Category: Saints of Westmeath

  • Saint Etchen of Clonfad, 11 February

    On 11 February we commemorate  Saint Etchen (Éidchéan, Etchenius, Ecian, Echen), the bishop and patron of Clonfad, County Westmeath. The entry for his feast day in the Martyrology of Oengus tells an interesting tale:

    11. Etchen, i.e. in Cluain fota Baetain in Fir bile.

    Bishop Etchen from Cluain fota Baetain aba in Fir bili is in the south of Meath, and of the Dal Mescorp of Leinster is he. It is Colum cille that went to him to have episcopal orders conferred upon him. Then Colum cille sits under the tree to the west of the church, and he asks where was the cleric?

    “There he is,” says a man there,”on the ploughing-field below.”

    “Meseems,” says Colum cille, “it is not proper for us that a ploughman should confer orders upon us. However, since we have come for it, let him be proved by us.”

    So first, he asks Etchen for the ploughshare. He gives it to them at once, and not the less did the oxen plough.

    “A good man is the cleric!” say they.

    “Prove him still more,” says Colum cille. He asks him for the outer ox. Etchen straightway bestows it on them ; and bishop Etchen ordered a stag which was in the forest to do that work, and he does it forthwith.

    Then Colum cille, having proved the cleric, goes to him and tells him what he had come for.

    “It shall be done,” says the cleric. Then sacerdotal orders are conferred on Colum cille, and it was episcopal orders that he wished to have. The cleric prays till the morrow.

    “That is a mistake, O cleric,” says Colum cille,”the order that thou hast conferred upon me ;- and yet I will never change it so long as I am alive. In lieu of that, now, no one shall ever come to this church to have orders conferred upon him.” And this is still fulfilled.

    The later Martyrology of Donegal reads:

    11. G. TERTIO IDUS FEBRUARII. 11.

    ETCHEN, Bishop, of Cluain-foda in Fir-Bile, in Meath. He was of the race of Laeghaire Lore of the Leinstermen. And it was he that commanded the wild ox to come to him to plough, when he bestowed the order of priest upon Colum Cille in place of the order of bishop. And Colum Cille said that he would not accept of any different orders as long as he should live ; and this indeed he observed, and no one ever came to that church to receive orders from that time forth, A.D. 577. The life of Colum Cille, chap. 38, agrees with this.

    So the calendars identify Saint Etchen as the bishop who ordained Saint Colum Cille (Columba) but mistakenly only to the priesthood and not to the episcopacy. Neither is Saint Colum Cille the only great Irish saint to be linked to Bishop Etchen. The translator of the Martyrology of Donegal has added a footnote saying that a later hand has added a postscript saying “It is he that is called Etianus in Latin, and Echenus in the Life of Brighid, chap. 101.” According to O’Hanlon, the link to Saint Brigid is that she once enjoyed the hospitality of Saint Etchen’s parents and interceded for her childless hosts to conceive.

    Not much is known of Saint Etchen prior to his appearance in the sources as the founder of the monastery at Clonfad and as the bishop who somehow made a mistake in the rite of ordination he administered to Saint Colum Cille. O’Hanlon and other earlier writers were at something of a loss to explain this incident, a popular theory was that it had been intended for Saint Colum Cille to be ordained per saltum i.e. he would be ordained directly from the rank of deacon to that of bishop without first going through the priesthood. It may be that Bishop Etchen had reservations about this and ordained the deacon Colum Cille instead to the priesthood in the usual way. O’Hanlon suggests that perhaps the incident is an attempt by later writers to explain why the great Saint Colum Cille did not hold episcopal rank. He goes on to summarize the records of Bishop Etchen’s feast in calendars from home and abroad:

    The death of Bishop Etchen is recorded in the Annals of the Four Masters at “577. St. Etchen, Bishop of Clonfad, died on the 11th of February.” His festival, on that day, was kept with great solemnity, at Clonfad, in the southern part of ancient Meath. The foreign Martyrologists, Hermann Greuen, Canisius, Ferrarius and others, note this celebration. Our native calendarists, likewise, mention this saint, with distinctive praise.

    The simple record Etchan, bishop, occurs in the Martyrology of Tallagh, at the 11th of February. The Calendar of Cashel, Marianus O’Gorman, Maguire, and the Scholiast on St. Oengus, specially note him, as the minister of St. Columba’s ordination. In the ancient Martyrology, belonging to the Cathedral Church of the Holy Trinity, Dublin, this saint is entered as a bishop at the iii. Ides of February, corresponding with the present day. It seems strange, however, that his name has been omitted from the calendar, which is prefixed. This is probably the Etianus set down for this day, in the anonymous catalogue of national saints, published by O’Sullivan Beare. Under the head of Cluain fota, Duald Mac Firbis enters Bishop Etchen, from Cluain-fota, son of Maine, the poet, of the race of Conchobar Abratruadh.

    At the 11th of February, the Martyrology of Donegal notes the feast of St. Etchen, Bishop of Cluain-foda, in Fir-Bile, in Meath. Scotland, likewise, naturally held the present holy man, in great veneration, because he was the ordaining minister of its great national Apostle. In Ireland, at the 11th of February, the holy bishop and confessor, Etchen, is said to have departed to Christ, according to the Kalendar of Drummond.

     

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  • Saint Maeldubh Beg of Fore, October 2

    [Photo credit: An Ancient Cross at Fore in James Woods, Annals of Westmeath, ancient and modern (Dublin, 1907), facing page 278).

    On October 2 the Irish calendars commemorate an abbot of the monastery of Fore, County Westmeath, Maeldubh, who has the epithet ‘the little’ attached to his name. Fore is the monastery founded by the seventh-century Saint Fechin. The Irish calendars and annals have preserved the names and feastdays of some of his successors, including Saint Maeldubh, but I was unable to find a date recorded in the annals for this particular Abbot’s repose. Although I thus do not know the exact period in which he flourished, our small-statured saint is recorded in the earliest of the calendars, the ninth-century Martyrology of Tallaght, as Maelduib Bic, ‘Maeldubh the little’. He is introduced in the 12th-century Martyrology of Gorman as Maeldub organ orda, ‘Mael dub a golden instrument’ to which the note Mael dubh Becc, ab Fobhair, ‘Mael dub the Little, abbot of Fobar’ has been added. The same information appears on this day in the 17th-century Martyrology of Donegal Maoldubh becc, abb Fobhair, ‘Maeldubh Beg, Abbot of Fobhar’.

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  • Saint Lassar of Cill Arcalgach, August 20

    August 20 is the feastday of a Saint Lassar associated with the area around Lough Lene in County Westmeath. She is alas, one of the many Irish saints about whom nothing much is known apart from the remembrance of her name and locality in the Irish Calendars. Canon O’ Hanlon has this to say:

    St. Lasar, or Lassar, Virgin, of Cill Arcalgach, near Lough Lene, County of Westmeath.

    …A festival in honour of Lasar, of Chill Arealgaich, is registered in the published Martyrology of Tallagh, at the 20th of August. Again, at the 13th of the September Kalends [i.e. August 20], that copy in the Book of Leinster spells the entry in a manner somewhat different [as Lassar o Cill Archalgach]. At this same date, the Martyrology of Donegal mentions Lassar, Virgin, of Cill Arcalgach,on the brink of Loch Lebenn, in Meath. Her place of residence must be sought for within or on the banks of the present Lough Leane—known in our ancient annals as Loch Lephinn or Loch Leibhinn. It is now called Lough Lene, about two miles and three quarters of a mile in length, by one mile in width and for its extent, it is one of the loveliest of the numerous lakes in Westmeath. It contains two wooded islets; and, on one of these, it is said a monastery formerly existed. Lough Leane lies about one mile south of Fore Village, in the barony of Demifore, and in the northern part of Westmeath County… The Irish Calendar now preserved in the Royal Irish Academy has a notice of this person as Lasar, Virgin of Cill Arcalgach, on the border of Locha Leibhean. We cannot attempt further to identify her, nor to know the period in which she lived.

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