To be completed in Twelve Royal Octavo
Volumes^
and in 120 Farts, of dOt pages each Fart.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v5
—Festival of St.
Caidoc and Frechor or Adrian, Centule, Picardy, and Apostles of the Morini, in France.
[Sixth and
Seventh Centuries. ] . . . . . . . . . 615
Article VIII. —Festival of the Nativity of St. Thomas . . .
Article IX. —Festival of Eutychius, Martyr . . . . . .
Article X. -—Reputed Feast for the Translation of the Relics of St. Dympna and of
St. Gerebern, at Gheel, in Brabrant . . . . . . 617 Article XL—Reputed Feast of St. Totuanus, Martyr . . . . . . 617
^i)trt2'-tot ©as of iilag.
Article I. St. Feradacius, Abbot of Iona, Scotland. [Ninth Century. ] . . . . . . . . . . . . 617 Article II. —St. Fer-da-crioch . . . . . . . . . . . 618
Article III. —St. Eoghan, Bishop of Cremhcaille, or Abbot of Moville,
County of Down . . . Article IV. —St. Maelodhrain, of Slane, County of Meath
. . . 619 . . . 619 . . . 621 . . . 621 . . . 621 . . . 621
. . . . . . . . .
[Seventeenth Century. ] . . . . . . Article X. —Reputed Feast of St. Silanus, a Pilgrim and Bishop . . . Article XL—Reputed Feast of Findocha, Virgin, in Scotland . . . Article XII. —Reputed Feast of St. Frudocha, Virgin . . .
Article v. —St. Ernin, of Cranfield Parish, County of Antrim
Article VI. —St. Coirpre, Abbot of Moville. County of Down . . .
Article VII. —Feast of St. Chrysogenus, Martyr, at Aquileia . . .
Article VIII. —St. Petronilla, Virgin . . . . . .
Article IX. —The Blessed John Meagh, S. J. , Martyr, near Prague, Bohemia.
. . . ••• 594 . . . . . . 596 •• ••• 597
. . . 616
. . . 617
. . . 622 . . . 623 . . . 623 . . . 623
Page
Abbot, Right Rev. Father, of La Trappe West Gorton, Manchester, England.
Monastery, Gethsemani, Nelson County, Slattery, Rev. J. , St. Patrick's Catholic _
State of Kentucky, U. S. A.
Byrne, Very Rev. P. J. Byrne, Dean, V. G. ,
P. P. . Dungannon, County of Tyrone. Franciscan Convent, Very Rev. Guardian of,
Church, Bradford, England.
Walshaw, Very Rev. Canon Samuel, St.
Mary's Church, Sheffield, England.
DIRECTION TO THE BINDER.
^^ The Binder will please to prefix the Frontispiece and Title Page, contained in Part 51, and First of this Volume, to the present Table of Contents, which, in order of binding, should precede the various succeeding Parts to 60, which Part closes the present Volume.
To be completed in Twelve Royal Octavo Volumes^ and in 120 Farts, of dOt pages each Fart.
'^m% 0f the frijsh ^mx\%, Compiled from Manuscript and other Sources,
SEitjj tje (fTommcmorations anti jFcstibals of ^lolg Persons, NOTED IN
Calendars, Martyrofogies, and Various Works, Domestic or Foreign,
RELATING TO
Cfje ancient Cljurti) listDtg of felanlr,
VERY REV. JOHN CANON O'HANLON, M. R. I. A.
Parts, ONE SHILLING each Part to Subscribers; ONE SHILLING and SIXPENCE each to Non-Subscribers.
Vol. I. For the Month of January, containing 13 Parts, cloth, gilt, and gilt edges, bevelled, in highly ornamental Covers, Price to Subscribers, i6s. to Non-Subscribers, 22s. 6d.
Vol. II. For the Month of February, containing 12 Parts, do. , Price to Subscribers, 15s. ; to Non-Subscribers, 21s.
Vol. III. For the Month of March, containing 16 Parts, do. . Price to Sub- scribers, 19s. ; to Non-Subscribers, 27s.
Vol, IV. For the Month of April, containing 9 Parts, do. . Price to Sub- scribers, i2S. ; to Non-Subscribers, i6s. 6d.
Vol. V. For the Month of May, containing 10 parts, do. , Price to Sub- scribers, 13s. ; to Non-Subscribers, i8s.
plain, each Vol. , 2S. 6d. ; in best morocco, extra, 12s. ; in any Variety of Colour ordered. The rich Style of Cover design, the 0/>us JIil>ernicn//i, specially adapted, only fur- nished from the Bookbinding Establishment of Messrs. James Duffy and Sons. ^^ Cloth Cases, in a Variety of Colours, with richly gilt Sides and Back, and in a Style to match for each Volume, can there be obtained, at 2s, each,
or free by Post, 2s. 3d.
*^* Binding in Cloth, gilt, and gilt edges, eacli Vol. , 3s,
;
;
SUPPLEMENTAL LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS.
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
jfirsJt 2Baj) of iWap*
ARTICLE I. —ST. CEALLACH, OR KELLACH, BISHOP OF KILLALA, AND MARTYR.
[SIXTH CENTURY. ] CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION—IRISH LIFE OF ST. CELLACH—HIS FAMILY AND RACE—HIS PERIOD HIS EARLY INSTRUCTION RECEIVED FROM ST. KIERAN—CELLACH WITHDRAWS FROM CLONMACNOISE, AND HE IS NOMINATED KING OF CONNAUGHT, BY THE TRIBE OF HY-FIACHRACH.
WHILE popular traditions have locally preserved the memorials of our saints, they have frequently added statements and embellishments of a questionable character. In many instances, it may well be supposed, the writers of Irish Saints' Lives drew from such sources, and were only partially acquainted with the factsof contemporaneous history; oftentimes too, theywere ignorant in respect to the period, persons, and circumstances, that transpired coeval with them, and a knowledge of which might help to give more accuracy andconsistencytothenarratives,whichhavedescendedtous. Inageneralway, most of the detailed prose Lives are mediseval, and apparently not grounded on the accounts of authors, who had personal knowledge of their subjects. Again, the rhythmic statements of various provincial bards seem to have the flavour of romance, more to recomm. end them for popular admiration, than a sound historic basis for the exercise of sober judgment, and to sustain the localtraditions,fromwhichthosecompositionsemanated. Yet,sometimes, we are not to regard them as largely the product of imagination and pure in- vention. It is, occasionally, with very great diffidence, we are obliged to follow those guides, and yet to present such information as they afford, in a reserved measure, and frequently in a mood of doubt or dissent. Were it attempted to describe minutely the miracles, fortunes, and characteristics of saints, as
recorded in their old Acts, too often might we wander into narratives, wholly irrelevant to those objects sought to be attained. It is more than probable, edification given to the reader could hardly prove the result for such an exact reproduction of stories manifestly fabulous. However pleasant in perform- ance and choice to the writer, to record even harmless legends regarding our saints, this might be deemed even prolix and misplaced by the critical reader.
Moreover, as embracing the later popular accounts of times, long subsequent '
Vol. v. —No. i.
a
—
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [May i
to the age of those holy persons, besides displacing incongruity, our narrative mustrequirespace,morethancouldbeavailablewithromanticnarratives. Our ])lan demands, in most cases, very brief biographical notices, and these we labour to render consistent, so fiir as may be attempted, with the probabilities of history, or with the fair deductions, resulting from a study of our old national traditions and modes of thought. In the present ojiening narrative, most pro- bably we have both history and romance blended in ])roportions, that now cannot well be known or distinguished, and that still require additional re- flected lights, to place them in a more satisfactory point of view.
The earliest copy of St. Cellach's Life we possess at present is probably in that collection of prose and verse tracts, contained in the Leabhar Breac, or Si)eckled Book, otlierwise styled Leabhar Mor Duna Doighre, or the Great Bookof Diin Doighre. The following narrative, based ui)on it, does not conflict, except apparently in chronology, with what occurs in our general Irish annals. We find, also, among the Messrs. Hodges' and Smith's collection of Manu- scripts, in the Royal Irish Academy, a Tract on the Life of St. Cellach. ' This is only a copy, taken from an original. A somewhat similar Life was in
possession of the Irish Franciscans, at Louvain. * It resembles that contained in the Irish Manuscript Codex, called by some Leabhar Mor Duna Doighrd,3 but now better known as the Leabhar Breac. The biographical tract in question was translated, from Irish into Latin, by Father Thomas O'Sheerin, to serve the purpose of Father Gotlefrid Henschenn, who has edited it. '' How- ever, distrusting much some poetic or irrelevant rhapsodies which he rejects, Father Henschenn has adopted a rescission he deems better suited, to eluci- date the present Saint's liistory. s The full text of this piece is now accessible to the Irish student, as the Leabhar Breac has been published f and. it is interpolated with poetic effusions, in reference to the subject matter. Among these are lines, attributed to St. Cellach himself, but, most probably, they are only the production of a later period, than when he flourished. Some notices, in reference to him, have been entered in a work, compiled by Duald Mac Firbis ;7 and, in the Book of Lecan, there is also allusion to him. In Rev.
Jeoffrey Keating's General History of Ireland, this account is also found abridged. * From these various sources, the following narrative has been derived.
The holy man, whose biography we are about to treat, descended from a race of royal ancestors, whose actions have been chronicled, in the general annals of Ireland. Thus, St. Ceallach 9 was son to Eugenius Belus—in Irish
Article i. —Chaptf. r i. —' It is a vel- lum folio, and classed No. 224.
' This was a tran>icri]it, from an older copy, in the " Leabhar l. reac. "
3 Anglicized, "the Great Book of Dun- Doighre," which was a place on the Con- naught side of the Shannon, and some miles below the town of Athlone. See Professor O'Curry's "Lectures on the Manuscript Materials of Ancient Irish History," Lect. ii. ,
PP- 3I' 32-
* See the Bollandists"' Acta Sanctorum,"
tomus i. , Maii i. De Sancto Kellaco Epis- copo in Hibernia. A commentary, in live paragraphs preceding it, and a few notes, follow. See pp. 104 to 107.
5 As will afterwards be shown, in text and notes, various personage^, well designated in our Annals, are introduced in the Irish Life.
Their names render it extremely difficult, liowevcr, to reconcile its narrative with exact chronology,
* See "Leabhar Breac. the Speckled Book, otherwise styled Leabhnr Mor Duna
Doighre, the Great Book of Diin Doighre a collection of Pieces in Irish and Latin, compiled from ancient sources about the close of the Fourteenth Century; now for the first time published from the original Manuscript in the Libraiyolthe Royarirish Academy," pp. 272 to 276. Dublin. Royal IrishAcademyHouse,i9l)a\vsou-stieet,i876.
' . See "The Goueaiogies, Tribes and Cus- toms of Hy-Fiachrach, commonly called O'Dowda's Country," edited by John O' Donovan, pp. 32 to 35.
''See Dermod O'Connor's second folio edition, Book ii. , pp. 351, 352. Westmin-
;
May I. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
Eoglian Beul—King of Connaught ; and, he had another brother, who was called Cuchoingelt, orMuireadhach. '° Among the bravest and most ambitious, vigilantandcapableofadministrators,inhisageandcountry, EoghanBeul ruled over the province of Connaught, with popular applause and good for- tune, which he hoped might be secured for his sons. " These named Ceallach and Muireadhach were lineal descendants of Eochaidh Muighmheadhoin," who flourished as supreme monarch of Ireland, about two centuries previous to their birth. At first, he was King over Connaught, when he married Mong- finn, sometimes called Munig, with Finn superadded, and by her he was fath. er of four sons, Brian, '3 Fiachra,'4 Fergus and Olioll. 's He also married Carrina '*—said to have been a Saxon '? —and by her, he had a son, the re- nowned Niall of the Nine Hostages. According to the Irish pedigrees, Eogan Beul was the son of Ceallach,'^ son to OillioU Molt,'9 son of Dathi,^° sometimes called David, son to Fiachra Follsi. athach,^'' son. to Eochaidh Muighmeadhoin. His castle ^^ was built on an Island, lying in Lough Mask, and from him, it has since been called Inis Eoghain. ^3 it lies on the east side of the Lough, and the denomination is now written Inish Owen. ^'t It
comprises over twenty-nine acres in extent of surface. '^s
The date of our saint's birth must been referred to about the year 520,
according to the most probable opinion. He was the eldest son of his father, who selected for him a renowned and holy teacher. The young j)rince Ceal- lach was placed at an early age, under the tutelage of St. Kieran, Abbot of Clonmacnoise. ^^ Charmed with the exercises of religious life, Ceallach re- solved to embrace the monastic profession, and there he lived as a monk.
ster, 1726, fol
5 Not ad verting to the identity of name, in
hisedition of Ware, Walter Harris calls him "the son of Doghan, or as some say, of Owen Bel, King of Connaught. "—Vol. i. , " Bis- hops of Killala," p. 650.
'° In the valuable Genealogical Table,
narrating the principal descendants of and, by Dr. Svlvester O'Halloran, he is said
Eochaidh Muighmheadhoin, which is found in Mr. O'Donovan's translation of the " Genealogies, Tribes and Customs of Hy- Fiachrach," p. 476, St. Ceallach and his brother Cuchoingeltare placed in the seventh generation from their famed ancestor.
*° For tvventy-threeyeais, he was sovereign over Ireland, and he was struck dead by " -See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus i. , Maii lightning, in the Alps, A. D. 428. See
i. , Vita S. Kellaci, sect, i. , p. 104.
'^ He reigned from A. D. 358 to A. D.
Thomas D'Arcy M'Gee's " Popular History
365. See Dr. O'Donovan's "Annals of the Four
of Ireland," vol. i. , Book 19.
i. , chap,
ii. , p,
Masters," vol. i. , pp. 124, 125.
'5 From him, are descended the Hy- land, and Amalgaidh, King over Connaught.
Brien of Connaught.
"• From him, descend the Hy-Fiachra of
Connaught.
'5 From him, the territory of Tirolioll, in
See Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum Hiberniae," Februarii iii. , Appendix ad Acta S. Colmani, vulgo Macduach, cap. i. . p. 248.
^- There is a curious little poem, quoted by Sligo, had its denomination. See Roderick Duald Mac Firbis in his large genealogical O'Flaherty's " Ogygia," pars, iii. , cap. work, describing the residence of King
Ixxix. , p. 374.
'* Dr. Sylvester O'Halloran calls her a
princess of the Saxon nation ; but, the Saxons at that period had no settlement in England. See "General History of Ire- land," vol. i. , Book vi. , chap, v. , p. 288.
'' Roderick O'Flaherty remarks, that the Saxons, in conjunction with the Scots, Picts and Attacots, had frequently invaded Bri- tain, before the period of the Anglo-Saxon
Eoghan Beul.
^3 On it.
Seventh Centuries. ] . . . . . . . . . 615
Article VIII. —Festival of the Nativity of St. Thomas . . .
Article IX. —Festival of Eutychius, Martyr . . . . . .
Article X. -—Reputed Feast for the Translation of the Relics of St. Dympna and of
St. Gerebern, at Gheel, in Brabrant . . . . . . 617 Article XL—Reputed Feast of St. Totuanus, Martyr . . . . . . 617
^i)trt2'-tot ©as of iilag.
Article I. St. Feradacius, Abbot of Iona, Scotland. [Ninth Century. ] . . . . . . . . . . . . 617 Article II. —St. Fer-da-crioch . . . . . . . . . . . 618
Article III. —St. Eoghan, Bishop of Cremhcaille, or Abbot of Moville,
County of Down . . . Article IV. —St. Maelodhrain, of Slane, County of Meath
. . . 619 . . . 619 . . . 621 . . . 621 . . . 621 . . . 621
. . . . . . . . .
[Seventeenth Century. ] . . . . . . Article X. —Reputed Feast of St. Silanus, a Pilgrim and Bishop . . . Article XL—Reputed Feast of Findocha, Virgin, in Scotland . . . Article XII. —Reputed Feast of St. Frudocha, Virgin . . .
Article v. —St. Ernin, of Cranfield Parish, County of Antrim
Article VI. —St. Coirpre, Abbot of Moville. County of Down . . .
Article VII. —Feast of St. Chrysogenus, Martyr, at Aquileia . . .
Article VIII. —St. Petronilla, Virgin . . . . . .
Article IX. —The Blessed John Meagh, S. J. , Martyr, near Prague, Bohemia.
. . . ••• 594 . . . . . . 596 •• ••• 597
. . . 616
. . . 617
. . . 622 . . . 623 . . . 623 . . . 623
Page
Abbot, Right Rev. Father, of La Trappe West Gorton, Manchester, England.
Monastery, Gethsemani, Nelson County, Slattery, Rev. J. , St. Patrick's Catholic _
State of Kentucky, U. S. A.
Byrne, Very Rev. P. J. Byrne, Dean, V. G. ,
P. P. . Dungannon, County of Tyrone. Franciscan Convent, Very Rev. Guardian of,
Church, Bradford, England.
Walshaw, Very Rev. Canon Samuel, St.
Mary's Church, Sheffield, England.
DIRECTION TO THE BINDER.
^^ The Binder will please to prefix the Frontispiece and Title Page, contained in Part 51, and First of this Volume, to the present Table of Contents, which, in order of binding, should precede the various succeeding Parts to 60, which Part closes the present Volume.
To be completed in Twelve Royal Octavo Volumes^ and in 120 Farts, of dOt pages each Fart.
'^m% 0f the frijsh ^mx\%, Compiled from Manuscript and other Sources,
SEitjj tje (fTommcmorations anti jFcstibals of ^lolg Persons, NOTED IN
Calendars, Martyrofogies, and Various Works, Domestic or Foreign,
RELATING TO
Cfje ancient Cljurti) listDtg of felanlr,
VERY REV. JOHN CANON O'HANLON, M. R. I. A.
Parts, ONE SHILLING each Part to Subscribers; ONE SHILLING and SIXPENCE each to Non-Subscribers.
Vol. I. For the Month of January, containing 13 Parts, cloth, gilt, and gilt edges, bevelled, in highly ornamental Covers, Price to Subscribers, i6s. to Non-Subscribers, 22s. 6d.
Vol. II. For the Month of February, containing 12 Parts, do. , Price to Subscribers, 15s. ; to Non-Subscribers, 21s.
Vol. III. For the Month of March, containing 16 Parts, do. . Price to Sub- scribers, 19s. ; to Non-Subscribers, 27s.
Vol, IV. For the Month of April, containing 9 Parts, do. . Price to Sub- scribers, i2S. ; to Non-Subscribers, i6s. 6d.
Vol. V. For the Month of May, containing 10 parts, do. , Price to Sub- scribers, 13s. ; to Non-Subscribers, i8s.
plain, each Vol. , 2S. 6d. ; in best morocco, extra, 12s. ; in any Variety of Colour ordered. The rich Style of Cover design, the 0/>us JIil>ernicn//i, specially adapted, only fur- nished from the Bookbinding Establishment of Messrs. James Duffy and Sons. ^^ Cloth Cases, in a Variety of Colours, with richly gilt Sides and Back, and in a Style to match for each Volume, can there be obtained, at 2s, each,
or free by Post, 2s. 3d.
*^* Binding in Cloth, gilt, and gilt edges, eacli Vol. , 3s,
;
;
SUPPLEMENTAL LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS.
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
jfirsJt 2Baj) of iWap*
ARTICLE I. —ST. CEALLACH, OR KELLACH, BISHOP OF KILLALA, AND MARTYR.
[SIXTH CENTURY. ] CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION—IRISH LIFE OF ST. CELLACH—HIS FAMILY AND RACE—HIS PERIOD HIS EARLY INSTRUCTION RECEIVED FROM ST. KIERAN—CELLACH WITHDRAWS FROM CLONMACNOISE, AND HE IS NOMINATED KING OF CONNAUGHT, BY THE TRIBE OF HY-FIACHRACH.
WHILE popular traditions have locally preserved the memorials of our saints, they have frequently added statements and embellishments of a questionable character. In many instances, it may well be supposed, the writers of Irish Saints' Lives drew from such sources, and were only partially acquainted with the factsof contemporaneous history; oftentimes too, theywere ignorant in respect to the period, persons, and circumstances, that transpired coeval with them, and a knowledge of which might help to give more accuracy andconsistencytothenarratives,whichhavedescendedtous. Inageneralway, most of the detailed prose Lives are mediseval, and apparently not grounded on the accounts of authors, who had personal knowledge of their subjects. Again, the rhythmic statements of various provincial bards seem to have the flavour of romance, more to recomm. end them for popular admiration, than a sound historic basis for the exercise of sober judgment, and to sustain the localtraditions,fromwhichthosecompositionsemanated. Yet,sometimes, we are not to regard them as largely the product of imagination and pure in- vention. It is, occasionally, with very great diffidence, we are obliged to follow those guides, and yet to present such information as they afford, in a reserved measure, and frequently in a mood of doubt or dissent. Were it attempted to describe minutely the miracles, fortunes, and characteristics of saints, as
recorded in their old Acts, too often might we wander into narratives, wholly irrelevant to those objects sought to be attained. It is more than probable, edification given to the reader could hardly prove the result for such an exact reproduction of stories manifestly fabulous. However pleasant in perform- ance and choice to the writer, to record even harmless legends regarding our saints, this might be deemed even prolix and misplaced by the critical reader.
Moreover, as embracing the later popular accounts of times, long subsequent '
Vol. v. —No. i.
a
—
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [May i
to the age of those holy persons, besides displacing incongruity, our narrative mustrequirespace,morethancouldbeavailablewithromanticnarratives. Our ])lan demands, in most cases, very brief biographical notices, and these we labour to render consistent, so fiir as may be attempted, with the probabilities of history, or with the fair deductions, resulting from a study of our old national traditions and modes of thought. In the present ojiening narrative, most pro- bably we have both history and romance blended in ])roportions, that now cannot well be known or distinguished, and that still require additional re- flected lights, to place them in a more satisfactory point of view.
The earliest copy of St. Cellach's Life we possess at present is probably in that collection of prose and verse tracts, contained in the Leabhar Breac, or Si)eckled Book, otlierwise styled Leabhar Mor Duna Doighre, or the Great Bookof Diin Doighre. The following narrative, based ui)on it, does not conflict, except apparently in chronology, with what occurs in our general Irish annals. We find, also, among the Messrs. Hodges' and Smith's collection of Manu- scripts, in the Royal Irish Academy, a Tract on the Life of St. Cellach. ' This is only a copy, taken from an original. A somewhat similar Life was in
possession of the Irish Franciscans, at Louvain. * It resembles that contained in the Irish Manuscript Codex, called by some Leabhar Mor Duna Doighrd,3 but now better known as the Leabhar Breac. The biographical tract in question was translated, from Irish into Latin, by Father Thomas O'Sheerin, to serve the purpose of Father Gotlefrid Henschenn, who has edited it. '' How- ever, distrusting much some poetic or irrelevant rhapsodies which he rejects, Father Henschenn has adopted a rescission he deems better suited, to eluci- date the present Saint's liistory. s The full text of this piece is now accessible to the Irish student, as the Leabhar Breac has been published f and. it is interpolated with poetic effusions, in reference to the subject matter. Among these are lines, attributed to St. Cellach himself, but, most probably, they are only the production of a later period, than when he flourished. Some notices, in reference to him, have been entered in a work, compiled by Duald Mac Firbis ;7 and, in the Book of Lecan, there is also allusion to him. In Rev.
Jeoffrey Keating's General History of Ireland, this account is also found abridged. * From these various sources, the following narrative has been derived.
The holy man, whose biography we are about to treat, descended from a race of royal ancestors, whose actions have been chronicled, in the general annals of Ireland. Thus, St. Ceallach 9 was son to Eugenius Belus—in Irish
Article i. —Chaptf. r i. —' It is a vel- lum folio, and classed No. 224.
' This was a tran>icri]it, from an older copy, in the " Leabhar l. reac. "
3 Anglicized, "the Great Book of Dun- Doighre," which was a place on the Con- naught side of the Shannon, and some miles below the town of Athlone. See Professor O'Curry's "Lectures on the Manuscript Materials of Ancient Irish History," Lect. ii. ,
PP- 3I' 32-
* See the Bollandists"' Acta Sanctorum,"
tomus i. , Maii i. De Sancto Kellaco Epis- copo in Hibernia. A commentary, in live paragraphs preceding it, and a few notes, follow. See pp. 104 to 107.
5 As will afterwards be shown, in text and notes, various personage^, well designated in our Annals, are introduced in the Irish Life.
Their names render it extremely difficult, liowevcr, to reconcile its narrative with exact chronology,
* See "Leabhar Breac. the Speckled Book, otherwise styled Leabhnr Mor Duna
Doighre, the Great Book of Diin Doighre a collection of Pieces in Irish and Latin, compiled from ancient sources about the close of the Fourteenth Century; now for the first time published from the original Manuscript in the Libraiyolthe Royarirish Academy," pp. 272 to 276. Dublin. Royal IrishAcademyHouse,i9l)a\vsou-stieet,i876.
' . See "The Goueaiogies, Tribes and Cus- toms of Hy-Fiachrach, commonly called O'Dowda's Country," edited by John O' Donovan, pp. 32 to 35.
''See Dermod O'Connor's second folio edition, Book ii. , pp. 351, 352. Westmin-
;
May I. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
Eoglian Beul—King of Connaught ; and, he had another brother, who was called Cuchoingelt, orMuireadhach. '° Among the bravest and most ambitious, vigilantandcapableofadministrators,inhisageandcountry, EoghanBeul ruled over the province of Connaught, with popular applause and good for- tune, which he hoped might be secured for his sons. " These named Ceallach and Muireadhach were lineal descendants of Eochaidh Muighmheadhoin," who flourished as supreme monarch of Ireland, about two centuries previous to their birth. At first, he was King over Connaught, when he married Mong- finn, sometimes called Munig, with Finn superadded, and by her he was fath. er of four sons, Brian, '3 Fiachra,'4 Fergus and Olioll. 's He also married Carrina '*—said to have been a Saxon '? —and by her, he had a son, the re- nowned Niall of the Nine Hostages. According to the Irish pedigrees, Eogan Beul was the son of Ceallach,'^ son to OillioU Molt,'9 son of Dathi,^° sometimes called David, son to Fiachra Follsi. athach,^'' son. to Eochaidh Muighmeadhoin. His castle ^^ was built on an Island, lying in Lough Mask, and from him, it has since been called Inis Eoghain. ^3 it lies on the east side of the Lough, and the denomination is now written Inish Owen. ^'t It
comprises over twenty-nine acres in extent of surface. '^s
The date of our saint's birth must been referred to about the year 520,
according to the most probable opinion. He was the eldest son of his father, who selected for him a renowned and holy teacher. The young j)rince Ceal- lach was placed at an early age, under the tutelage of St. Kieran, Abbot of Clonmacnoise. ^^ Charmed with the exercises of religious life, Ceallach re- solved to embrace the monastic profession, and there he lived as a monk.
ster, 1726, fol
5 Not ad verting to the identity of name, in
hisedition of Ware, Walter Harris calls him "the son of Doghan, or as some say, of Owen Bel, King of Connaught. "—Vol. i. , " Bis- hops of Killala," p. 650.
'° In the valuable Genealogical Table,
narrating the principal descendants of and, by Dr. Svlvester O'Halloran, he is said
Eochaidh Muighmheadhoin, which is found in Mr. O'Donovan's translation of the " Genealogies, Tribes and Customs of Hy- Fiachrach," p. 476, St. Ceallach and his brother Cuchoingeltare placed in the seventh generation from their famed ancestor.
*° For tvventy-threeyeais, he was sovereign over Ireland, and he was struck dead by " -See "Acta Sanctorum," tomus i. , Maii lightning, in the Alps, A. D. 428. See
i. , Vita S. Kellaci, sect, i. , p. 104.
'^ He reigned from A. D. 358 to A. D.
Thomas D'Arcy M'Gee's " Popular History
365. See Dr. O'Donovan's "Annals of the Four
of Ireland," vol. i. , Book 19.
i. , chap,
ii. , p,
Masters," vol. i. , pp. 124, 125.
'5 From him, are descended the Hy- land, and Amalgaidh, King over Connaught.
Brien of Connaught.
"• From him, descend the Hy-Fiachra of
Connaught.
'5 From him, the territory of Tirolioll, in
See Colgan's "Acta Sanctorum Hiberniae," Februarii iii. , Appendix ad Acta S. Colmani, vulgo Macduach, cap. i. . p. 248.
^- There is a curious little poem, quoted by Sligo, had its denomination. See Roderick Duald Mac Firbis in his large genealogical O'Flaherty's " Ogygia," pars, iii. , cap. work, describing the residence of King
Ixxix. , p. 374.
'* Dr. Sylvester O'Halloran calls her a
princess of the Saxon nation ; but, the Saxons at that period had no settlement in England. See "General History of Ire- land," vol. i. , Book vi. , chap, v. , p. 288.
'' Roderick O'Flaherty remarks, that the Saxons, in conjunction with the Scots, Picts and Attacots, had frequently invaded Bri- tain, before the period of the Anglo-Saxon
Eoghan Beul.
^3 On it.
