Author: Michele Ainley

  • An Irish Poem on the Wise Men

    J. R. Allen, Early Christian Symbolism in Gt Britain and Ireland (1887)

    January 6 is the feast of the Epiphany, which in the western church is associated with the bringing of gifts to the infant Christ by Magi from the East. Today we take it for granted that there were three wise men, with the names Caspar, Melchior and Balthasar, but this tradition was a long time in the making. The account of the visit in Saint Matthew’s Gospel makes no mention of the number of magi, much less their names, and the idea that there were three wise men seems to be based solely on the number of gifts recorded in the gospel. The Visit of the Magi is a popular theme in medieval European art including that of Ireland. One intriguing representation is found on the tenth-century Muiredach’s Cross at Monasterboice and if you look at the image above you will see that there are actually four figures approaching the newborn Christ.  The identity and significance of the ‘fourth man’ is still a subject of debate among scholars. The Magi also occur in Irish literary sources. In a paper delivered by the scholarly Irish Anglican Bishop, William Reeves, on the subject of an Irish manuscript held in the British Museum, he describes the contents of Folio 5 b as:

    An Irish poem on the Wise Men of the East who were led by the star to Bethlehem, consisting of eleven quatrains….The poem is as follows, and the accompanying translation is from the accurate pen of Mr. Eugene Curry.

    Auirilius, Humilis, the noble,
    Malgalad, Nuntius, of fierce strength,
    Melcho the grey-haired, without guile,
    With his grey and very long beard.

    A senior with a graceful yellow cloak.
    With a grey frock of ample size,
    Speckled and grey sandals without fault,
    He approached not the King without royal gold.

    Arenus, Fidelis, the munificent,
    Galgalad the devout and fervent;
    A red man was Caspar in his vesture
    A fair, blooming, beardless youth.

    A crimson cloak round the comely champion,
    A yellow frock without variety,
    Grey and close-fitting sandals:
    Frankincense unto God he freely presented.

    Damascus was the third man of them,
    Misericors, without dejection,
    Sincera gratia without restraint,
    Patifarsat the truly-grand.

    A grizzled man with a crimson, white-spotted cloak:
    Crimsoned stood he, above all without competition,
    With soft and yellow sandals,
    Who presented myrrh to the Great Man.

    These are the names of the Druids
    In Hebrew, in Greek to be quickly spoken,
    In Latin which runs not rapidly.
    In the noble language of Arabia.

    The colour of their clothes hear ye.
    As spoken in each of their countries:
    Selva, for the performers of heroic deeds,
    Debdae, Aesae, Escidae.

    Three were the Druids without gloom;
    Triple were their gifts in noble fashion;
    Three garments were upon each man of them;
    From three worlds they came without debility.

    Mary, Joseph, and noble Simeon,
    Of the tribe of Judah of the noble kings,
    Are in the house in which every hand is a lighted torch.
    All together with the Trinity.

    May we do thy will, O King,
    And desire it with all our heart:
    Thou art gracious to relieve us in our distress,
    Since the day thou wast adored by Aurelius.

    Rev W. Reeves, ‘On an Irish MS. of the Four Gospels in the British Museum’, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. V., (1853), 47-50.

    Dr Reeves goes on to discuss the possible sources for the descriptive information relating to the Magi in his footnotes but as these are all cited in Latin I won’t reproduce them here. He also later discusses the dating evidence for the Manuscript and concludes that  it was written in the twelfth century.

  • Saint Fiadhnat, January 4

    Another of the many obscure Irish female saints is commemorated on January 4. All we know of Saint Fiadhnat is the recording of her name in the Irish calendars, and in the absence of anything else to say Canon O’Hanlon sounds wonderfully Victorian as he complains about the number of females ‘addicted to idle or frivolous pleasures’:

    St. Fidnatan, or Fiadhnat, Virgin. 

    Numberless females are found in society addicted to idle or frivolous pleasures. Their lives are spent as a taper that wastes away its substance, giving little or only a very flickering light. The name of Fidnatan, virgin, is mentioned in the “Martyrology of Tallagh,” on the 4th of January. Besides this entry, Fiadhnat, the same virgin, is recorded on this day in the “Martyrology of Donegal.” The distinction of sanctity accorded her proves the genuine merits of her well-ordered life.

    Content Copyright © Omnium Sanctorum Hiberniae 2012-2016. All rights reserved.

  • Saint Cillene of Fahan, January 3

    Bell of Saint Mura (UJA, 1853)

    January 3 is the commemoration of a seventh/eighth-century Abbot of Fahan in County Donegal, Cillene Ua Colla. The monastery of Fahan was founded by Saint Mura and various of his successors, including our saint, had the dates of their deaths noted in the Irish Annals. Canon O’Hanlon has this account of Abbot Cillene:

    St. Cillin, or Cillene Ua Colla, Abbot of Fathan-Mura, now Fahan, County of Donegal. 

    [Seventh and Eighth Centuries.]—We find a festival, Cillini Mac h Colla, at the 3rd of January, in the “Martyrology of Tallagh.” In addition to this notice the “Martyrology of Donegal” mentions Cillin Ua Colla, abbot of Fathan-Mura, as having been venerated on this day. The name of this place is sometimes found written Athain and Othain in ancient records. A church was founded here so early as the sixth century by the great St. Columkille. St. Cilline, the descendant of Colla, was born most probably about the middle of the seventh century. The modern designation of his locality is Fahan, within the peninsula of Inishowen, in the county of Donegal. At present, it is said, the old church of Fahan Mura lies close to the eastern shore of Lough Swilly, in the barony of Inishowen, county of Donegal, and in an exceedingly picturesque situation within the ornamental glebe grounds.  In the Annals of Ireland we have on record the death of Ceallach, son of Saran, abbot of Othan-mor or Fahan, A.D. 657. It seems likely the present saint did not succeed him as abbot for many years afterwards, as the death of St. Cillene Ua Colla is set down in the “Annals of the Four Masters,” at A.D. 720, on the 3rd of January. The “Annals of Ulster” place his death at A.D. 724, and the Martyrologists of Donegal seem to adopt this latter computation.

    Content Copyright © Omnium Sanctorum Hiberniae 2012-2016. All rights reserved.