also. at the same date, in Thomas Dempster's ""
5 See Mirseus* dici," p. 364.
Scoticum are these words "'"
Menologium
:
185. Belgici Burgun-
Oostkerkae confessoris, Guthagoni
Fasti
et
regis filii, qui divino amore tactus, regnum terre- n—um sprevit, ut cceleste obtineret B. K. ML. "
Ibid. , p. 204.
" A learned nobleman and toparch of
l6 See Bishop Sancta," part ii. , p. 8.
bise. "
I3 See Father Stephen White's Apologia
pro Hibernia," cap. iv. , p. 42.
' 4 See " Circle of the Seasons/' p.
t? Printed a. d. 1509.
10 or son to a
Challenor's "Britannia
July 3. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 43
for the veneration of the faithful. Formerly, his feast was kept there with
greatsolemnity,andonit therewasanobligationforhearingMass. This, however, had been abrogated, yet a proper office for a Confessor not a Pontiff had been recited, and he was invoked as a minor patron of that place. The feast of this saint is set down at the 3rd of July, in the enlarged edition of
Usuard's Martyrology; also, in a Manuscript Catalogue of the Saints ofScot- x
land ; as likewise, in the Breviary of Aberdeen. ? John Wilson, in his " Martyrologium Anglicanum," sets him down as an Irishman, at this day. The name of Guthagon occurs, at this date, in the anonymous Catalogue, publishedbyO'SullevanBeare,asGuthagonius. MolanusandHenryFitz-
simon set him down, as Rex et Confessor, at the Guthagonus,
18
3rd July. Again,afeasthasbeenassignedtohim,atthe1stofOctober. Thisappears
as having reference to the Translation of his Relics.
Article III. —St. Cilline or Cillen, Droicteach, Abbot of Iona, Scotland. {Eighth Century. '] Among a long line of illustrious abbots who
presided over Iona, the present holy man is classed.
In the Martyrology of
occurs. He
1 at the
is noted in the Martyrology of Marianus O'Gorman, at the
this date, the Bollandistss have noticed him, also, on the foregoing authority and on that of Sirinus. Some notices of him occur, in the work of Bishop Forbes/ ThisdistinguishedsaintderivedhisoriginfromtheraceofConall Cremthainne, son to Niall of the Nine Hostages, of the southern Hy-Neill. This saint's pedigree is thus given in the Naemhsenchas. His father's name was Dicolla, son of Cilline, son to Amalgadh, son of Feradhaigh, son to Feic,* son of Cerbaill, who was son to the aforesaid Conall Cremthainne. 6 He was born in Ireland, probably towards the close of the seventh century. The epithet, suffixed to his original name Cilline, and which was Droicteach, sig- nifying "Bridge-maker," has reference apparently to work of that kind on which he had been engaged, previous to his leaving Ireland for Scotland. It is likely, that he felt a religious inspiration to join the Columban institute in Iona, and there, too, it would seem, that he chose to live as an ancho- rite,? according to the custom of those monks, who desired to observe a very strict discipline. His virtues were so highly esteemed by that community, after the death of St. Cilline Fada, or the Tall Abbot of Iona, whick took place, a. d. 726, Cilline Droicteach was selected as his immediate successor. 8 Meanwhile, Feidhlimid or Failbhe seems to have been elected Abbot of Iona in the year 722, nor do we find that he ceased to enjoy that title, during the administrationofFaelcu,9ofCilleneFada,10 andofCillineDroicteach,until he departed this life at the very advanced age of eighty-seven years, com-
Tallagh,
3rd
of
July,
the
simply entry
of
Cilline,
Abb.
Iae,
18
Catholica Iberniae Compendium," tomus i. , lib. iv. , cap. xi. , —xii. , pp. 50, 54.
*
Article hi. Edited by Rev. Dr.
See O'Sullevan Beare's "Historia baill, King of Ireland, who reigned 21 years, and who died a. d. 565.
Kelly, p. xxviii. 2"
Royal Irish Academy.
^ In the Annals of Tighernach and of
Ulster, he is only styled ancorita.
Thus : Kellenus cognomento Droich-
theach, virgo, miles egregius. "
3 See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus i. ,
Julii iii. Among the pretermitted saints, p. 631.
4 See " Kalendars of Scottish Saints,"
p. 301.
5 He was brother to Diannait Mac Cer-
8
In a gloss on his name, in the Calendar
6
According to the Leabhar Lecain, in the
of Marianus O'Gorman, he is expressly styled -Abb 1^e ColAim cible.
9 See an account of him, in the Fourth Volume of this work, at April 3rd, Art. iv.
I0
14th, Art. iii.
of 2 At 3rd July.
For a notice of him, see ibid. , at April
44 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [July 3.
pleted in 759, and during the administratorship of Slebhine. Whether
Feidhlimid or Failbhe " had been the principal or only a coadjutor Abbot
over Iona cannot be gleaned with any degree of distinctness from the Irish
12
Annals.
It is thought, that owing to the circumstance of Cilline Droicteach
having chosen the rigid rule of an anchorite's state, the active duties of his
presidency, over the monastic institute of Iona, had been in a great measure
discharged by his coadjutor, Fedhlimid. He continued alive, during the pre-
sidency of Cilline Droicteach. The present hoiy man brought to Erin that
shrine of the many relics,^ which Adamnan had collected, to make peace
and friendship between the Cinel-Conaill and the Cinel-Eoghain. This
appears to have occurred in the year 727. The Relics collected by Adamnan
were returned to Iona in 730. The present saint, called Cilleine Droctigh,
anchorite of la, died on the 3rd of July, a. d. 747. I4 Other accounts have
l6 He is to have been the fourteenth abbot of reputed
a. d. J s and
12
See Rev. Dr. Reeves' Adamnan's "Life
751
752.
Iona, commencing with the great founder, St. Columkille. 1 ? We have him
in the of 18 at this same Martyrology Donegal,
as Cillen
recorded,
Droichtech, Abbot of la Colum Cille.
date,
Article IV. —St. Tirechan, Bishop. {Seventh Century^ It is much to be regretted, that we know very little relating to the personal history of the present distinguished bishop, so much regarded in his day, and who was remarkable, doubtless, for his holiness of life, as for his proficiency in learn- ing. Being one of St. Patrick's early biographers should alone give him a special claim on our veneration. Marianus O'Gorman has an entry of Tire- chan, at the 3rd of July, in his Calendar.
