Category: Irish saints in Scotland

  • Saint Brigid, March 14

    March 14 is the feast of a Saint Brigid, around whose precise identity much confusion reigns. Canon O’Hanlon’s source is Bishop Forbes’ Scottish Kalendars and so we can turn directly to this account:

    BRIGIDA II. V, March 14.—

    A Scotch S. Brigida’s relics were preserved in Abernethy. It is probable that there were two saints of this name. —(See Ussher, Works, edition Elrington, vol. vi 256, 257, 451.) A Brigida is said, in the Irish Life of S. Cuthbert, to have been brought from Ireland, and educated by S. Columba with S. Cuthbert at Dunkeld.—(Libellus de Nativitate S. Cuthberti, c. xxi.) The Brigida of Abernethy is associated with the nine Maidens. See Mazota. [1]

    O’Hanlon reproduces this information but ends by saying that ‘Most likely, the present St. Brigida, or Brigid, was an Irish saint.’ He does not, however, have any supporting evidence to offer nor does he address the Scottish links in the sources.

    Miss Agnes Dunbar in her work on women saints also mentions the Scottish Brigid of Abernethy:

    The Aberdeen Breviary, in the story of St. Mazotta, says that St. Brigid of Abernethy was cousin of Graverdus, king of the Picts, who during his wars with the Britons was admonished by supernatural means to send to Ireland for Brigid, and follow her advice. She came with St. Mazota and eight holy virgins, and settled at Abernethy, and there built a church, where the king was baptized. [2]

    and the Dunkeld Brigid:

    St. Brigid March 14. An Irish virgin, brought up at Dunkeld with St. Cuthbert, by St. Columba. Bishop Forbes, Scot. Cal [3]

    There may be a third possiblity, that Brigid of Abernethy is a manifestation of the cult of Saint Brigid of Kildare in Scotland. It is interesting that the Aberdeen Breviary mentions that the Pictish King ‘sent to Ireland for Brigid’ and Abernethy seems to have enlisted not only Ireland’s patroness but also our patron in its foundation story:

    Special notice has here been taken of St Bridget’s connection with the church of Abernethy, in as much as the Aberdeen Breviary links the story of St Mazota with that of the Abbess of Kildare, thereby removing Mazota to a date earlier than her own. The narrative in the Breviary is thus given by Bishop Forbes: “Graverdus, son of Domath, the distinguished king of the Picts, and cousin of S. Brigida, while fighting against the Britons, is supernaturally warned to send for her to Hibernia and to obey her precepts. S. Brigida obeyed the summons, and with nine holy virgins came from Hibernia to Scotia, and settled at Abirnethy close to the Taye on the south, in which places he erected a basilica in honour of Almighty God and the Virgin Mary, in which the king with all his family was baptized. Mazota was the most remarkable of these virgins, and she followed in all things the steps of Brigida. The king of the Picts promised that the church should be dedicated by S. Patrick, at that time dwelling in Scotia, and there Mazota with the other virgins continued to serve God, till they all died and were buried. No tongue can tell the miracles that God in Heaven caused to take place by her agency.” We may remark in passing that an interesting reminiscence of St Bride’s Nine Maidens was to be met with till recent times in Sanquhar parish, Dumfriesshire, where “it was customary to resort on May-day to St Bride’s Well, where each maiden presented nine smooth white stones as an offering to the Saint, which correspond in number with St Bride’s nine virgin attendants.” [4]

    Interesting too in this regard is the fact that Saint Darlugdacha, the immediate successor to Saint Brigid at Kildare, is also part of the foundation legend of Abernethy:

    Thomas Innes says, “The death of Brigid was soon after followed by that of Darlugtach Virgin, her disciple : the same who came over to Britain in the time of Nectan, the third king of the Picts, and conversed with him on the first foundation of the ancient church of Abernethy. Her feast is celebrated February the first.”—(Innes, Civ. and Eccl. Hist, of Scotland, p. 128: Spalding Club. See Irish Nennius, p. 163) [5]

    So, in summary we can say that there is a record of the commemoration of a Saint Brigid in Scottish sources on March 14 with two possible identities proposed (1) Brigid of Abernethy and (2) Brigid of Dunkeld. I doubt though that we will ever be able to say with any confidence who exactly the Saint Brigid commemorated on March 14 actually was.

    [1] Alexander Penrose Forbes, D.C.L. Bishop of Brechin, Kalendars of Scottish Saints, (1872), 291-2.

    [2] A dictionary of saintly women (Volume 1) (London, 1904), 135-6.

    [3] ibid.

    [4] J.M.Mackinley, ‘Traces of the Cultus of the Nine Maidens in Scotland’ in Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Volume 40 (1906), 259.

    [5] Forbes, op.cit., 321.

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  • Saint Palladius, July 6

    It seems to me, as I read the views of modern scholars on the saints of the early Irish church, that there are winners as well as losers in the revisionist process. One clear winner has been Saint Palladius, whose reputation as the first bishop sent to the Irish has been reclaimed from the ‘Armagh propagandists’ who did their best to airbrush both the man and his mission out of the historical record in order to promote the idea of Saint Patrick as the national apostle. A summary of the views of one modern scholar on this theme can be read at my other site here. What kept the memory and claims of Palladius alive, however, was the fact that his mission was recorded in an unimpeachable historical source: the works of Prosper of Aquitaine. This 5th-century chronicler and champion of the teachings of Saint Augustine against Pelagianism records for the year AD 431:

    Ad Scottos in Christo credentes ordinatus a papa Celestino Palladius primus episcopus mittitur.

    ‘Palladius, having been ordained by Pope Celestine, is sent, as their first bishop, to the Irish who believe in Christ’.

    As scholar Michael Richter points out in his book Medieval Ireland- The Enduring Tradition:

    ‘This is the only reliable date for Irish history in the fifth century. Yet Prosper’s statement raises several questions: When had Christianity come to Ireland? How many Christians were there in Ireland in the year 431? Who was Palladius? How long was he active in Ireland? Where did he carry out his work?’

    and he attempts some answers, starting with the last question – where did Palladius carry out his work?:

    ‘In the Middle Irish Life of Patrick (Bethú Phátraic), we are told: ‘He (Palladius) founded three churches. Cell Fine in which he left his books, the casket with the relics of Paul and Peter and the board on which he used to write, Tech na Román (“House of the Romans”) and Domnach Airte containing Sylvester and Solinus’ (presumably two of his followers)… The three churches mentioned are situated in Leinster, the region lying opposite the coast of Wales.’

    Modern scholarship seems to be in agreement that the Palladian mission operated in Leinster and Munster and that it is likely that Palladius came to Ireland via Wales. Richter seeks to locate Palladius within a specific historical context – that of the fight against Pelagianism:

    ‘Palladius was dispatched to the Irish Christians at about the same time as Germanus of Auxerre was sent to the Christians in Britain. Germanus had been dispatched to Britain in AD 429 to combat the heretical teachings of Pelagius. Active from around the year 400, Pelagius was a British monk who had developed a doctrine of human free will. Since this conflicted with the Catholic doctrine of grace, Pelagius was declared a heretic in 418. In his Ecclesiastical History Bede tells us that Germanus had refuted Pelagianism in Britain through the healing power of relics (H.E. 1, 17ff.). A similar function could be attributed to the relics Palladius brought to Ireland. If this was the case, it would indicate that Rome assumed a rather highly-developed level of Christianity amongst the Irish.

    He now turns to another of his initial questions – who was Palladius?:

    ‘Two deacons with this name are known from this period, one from Rome, the other from Auxerre, and it was probably the latter who came to Ireland. However, before we consider this and other questions regarding Palladius’ activities, we must turn our attention to Patrick…. Patrick does not give us any concrete details concerning the region in which he was active, nor does he mention that he had an episcopal see. Indeed, after his writings, nothing more is heard in Ireland about Patrick throughout the sixth century.

    This gives rise to the following problems: Patrick was a bishop; Palladius is referred to as the first bishop. Palladius came to the Irish who already believed in Christ whereas Patrick was active among the Irish for many years; Palladius apparently spent a long time among the Irish according to the information in the tribute paid to him by Pope Celestine I and described by Prosper in his work Contra Collatorem.’

    Richter does not quote the text of this tribute so I have found it in another source:

    ‘He (Celestine) has been, however, no less energetic in freeing the British provinces from this same disease (the Pelagian heresy); he removed from the hiding-place certain enemies of grace who had occupied the land of their origin; also having ordained a bishop for the Irish, while he labours to keep the Roman island catholic, he has also made the barbarian island christian.’

    The Roman island, is of course, Britain, the barbarian island which has been Christianized is Ireland.

    Richter then attempts to reconcile some of the contradictory statements about Palladius and Patrick which he had raised above. He suggests as a starting point an assumption that Patrick was active in a part of Ireland which had not yet been reached by Christianity. He therefore proposes that Patrick’s primary mission was carried out in the provinces of Ulster and northern Connacht, whereas, as we have seen, the Palladian mission was based in Leinster and Munster. Richter goes on to say:

    ‘Nor does the description of Palladius as the first bishop of the Irish pose any real problem: Patrick had no contact with Rome and Prosper apparently knew nothing of Patrick’s activities. The later legend tells of Patrick spending many years in Gaul, mainly in the monastery of Lérins. There is, however, no mention of this in the authentic works of Patrick; the Latin in the Confessio and the Epistola is such that a long stay on the part of their author can be ruled out. Gaulish bishops who, according to later sources, worked with Patrick in Ireland are more likely to have worked with Palladius.’

    And the reason for the silence regarding Patrick in the 6th century?:

    ‘The fact that nothing was heard of Patrick in the century following his missionary work can no doubt be explained by the increasingly important role which the monasteries were to play in the Irish Church from the end of the 5th century. Palladius and Patrick were, however, both bishops. Their work developed from this office and both wanted to establish a diocesan Church in Ireland.’

    Richter ends by saying that although both Palladius and Patrick were committed to the Roman organisational model of the Church, the fact that Ireland had not been part of the Roman Empire and lacked towns and other aspects of the Roman heritage, made this model quite unsuitable.

    By contrast with the way in which Richter and other modern writers approach the mission of Palladius, Canon O’Hanlon espoused the traditional view that his mission was a short-lived failure:

    ‘Notwithstanding his high commission to evangelize the people, St. Palladius remained not long in Ireland. To St. Patrick, and not to him, had Providence assigned the grand measure of a successful mission’.

    In this view, Palladius was unable to face the opposition of the locals:

    ‘..the prevailing opinion appears to be, that the rude and inhospitable people where he landed did not readily receive his doctrine, and therefore he willed not to remain in a country strange to him. His resolve was formed, to return with the first tide which served, and to seek the Pope who had sent him.’

    Of course, it took more than a few hostile pagans to scare off the true apostle to the Irish:

    ‘Here we have to admire the inscrutable ways of Divine Providence, who so willed it, that the mission of Palladius should prove comparatively barren of results, while within a short time after his leaving Ireland, St. Patrick was destined to arrive, and to preach the Gospel among the natives, with most successful and consoling results’.

    If this traditional Patrician triumphalism is hard to swallow, Richter offers a comforting thought:

    ‘Some scholars are of the opinion that the later legend of Patrick was compiled from accounts relating to the activities of both Patrick and Palladius. In this case, the controversy over the description of Patrick as ‘the Apostle of the Irish’ would become irrelevant’.

    Thus does Saint Palladius emerge as one of the winners in the efforts of modern revisionist scholars, with his reputation restored. What ultimately became of the first bishop to the Irish is unclear. Later accounts say that Palladius, having failed in Ireland, went instead to Scotland and was martyred there. More recent writers tend to be sceptical of the Scottish connection. The Aberdeen Breviary has assigned July 6 as his feast day, although some other sources commemorate a feast of Saint Palladius on January 25.

    There is a most interesting blog entry on Saint Palladius and the Dunlavin area of County Wicklow here which concludes:

    ‘Ultimately perhaps, Palladius’ life should not be measured by the success or failure of his mission, but by how much he endured and what he gave for his cause and his God.’

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  • Saint Conval of Strathclyde, May 18

    May 18 is one of the commemorations of Saint Conval, a disciple of the Scottish Saint Kentigern. His feast day is recorded as September 28 in the Aberdeen Breviary, whose modern editor, Alan Macquarrie, remarks that the Lessons appointed for the day ‘give the appearance of having been drawn from a vita et miracula of St  Conval, but this has not survived’. The Lessons begin by associating Saint Conval with Saint Kentigern but go on to describe his reputation as a healer.  Since September 28 seems to be his main feast day, at least at Inchinnan, the site with which he is mainly associated, I will prepare another and more detailed post on Saint Conval for this date. The account below has been taken from Bishop (later Cardinal) P.F. Moran’s 1879 work Irish Saints in Great Britain. It was a matter of some pride to the Bishop that Irish immigration into Glasgow had revived the memory of this saint in the suburban parish of Pollockshaws:

    One of the most illustrious of St. Kentigern’s disciples was St. Conval, who inherited in an eminent degree the zeal and sanctity of his great master. He was the son of an Irish chieftain, and forsaking his country and friends, through the desire of winning souls to God, sailed to the banks of the Clyde, and enrolling himself among the clergy of St. Kentigern, soon proved himself a devoted missioner, and became a bright ornament of the Scottish Church. In many of the mediaeval records he is styled Archdeacon of Glasgow, and by his untiring labours he merited to be honoured as a second apostle of that great city. Each memorial of the saint was long cherished by the faithful to whom he ministered. The rock on which he landed on the sea-shore, and on which in after years he was wont to pray, was held in the greatest veneration, and several churches erected under his invocation attested the reverence and fond affection in which his hallowed memory was held. It is recorded that he visited his countryman, King Aidan, of Dalriada, and was welcomed by that prince with the highest honours. The purport of St. Conval’s visit was probably to secure the aid of King Aidan for the religious works in which he was engaged south of the Clyde; and we are further told that, at that pious monarch’s request, St. Conval passed into the Pictish territory, and there gained many souls to God. He also visited St. Columba, and seems for a time to have been associated with that great saint in his missionary labours.

    He is venerated as patron at Inchinnan, in Renfrewshire, on the Clyde, about seven miles below Glasgow, and Boece writes that the saint’s relics were still preserved there in his time. Near the ancient fort of Inchinnan there stood, till a comparatively late period, an ancient Celtic cross, erected in honour of St. Conval. Now its base alone remains. He was also venerated at Cumnock and at Ochiltree. The parish of Pollokshaws had also our St. Conval for its patron, although his feast was there kept in the month of May. “Its ancient church,” thus writes the learned Cosmo Innes, “probably stood beside the castle upon the bank of the Cart. It was dedicated to St. Convallus, the pupil of St. Kentigern, whose feast was celebrated on the 18th of May.” A church bearing St. Conval’s name existed at Eastwood down to a comparatively late period. The burial ground attached to it is still used, and a portion of it near the still-flowing fountain that supplied the monks with water is set apart for the exclusive interment of Catholics, but no trace of the ancient church or monastery now remains. Near the burial ground there was a ruin known as the “Auld House,” which, with its enclosure, was called “St. Conval’s Dowry.” His memory after having been forgotten for three hundred years has been revived in our days by the erection of a beautiful church at Pollokshaws, dedicated to God under the invocation of the Blessed Virgin and St. Conval…

    Rt. Rev. P. F. Moran, Irish Saints in Great Britain (Dublin, 1879), 156-159.

    Note: This post, first published in 2012, was revised in 2024.

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