Author: Michele Ainley

  • Saint Fachtna of Ross, August 14

    August 14 is the feast of Saint Fachtna, diocesan patron of Ross, today part of the united diocese of Cork and Ross. The account below has been excerpted from the updated edition of the eighteenth-century writer Protestant Mervyn Archdall’s classic text Monasticon Hibernicum. The editor was the then Catholic Bishop of Ossory, the Rt. Rev. P.F. Moran, later Cardinal Archbishop of Sydney, who contributed copious notes to expand Archdall’s original entries:

    St. Fachnan, in Irish Fachtna, who is also called Lachtna, is patron of the See, being founder of the monastery, and Bishop of Ross in the sixth century. He was a disciple of St. Finbarr in the famous school of Loch-Eirche, and before proceeding to Ross, was abbot of the Molana monastery, near Youghal. He also, like most of the contemporary saints of Ireland, received lessons of heavenly wisdom from St. Ita, the Brigid of Munster. Ross soon became so famous that crowds of students and religious flocked to it from all parts, so that it was distinguished by the name of Ross-ailithir, that is, Ross of the pilgrims. The birth of St. Fachnan, and the future greatness of his school, were foretold by St. Kiaran of Ossory, whose mother was of his family, and who himself was born in the territory of Ross, at a place still called Traigh-Ciaran (i.e., St. Kiaran’s strand), in Cape Clear Island. St. Fachnan, having lost his sight by some accident when he was somewhat advanced in years, it was restored to him through the merits of St. Mochoemog, also called Pulcherius, who was then in his mother’s womb, and whose future sanctity was foretold by St. Fachnan. It is also related of our saint that it was his daily habit to retire for silent recollection and private prayer to a secluded spot on the side of a hill, near the monastery. It happened that one day he left his scroll of prayers behind him. Rain fell heavily during the night, but in the morning his prayer-book was as dry as Gideon’s fleece, for the angels had built a small chapel over it. The traces of this ancient oratory may still be seen. The precise date of the foundation of the celebrated monastery of Ross cannot be fixed with certainty. Ware says it was founded about the year 590, and his opinion has been adopted by later writers. It would, probably, be more accurate to place the foundation of the monastery before the year 570, and the death of the saint about the year 590. The Life of St. Mochaemog states, that it was by the advice of St. Ita that St. Fachtna proceeded from the monastery of Ross to the parents of Mochaemog, through whose merits his sight was restored to him. St. Brendan, patron of Kerry, is also mentioned among those who visited and gave lessons of heavenly wisdom in Ross. These two facts sufficiently prove that the monastery was established before the death of St. Brendan, which took place in 577, and of St. Ita, which is marked in our Annals in 570.

    In some Latin documents our saint receives the epithet “Fachtna facundus, “St. Fachtna the eloquent:” sometimes his name is simply Latinized Sanctus Facundus.

    In the Irish records he generally receives the designation of Mac Mongach, i.e., ” the hairy child,” because at his birth his head was covered with hair : “Fachtna, Mongach quia cumcaesarie natus,” as the Calendar of Cashel explains that name. This designation betrayed Usher and others into error when they style our saint filius Monghich, “the son of Mongach.” The genealogy of St. Fachtna is thus accurately given in the ‘ Sanctilogium Genealogicum” : ” Fachtna, the son of Maonaigh, the son of Cairill, the son of Fiachna, &c., descended from Lughad, son of Ith,” and from the genealogical tables, we should conclude that the holy Bishop Brandubh, whose feast is kept on the 3rd of June, and Saints Casan and Cailcin, were brothers of our saint. The O’Driscolls, in whose territory Ross was founded, belonged to the same race, and made it one of their tribe-duties to enrich the monastery and church of their patron saint with lands and other endowments. After St. Fachnan twenty-seven bishops of his tribe ruled the See of Ross, as is thus expressed in the ancient quatrain preserved in the Book of Lecan :

    ” Seven and twenty bishops nobly
    Occupied Ross of the truly fertile lands,
    From Fachtna the melodious, the renowned,
    To the well-ordered Episcopate of Dongalach.”

    The names of these bishops are not mentioned in our annals, only their number is recorded, and their jurisdiction, which was co-extensive with the territory of Corcalaidhe. This example should serve as a warning to the student of our Ecclesiastical History not to infer from the silence of our annals in regard to other districts, either that there was no regular succession of bishops or that there were no fixed boundaries for the ancient Sees of the Irish Church.

    St. Fachtna is commemorated in all our ancient Martyrologies on the 14th of August. The entry in the Martyrology of Donegal on 14th August seems, however, at first sight to exclude St. Fachtna from the See of Ross. The whole entry for that day is as follows: “Fachtna, Bishop and Abbot of Dairinis Maelanfaidh, in Hy-Cennselach ; forty-six years was his age, and he was of the race of Lughaidh. son of Ith, according to the Seanchus : Echlech, Cuimmen, and Caemhan, three sons of Daighre : Brocadh : Dinil.” (Martyr, of Donegal, page 219.) Thus all mention is omitted of Rossaihthir. There is, however, some confusion in this entry, owing, probably, to a transposition of names. We are, happily, able to detect the error by the corresponding entry in the Martyrology of Tallaght, as preserved in the Roman fragment of the Book of Leinster, which is as follows : “XIX. Kalendas Septembris. Fachtna mac Mongan o Ros Ailithir : Dinil Macintsair : Mac-intsaeir, Episcopus et Abbas Darinsi Maelianfaid : Broccain Mac Lugdach : Cummini : Coemain : Aicclig.” Thus, it was not St. Fachtna who was Abbot of Darinis Molana in Hy-Kinnselagh, but St. Mac-in-tsaer ; what, possibly, gave occasion to this confusion of names, was the tradition mentioned by Lynch, that St. Fachtna, before proceeding to Ross, was abbot of another monastery called also Molana, situated on the islet of Dair-inis, at the mouth of the Blackwater. See further mention of this monastery in Archdall, at the County Waterford.

    In the Felire of St. Oengus, the name of St. Fachtna occurs in the strophe for the 14th of August :

    ” With the calling of Fortunatus,
    Over the expansive sea of ships,
    Mac-an-tsaer, the noble chief,
    The festival of Fachtna mac Mongach.”

    So also he is commemorated on the same day in the metrical calendar of Manus O’Gorman :

    “Great vigil of Mary :
    Gregory, and the bright hero Felix,
    The just Eusebius in their company:
    The sons of Daigre, with Dinil;

    Let Brocad be in their presence:
    Fachtna the smooth, fair, hairy son,
    Eiclec, Cummen, Coeman,
    Not narrow fences this structure.”

    St. Cuimin of Connor, in his beautiful poem on the characteristic virtues of the saints of Ireland, thus celebrates the zeal and devotedness of St. Fachtna:

    “Fachtna, the generous and steadfast, loved
    To instruct the crowds in concert,
    He never spoke that which was mean,
    Nor aught but what was pleasing to his Lord.”

    It is generally supposed that the St. Fachnan, patron of Ross, is the same with St. Fachnan, patron of Kilfenora. Two circumstances strongly confirm this identity, viz. : that their festivals are now kept on the same day, the 14th of August, and that the same tribe was dominant in both territories. However, Lynch informs us that in his time (1660) the feast of St. Fachtna, the holy founder of Kilfenora, was kept on the 20th of December.

    Monasticon Hibernicum, or, A Short Account of the Monasteries of Ireland in Irish Ecclesiastical Record, Vol VII,1871, 485-488.

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  • Saint Brigid of Cluain-diolama, August 13

    Canon O’Hanlon records that August 13 is the commemoration of a saint Brigid associated with a locality now difficult to identify. There is no other clue as to the individual identity of the saint, nor at what time she flourished.

    St. Brigid of Cuainaoi, or Cluana diailama.

    At the 13th of August, St. Brigid of Cluana diailama is in the Rev. Dr. Kelly’s version of this Martyrology [i.e. the Martyrology of Tallaght]. In that copy contained in the Book of Leinster, the place is differently entered [as Brigitae Cl. Dianluma]. Her location is styled Cluain-diolama, by Colgan. It does not appear with what existing townland denomination the name Cluain-diolama or Cluana diailama can be identified. At the 13th of August, the Martyrologies of Marianus O’Gorman, of Charles Maguire, and of Donegal, record a festival for St. Brigid of Cluainaoi or Cluain-ai. There is a church, called Cluainaoi, in the diocese of Derry. In the county of Londonderry alone, there are no less than four townlands, respectively called Clooney. Another Clooney was near Clonard in Meath and it is the only place so denominated in that county.

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  • Saint Ségéne of Iona, August 12

    August 12 is the commemoration of the fifth abbot of Iona, Saint Ségéne. This is the accepted version of the saint’s name today, Canon O’Hanlon in his account below brings us all of its variations, as he does for the island of Iona which appears in its various forms as Hi, Hy, Ia and the genitive form Iae. If that weren’t enough to contend with, we are also faced with the problem of identifying the island known as ‘Rathlin’ where our saint founded a church. To a northern woman like myself Rathlin island is that place off the County Antrim coast with many historic links to Scotland, but it seems that in this case it may be a place known today as Lambay island off the coast of County Dublin. Saint Ségéne had a long and interesting reign as a successor to Saint Colum Cille of Iona. He was one of those related by blood to the founder and he featured prominently in the Paschal Dating Controversy. Abbot Ségéne was one of those implacably opposed to accepting the Roman computation for the date of Easter. Why the Bollandists appear to have had reservations about ‘numbering him in a Catalogue of the Saints’ I am not sure, the Abbot’s feast is marked on the Irish calendars of the saints both early and late and his repose noted in the Irish annals. I have also been reading an account of this saint by a modern scholar, Professor Máire Herbert, who has some interesting observations to make on the contribution made by Saint Ségéne to the development of the hagiographical school on Iona. She argues that he directly encouraged his nephew and eventual successor Cuimine the Fair to compile a life of their kinsman and founder. The hagiographical endeavours at Iona of course flowered in the famous Life of Columba by the ninth abbot, Saint Adamnan, but Prof. Herbert argues that the foundations were laid under Ségéne. Perhaps in the future I will bring a summary of her thoughts on this saint as he seems to have been a rather more important figure than perhaps Canon O’Hanlon’s account below suggests:

    St. Seighin, Abbot of Iona, and Founder of the Church on Rathlin Island, County of Antrim.

    The festival of the celebrated Segene, is commemorated on this day, in the “Feilire” of St. Aengus. The commentator observes, that he was Abbot of Hi of Colomb Cille. The Martyrology of Tallagh mentions, that veneration was given at the 12th of August to Segene, Abbot, Iae. The Bollandists have a notice of Segenus or Segeneus, Abbot of Hy, at the 12th of August, while remarking, that Dempster and Camerarius noted it at the 7th of April; but, they express a doubt, regarding the propriety of numbering him in a Catalogue of the Saints. He is called Segineus, son of Fiachrius, son to Feradac, son of Ferguss, son of Conall Gulban. A commentator on the Donegal Martyrology makes Seghin the son of Fachtna while the Irish Saints’ Genealogies state, he was son of Fiachra, or of Ronan. Segeni, Abbot of Ia, is commemorated on the same day, in the Festilogium of the Psalter of Cashel. He was nephew to Laisren, the third Abbot of Iona. He is said to have built a church on Rachrainn, Ragharee or Rathlinn Island, A.D. 630, 632, 634, or 635, according to various statements. Dr. O’Conor, however, considers him to be only the restorer of this church. This idea he appears to have entertained, because St. Columkille is said to have been the original erector of Rachrann church. But, it would appear from Prince O’Donnell’s Life of St. Columkille, as also from various other authorities, that the Island of Rachrainn, on which this holy man built the church, belonged to the east of Bregia. It was, in fact, the ancient name of Lambay Island, off the coast of the County Dublin. Adamnan refers to Segene as being the informant of Failbeus, his own immediate predecessor, for certain particulars which are set down in the Life of St. Columba. The Venerable Bede mentions him as presbyter and abbot. He succeeded Fergna Brit, in the year 623; and thus, he was the fifth abbot, in order of time, who followed after St. Columba. He ceased to rule the community at Iona in 652. He was a zealous advocate for the old Irish Paschal observance. He was addressed in 634 by Cummian, in an Epistle on the Paschal observance. The clergy of Rome, in 640, wrote to him another epistle on that same subject. The death of this present saint took place in the year 642, according to the Annals of Inisfallen, or A.D. 651, according to Ussher; or A.D. 652, according to the Annals of Tighernach, and of Ulster. He is registered in the Martyrology of Donegal, at the same date, as Seighin, son of Fochtua, Abbot of Ia-Coluim-Cille. Also his feast is recorded, at this day, in the Kalendar of Drummond.

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