ALL THE SAINTS OF IRELAND

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Saint Bigsech of Kilbixy, June 28
June 28 is the commemoration of a female saint, Bigsech, who has left her memory in the placename of Kilbixy, County Westmeath, and in the dedication of a holy well. Canon O’Hanlon draws on the work of Irish Ordnance Survey pioneer, John O’Donovan, and of Meath diocesan historian, Dean Anthony Cogan, in his account below. I note that the leper house at this locality, discussed by Father Cogan on page 578 of volume 3 of his The Diocese of Meath: Ancient and Modern, available online here, was dedicated to Saint Brigid. This 2010 newspaper report on the plans to restore the site of Saint Bigsech’s church describes our saint as a ‘handmaiden of Saint Brigid’:St. Bigesg, Bicsecha, or Bigsech, Virgin, of Kilbixy, County of Westmeath.The simple entry, Bigsech, Virgin, appears in the Martyrology of Tallagh, at the 28th of June. This holy woman is called the daughter of Bressal, and she was a saint of the Hy-Fiachra family. She descended from the race of Fiachra, son to Eochaidh Muighmheadhoin. The place—apparently called after this holy virgin—is written Cill Bigsighe, i.e., “the church of St. Bigseach,” and it has been Anglicized into Kilbixy, now a parish, in the barony of Moygoish, in the county of Westmeath. This appears to have become an English town of considerable importance, as Sir Henry Piers, who wrote in 1682, relates. Even then it had decayed. Dr. O’Donovan visited this place in 1837, but he found only a few traces of the ancient town. These consisted of—First, the Leper house, a mere ruin; secondly, the site of the castle, but there were no remains whatever of its walls; thirdly, a moat, which had been surrounded by a circular fosse; and fourthly, the site for a gallows. There was a holy well, near the church, then bearing the name of Tobar Bighsighe, i.e., “the well of St. Bigseach.” This saint appears to have had another festival, at the 4th of October. The Rev. Mr. Cogan visited this place on the 4th of August, 1863. Then he found one of the old fonts, belonging to a former church, and stuck in the wall of a donkey-stable, at one of the private entrances to the churchyard. He gives an interesting account of this ancient place. At the same date, the name of this saint occurs in the Martyrology of Donegal, with the designation of Bigsech, Virgin, of Cill-Bigsighe, in Meath.Content Copyright © Omnium Sanctorum Hiberniae 2012-2015. All rights reserved. -
Saint Dimman, June 27
June 27 is the feast of a Saint Dimman or Dioman about whom not much can be established with any certainty. Canon O’Hanlon quotes the 17th-century hagiologist Father John Colgan’s opinion that he may have been a monk known to Saint Patrick. The name of Dimman is included in the earliest surviving Irish calendar, the Martyrology of Tallaght. The later Martyrology of Donegal describes him as a priest:
ST. DIMMAN OR DIOMAN.AT this date, the Martyrology of Tallagh enters the name Dimman, as having been venerated. The Calendarist O’Clery states he was a Priest. One of St. Patrick’s churches, in the territory of Dalriadia, was called Fothrath. This he committed to the care of two disciples, viz.: Cathbad, a priest, and Diman, a monk. Colgan thinks the latter may possibly be identified with the present St. Dimman or Dioman. In the Martyrology of Donegal, at June 27th, he is noticed as Dioman, a Priest.Content Copyright © Omnium Sanctorum Hiberniae 2012-2015. All rights reserved. -
Saint Soadbair, June 26
At June 26 the Irish calendars contribute the name of yet another obscure saint, Soadbair. Apart from telling us that our saint was a bishop, there are no other details recorded, as Canon O’Hanlon explains:
St. Soadbair or Soadbar, Bishop.
The Martyrologies of Tallagh and of Donegal register a festival at the 26th of June in honour of Soadbair or Soadbar, Bishop. His place is not mentioned.
Content Copyright © Omnium Sanctorum Hiberniae 2012-2015. All rights reserved.