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  • Saint Cera of Kilkeary, January 5


    January 5 is the feast of Saint Cera of Kilkeary. My previous posting on Saint Cera was the account from The Lives of the Irish Saints, now we have another, this time from Canon O’Hanlon’s predecessor, Father John Lanigan. Father Lanigan wrote a four-volume ecclesiastical history of Ireland in the 1820s and often took quite a critical and sceptical tone regarding the work of earlier authorities such as Colgan and Archdall. Some of his instincts and insights were quite correct though and his work is still very readable. Lanigan’s style was to write a paragraph and then provide copious notes to back up what he had said, as you will see from his account of Saint Cera:
    The holy virgin St. Cera, alias Chier, died in 680. (155) She is said to have been the daughter of one Duibhre, and of an illustrious family of Muskerry in the now county of Cork. It is supposed that she was the St. Chier, who, together with five other virgins, applied to St. Fintan Munnu, when residing in Heli (Ely O’Carrol) for a situation to establish a nunnery, and to whom he is said to have assigned the place, where he had lived himself, afterwards called Tech-telle. (156) That St. Cera spent some time in this place I do not find any sufficient reason for denying; (157) but it is very doubtful whether she got it from Fintan Munnu, or whether he had ever resided there. (158) How long she remained in Heli we are not informed. Returning thence to her own country she founded a nunnery, called, from her name, Killchree, now Kilcrea, (159) a few miles S. W. from the city of Cork, which she governed until her death. The reputation of this saint was very great, and her festival was kept at Kilcrea not only on the 5th of January, the anniversary of her decease, but likewise on the 16th of October, as a day of commemoration.
    (155) Colgan, treating of this saint at 5 January, has, from the Irish annals, A. 679. i. e. 680 for her death.

    (156) Archdall places Tech-Telle or Teaghtelle in the county of Westmeath, because Colgan says that, from having been in Heli, it afterwards was comprized in the western Meath, But by western Meath Colgan, and the older writers whom he quotes, understood not only the present Westmeath, but likewise the King’s county, in which Tech-Telle ought to be placed, whereas no part of Heli ever extended as far as what is now called Westmeath. Tech-Telle, or the house of Telle, got its name from St. Telle, son of Segen, who was contemporary with Fintan Munnu, and accordingly lived in the early part of the seventh century, and whose memory was revered on the 25th of June. (See AA. SS. p. 15. and 713.) Archdall has for this saint another Teach Telle at Teltown in the county of East Meath. And why? Because Colgan, speaking of him (at 713 ib.) places Teach-Telle in Midia, or Meath in general. But he had elsewhere (p. 15.) observed, that the part of Midia, in which Teach-Telle lay, was the western; and we have just seen that it was in the tract now called the King’s county. It is plain, on comparing the passages of Colgan, that he knew of only one Teach-Telle. As to Teltown, a place not far from Kells to the East, there is no reason to think that it owes its name to any saint, and it is more than probable that it is the same, at least in part, as the ancient Tailten, celebrated for the sports held there in former times. (See Not. 6. to Chap, v.)

    (157) She is stated to have been in that place before it was occupied by St. Telle. The only difficulty is that Telle flourished before the death, in 635, of Fintan Munnu. But St. Cera seems to have been young at the time she is said to have been there. Supposing that this was about 625, her having lived until 680 contains nothing contradictory or unchronological.

    (158) See Not. 78. to Chap. xv.

    (159) Colgan, in the Acts of this saint, which he has endeavoured to patch up, pretends that she had founded the nunnery of Kilcrea, before she went to Heli. The only reason, that appears for this position, is that he thought, and indeed very strangely, that she was the St. Ciara who is mentioned, in the Life of St. Brendan of Clonfert, as a holy virgin, contemporary with him, and living in Muscrighe Thire. He confounded Muscrighe Thire with the Muskerry of Cork, not recollecting, as he often does elsewhere, that the former was the tract now called Lower Ormond in Tipperary, whereas the latter was known by the name of Muscrighe Mitine. This is not the worst part of his hypothesis; for he knew that St. Brendan was dead since 577. And yet he would fain make us believe that a person, who lived until 680, was a distinguished saint in his days. To enable us to swallow this anachronism, he says she might have reached the age of 130. Harris was so led astray by this stuff, that he assigned the foundation of Kilcrea to the sixth century. Archdall says nothing (at Kilcrea) about the time of this foundation; but (at Teachtelle) he introduces St. Cera building an abbey, as he calls it at Teachtelle, before the year 576. Passing by these absurdities, I shall only add that, if there was a St. Ciara or Cera in Brendan’s time, she was different from the one of Kilcrea, and that she belonged to Lower Ormond. Colgan observes that, besides the St. Cera of Kilcrea, three other holy virgins of the same name are mentioned in the Irish calendars.
    Rev. J. Lanigan, An Ecclesiastical History of Ireland, Volume III (Dublin, 1829), 129-131.

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  • Saint Scoithin of Tescoffin, January 2

     

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    January 2 is the feast of an interesting saint who travelled between Ireland and Wales in pursuit of the monastic life, Scoithin of Tescoffin, County Kilkenny. The account of him below has been extracted from an inaugural address made by the then Bishop of Ossory, P. F. Moran at the first meeting of the Ossory Archaeological Society in 1874. In it the Bishop mentioned a number of local heroes, including Saint Scothin, and gave the text of a prayer which may have been associated with his Welsh journeying:

    To take now an instance from our local parochial patrons, I may refer to the life of St. Scuithin, or Scothin, patron of Tescoffin, which possesses many peculiar charms. To the Rev. John O’Hanlon we are indebted for an interesting sketch of the district which was hallowed by the virtues and penitential exercises of this Saint, and I regret that his limits did not allow him to enter more fully into the particulars of his life. Like St. Canice, St. Scothin proceeded to Wales to perfect himself in religious learning, and at Menevia he had the great St. David for his master. About the year 540 he returned to Ireland, and chose for himself a lonely cell on the slopes of Slievemargie. Many disciples soon gathered around him, and that district became known in popular tradition as Tescothin, or Tescoffin, that is, “St. Scothin’s cell.” He enjoyed a close friendship with St. Finbarr of Cork, St. Brendan, St. Columbkille, St. Aidan of Ferns, St. Modomnoc of Tipraghny, and many other great saints who adorned our country at this period. St. Oengus marks his festival on the 2nd of January, and styles him “Scuithin, the diadem of Mairge.” These words were translated by O’Curry for Dr. Mat. Kelly. In the complete MS. translation of St. Oengus’s Festology, made by O’Curry for Dr. Todd, we read, “Scuithin, the ornament of Mairge,” and in the notes, the metaphor being laid aside, it is explained as being equivalent to “Scuithin, the Doctor of Mairge.”

    In a translation kindly made for me by Mr. Crowe, the passage is given “Scuithin, the gem of Mairge.” One of St. Scothin’s austerities is specially mentioned. Each night he plunged into the stream that flows by Tescoffin, and remained immersed in it whilst he recited the penitential psalms. It is also recorded that, by a privilege only granted to the greatest saints, he was free from temptations, and being asked by St. Brendan how he was preserved from them, he replied that whenever he reposed, two heavenly virgins, i.e., divine hope and charity, kept watch by his side to guard him from the attacks of the evil one. He was so spiritualized by his continual penance, and so indifferent to all things in the world around him, that he is said to have walked on the sea as if it were dry land. On one occasion, meeting with St. Finbarr, as the legend tells us, between Ireland and Wales, he stretched his hand to the sea and plucked from it a scuitliin, i.e., a variegated flower, and threw it to Finbarr, saying, ” See how, by the mercy of God, it is in a flowery meadow that we are journeying.” Finbarr replied: ” This is not a flowery meadow, but the sea ;” and dipping his hand in the water, he took from it a salmon which he threw to Scuithin, saying: “See how richly it is supplied by God to minister to our wants.” The note in the Felire of St. Oengus adds, that it was on account of that variegated flower that our Saint received his name of Scuithin.

    St. Scothin often proceeded to Wales to visit his venerable master St. David, and in the life of this great patron of Wales many facts are mentioned connected with our Saint. A short sentence which incidentally occurs in one of the texts of St. David’s Life, published by Rees in his “Lives of the Cambro-British Saints,” is of considerable importance as illustrating the life of St. Scothin. Having told how, on a certain Easter Day, our Saint visited Menevia, it adds that “St. Scuithin had also another name, i.e., Scolan,” and on the spot where he conversed with St. David, an oratory was erected which in after times was called Bed-y-Scolan, i.e., “St. Scuithin’s cell.” This leads us to an interesting discovery. Three short poems, some of the most ancient Gaelic remains among the Cymri, bear the name of Scolan. This unknown name was hitherto a puzzle and a stumbling-block to antiquarians, and in the last generation the opinion was generally adopted that Scolan was merely a corruption of the name of St. Columba, and that it was to this Apostle of Scotland that these poems should be referred. The distinguished Celtic scholar, Skene, however, in his “Four Ancient Books of Wales,” (Edinburgh, 1868), has clearly shown the fallacy of this opinion, and has proved that it is to St. Scothin that this name refers. The first poem dwells on some penitential exercises which should be performed for sins, and as examples of the most heinous crimes, it mentions the burning of a church, destroying the property of a school, and doing injury to a book. The second poem is a sort of Lorica, or invocation of God, for protection in his journey to Rome. The third lays down the maxims which lead to heaven, and is as follows :

    “I asked the aged priests,
    Their bishops and their judges,
    What is the best thing for the soul?
    The ‘ Our Father,’ the consecrated host,
    The blessed Creed: he who offers them for his soul
    Until the judgment day: these are the best things.
    Smooth the path that thou goest, and cultivate peace,
    And to thee there shall be no end of mercy.
    Give food to the hungry and clothe the naked,
    And perform thy devotions;
    Thus from the presence of demons wilt thou escape.
    The proud and the idle shall have pain in their flesh,
    The penalty for indulging in excess;
    Let there be no sifting of what is not pure;
    Excess of sleep, and drunkenness,
    Too much mead, and too much submission to the flesh,
    Are six bitter things for the judgment day.
    For perjury in respect to land, and the betrayal of a lord,
    And insult to the bounteous,
    Let there be repentence before the judgment.
    By rising to matins and nocturns,
    By watching, and by the intercession of the saints,
    Shall every Christian obtain forgiveness.”

    The Felire of St. Oengus tells us that St. Scothin was also honoured in another oratory, which is described as situated opposite the territory of Fir-n-Arda (i.e., Ferrard, in the county Louth), and it is added that this duirthach or oratory was on the sea shore, and that the waves of the sea dashed against its gable wall.

    Irish Ecclesiastical Record, Vol 10 (1874), 141-161.

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  • 'Wise Jesus Submitted to the Law'

    Pictorial Lives of the Saints (1878)


    January 1 is the feast of the Circumcision of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Canon O’ Hanlon, in the first volume of his Lives of the Irish Saints has a short piece about the commemoration of this feast in Ireland:
    Feast of the Circumcision of our Lord.—
    This festival, which is traced to the very earliest ages of Christianity, seems likewise to have been celebrated in Ireland, from the time St. Patrick first introduced the light of the Gospel among our people. It is remarkable that our celebrated hagiologist, St. Oengus, the Culdee, devotes solely the opening stanza of his elegant metrical Irish Calendar, known as the Felire, to record this feast.
    A. Kalendis Januarii. i.
    Before men’s multitudinous race let the pre-eminent King lead!
    Christ on January’s calends underwent the Law, high the requirement!
    Saint Oengus has alluded to the aspect of the feast which was identified from earliest times – the submission of Our Lord to the requirements of the Jewish Law, which mandated male infants to undergo this ceremony and to receive their name. Patristic writers also saw this first shedding of Christ’s blood as a prefigurement of His Passion, and the circumcision of Christ features in the later western medieval devotions to the Precious Blood. The eighth-century Irish poet Blathmac, however, alluded to the more spiritual implications of the feast:
    165. It was your son (best protection!) who underwent the law of circumcision; good has come of it to us, the circumcision of our vices.
    James Carney, ed. and trans., The Poems of Blathmac Son of Cú Brettan, together with the Irish Gospel of Thomas and a Poem on the Virgin Mary (London 1964), 57.
    My personal favourite among the Irish sources is the succinct yet beautiful entry from the Martyrology of Gorman, which records for this day:
    On January’s high calends wise Jesus submitted to the Law as the octave (of His Nativity) came to pass.

    Content Copyright © Omnium Sanctorum Hiberniae 2012-2015. All rights reserved.