Category: Groups of saints

  • The Three Daughters of Ailill, August 9

    The Martyrology of Tallaght, one of the earliest of the Irish calendars, lists at August 9 the feast of Tri ingena Ailella – the three daughters of Ailill. Such groupings of saintly siblings are a feature of the Irish calendars, indeed these holy ladies share their day with Cethri meic Ercainthe four sons of Ercan and Ceithre meic Dimmain – the four sons of Dioman. We are unable to learn any more about the identities of the individuals who comprise the group of Ailill’s daughters, nor when or where they flourished. In Volume VIII of his Lives of the Irish Saints Canon O’Hanlon gives this brief account, noting that the Tallaght calendar is the sole source for the feast of Ailell’s daughters as they are not listed on the Martyrology of Donegal, compiled by Michael O’Clery and his associates in the seventeenth century: 

    Article III. Tri h. Inghena Ailalla. 

    Written in this manner, we have a festival entered in the Martyrology of Tallagh, as edited by the Rev. Dr. Kelly; although we find no corresponding entry, at this day, in the Martyrology of Donegal, edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves.

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  • The Seven Bishops of Cluain Caa, October 3

    On October 3 we find another of the groups of saints who are a feature of the Irish calendars – The Seven Bishops of Cluain Caa. The Martyrology of Donegal records:

    THE SEVEN BISHOPS, of Cluain Cua. We find seven bishops, the children of one father, of the race of Fiacha Suighdhe, son of Feidhlimidh Reachtmhar, son of Tuathal Teachtmhar, as we have said at the 21st of July.

    A Footnote from the editor adds:

    Cluain Cua. The more recent hand adds, Cluana Cáa rectius, more correctly, of  Cluain-caa. This is the reading in the Mart. Taml., and Marian.

    The entry for July 21 reproduces the genealogical details ascribed above to the bishops commemorated on October 3:

    THE SEVEN BISHOPS, of Tamhnach Buadha, [Bishop Tedda, of Tamhnach,] and we find seven bishops, the sons of one father, and their names and history among the race of Fiacha Suighdhe, son of Feidhlimidh Reachtmhar, son of Tuathal Teachtmhar.

    I turned next to the twelfth-century Martyrology of Marianus O’Gorman to see if he could shed any further light on these bishops or the locality of Cluain Caa. They form the last verse of his entry for the day:

    The bishops of Cluain Caa,
    their day I will mention.

    with a footnote reading ‘seven bishops of Cluain Caa’.

    In consulting the index of places attached to the calendar I found that, according to the nineteenth-century scholar and translator W.M. Hennessy, Cluain Caa was located in Queen’s County, i.e. County Laois:

    Cluain Caa, Oct. 3, wrongly spelt Cluain cua, Progs. R.I.A. Irish MS. series i. 100, 101, where Hennessy locates it in Queen’s co.

    I also confirmed the entry in the earlier Martyrology of Tallaght:

    Secht n-epscoip Clúana Caa.

    So it would seem that the calendars concur in having a feast of seven bishops from Cluain Caa celebrated on October 3.  Only the Martyrology of Donegal supplies the genealogical detail and suggests that they are siblings. It is also only this calendar which seeks to link them to the group of bishops commemorated at Tamnach Buada on July 21. The Martyrology of Gorman notes only ‘austere bishops from Tamnach’ at this date and does not cross-reference this episcopal grouping with that commemorated on October 3.

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  • The Daughter(s) of Fachtna, of Ernaidhe

    At August 3 we find the names of several female saints commemorated on the Irish calendars, including Saints Trea and Deirbhile. We can add another name to the list, an unnamed ‘Daughter of Fachtna’, who may have been associated with the locality of Urney in County Tyrone. In his brief account below, Canon O’Hanlon, who begins on a pious note, brings only the details from the Martyrology of Donegal which identifies a single daughter in its entry for the day. The twelfth-century calendarist, Marianus O’Gorman, however, suggests that she may have had siblings. His entry reads:

    The festival of Fachtna’s modest daughters by whom every false assembly was purified.

    Such groups of saints, described as daughters or sons of a named parent, are a feature of the Irish calendars. I suppose the most well-known might be the daughters of Léinín, whose memory lives on in the place name Killiney (Cill Iníon Léinín – the Church of the Daughters of Léinín in County Dublin.
    There is no mention of Fachtna’s offspring in the earlier calendars of Oengus or Tallaght. Canon O’Hanlon records:
     

    The Daughter of Fachtna, of Ernaidhe, said to be Urney, in the County of Tyrone.

    Fairest and most full of consolation to the perfect religious is that morning, when she consecrates her love to Him, who will jealously demand its faithful observance. We find in the Martyrology of Donegal, that a festival was celebrated to honour the daughter of Fachtna, belonging to Ernaidhe, at the 3rd of August. Another rendering of her name is Facundide, as found at the alphabetical entries in a table superadded to that Martyrology. In William M. Hennessy’s copy of the work, that place with which the present saint is represented as having been connected, has been identified as Urney, in the County of Tyrone.

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