Jump to content

Kevin of Glendalough: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
added image, added ref and link to Glendalough (Main)
Widgery (talk | contribs)
→‎In Popular Culture: Added Seamus Heaney poem about St Kevin.
Line 60: Line 60:
[[Image:Stkevinschurch2.jpg|thumb|right|St. Kevin's Church, with the Round Tower of Glendalough in the background.]]
[[Image:Stkevinschurch2.jpg|thumb|right|St. Kevin's Church, with the Round Tower of Glendalough in the background.]]


==In Popular Culture==
==In Culture==
Kevin is remembered in popular culture as an [[ascetic]]. This is commemorated in a [[folk song]] about him which describes a legend claiming that he drowned a woman who attempted to seduce him. This was recorded and made popular by [[The Dubliners]]. the opening verse is as follows "In glendalogh there lived an auld saint, renowned for his learning and piety, his manners were curious and quaint and he looked upon girls with disparity."
Kevin is remembered in popular culture as an [[ascetic]]. This is commemorated in a [[folk song]] about him which describes a legend claiming that he drowned a woman who attempted to seduce him. This was recorded and made popular by [[The Dubliners]]. the opening verse is as follows "In glendalogh there lived an auld saint, renowned for his learning and piety, his manners were curious and quaint and he looked upon girls with disparity."


The independent film-maker [[Kevin Smith]] refers irreverently to his namesake 'Saint Kevin' and the key events of his life in the introduction to [[Sold Out: A Threevening with Kevin Smith]], his 2008 live Q & A show.
The independent film-maker [[Kevin Smith]] refers irreverently to his namesake 'Saint Kevin' and the key events of his life in the introduction to [[Sold Out: A Threevening with Kevin Smith]], his 2008 live Q & A show.

One of the most widely known poems of the the Novel prizewinner [[Seamus Heaney]], 'St Kevin and the Blackbird', relates the story of Kevin holding out his hand with trance-like stillness while a blackbird builds a nest in it, lays eggs, the eggs hatch and the chicks fledge.<ref>Heaney, Seamus, The Spirit Level (London: Faber and Faber, 1996), pp20-1.</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 12:15, 14 February 2013

Saint Kevin of Glendalough
Born498
Ireland
Died3 June 618
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodoxy
Anglican Communion
Canonized1903 (cultus confirmed)
Feast3 June
Attributesblackbird
Patronageblackbirds, Archdiocese of Dublin, Glendalough

Saint Cóemgen (modern Irish: Caoimhín), popularly anglicized to Kevin (d. c.618) is an Irish saint who was known as the founder and first abbot of Glendalough in County Wicklow, Ireland. His feast day in the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches is 3 June.[1]

Early life

His life is not well documented, as no contemporaneous material survives. His Latin vita (life) maintains that as with St. Columba, Kevin's family were of the nobility - he was the son of Coemlog and Coemell of Leinster. He was born in 498 at the Fort of the White Fountain.[2] He was given the Irish name Coemgen, which means "fair-begotten",[3] and was baptized by Cronan of Roscrea.

The Acta Sanctorum – which is based on an ancient manuscript contains a number of legends. The author of a commentary on this manuscript, Fr. Francis Baert, S.J., explains, “that although many of the legends given to this work are of doubtful veracity; it was decided to let them stand in favour of the antiquity of the document which is placed as having being written during or before the 12th century”. St Kevin’s birth and early years figure prominently in traditional legends. When an infant a mysterious white cow came to his parents house every morning and evening and supplied the milk for the baby.[4] From the age of seven, he was educated by St. Petroc of Cornwall, who had come to Leinster about 492, and lived with the monks until he was 12.

Kilnamanagh

Kevin next studied for the priesthood under his uncle, St. Eugenius, afterwards Bishop of Ardstraw, who at that time lived at Cell na Manach (Church of the Monks) in Wicklow, where he taught his pupils all the sacred learning which he had acquired in the famous British monastery of Rosnat.[2]

Locals say that it was his monastery that was demolished by developers in the 1970s when building the housing estate that is there today. St. Kevin’s well is all that remains today as the plot was unsuitable for building. It is now surrounded by a garden kept by locals in the saint’s honour. St. Kevin is today the patron saint of the Kilnamanagh parish.[citation needed]

Glendalough

Glendalough, or the Glen of two Lakes, is one of the most important sites of monastic ruins in Ireland. Before the arrival of St. Kevin this glen would have been desolate and remote, and would have been ideal for a secluded retreat.[5]

Hermitage

St. Kevin's bed

Kevin was ordained by Bishop Lugidus and following his ordination, he moved on to Glendalough in order to avoid the company of his followers. He lived as a hermit in a cave, a Bronze Age tomb now known as St. Kevin's Bed, to which he was reportedly led by an angel.[2]

St. Kevin’s Bed can best be described as a man made cave cut in the rock face very close to the edge of the mountain. It overlooks the upper lake from a height of about 30 odd feet (10 metres). The approach to the cave is very difficult, with access to it is through a rectangular space and a short passageway 3 ft. (1 metre) high and 2½ ft. wide. The inner or main part of the cave is just 4 ft. wide (1.5 metres) and less than 3 ft.(1 metre) high. It is reasonable to assume that the cave could only have been used as a sleeping place, and would have been impossible for an adult to stand upright in it, so it is quite likely that St Kevin only used it as his bed, or a place for pious prayer or meditation. Dr. Leask expresses the opinion that this cave was constructed long before Kevin’s time and it was probably the first and oldest piece of work to be undertaken by man in the glen.

There is a legend which claims that St Laurence O’Toole used the “bed” as he frequently made penitential visits to Glendaloch, especially during the season of Lent. Michael Dwyer, the famous Wicklow rebel is reputed to have taken shelter in the “bed” while he was on the run from British soldiers. The story goes that he escaped capture one morning by diving into the lake and swimming to the opposite side. Today, it is highly dangerous to try to approach the “bed” from the side of Lugduff mountain. Visitors, in the interests of their own safety, should be content with a distant view of it from one of the boats which operate during the tourist season.[6]

Monastery

The chapel of Saint Kevin at Glendalough

Kevin lived the life of a hermit there with an extraordinary closeness to nature, his companions were the animals and birds all around him. He lived as a hermit for seven years wearing only animal skins, sleeping on stones and eating very sparingly.[7] He went barefoot, and spent his time in prayer. Disciples were soon attracted to Kevin and a further settlement enclosed by a wall, called Kevin's Cell, was established nearer the lakeshore. By 540 Saint Kevin's fame as a teacher and holy man had spread far and wide. Many people came to seek his help and guidance. In time Glendalough grew into a renowned seminary of saints and scholars and the parent of several other monasteries.[7]

In 544 Kevin went to the Hill of Uisneach in Co.Westmeath to visit the holy abbots, Sts. Columba, Comgall, and Cannich. He then proceeded to Clonmacnoise, where St. Cieran had died three days before. Having firmly established his community, he retired into solitude for four years, and only returned to Glendalough at the earnest entreaty of his monks.[3] Until his death around 618 Kevin presided over his monastery in Glendalough, living his life by fasting, praying and teaching. St Kevin is one of the patron saints of the diocese of Dublin.[7]

He belonged to the second order of Irish saints. [3] Eventually, Glendalough, with its seven churches, became one of the chief pilgrimage destinations in Ireland.

St. Kevin's Church, with the Round Tower of Glendalough in the background.

In Culture

Kevin is remembered in popular culture as an ascetic. This is commemorated in a folk song about him which describes a legend claiming that he drowned a woman who attempted to seduce him. This was recorded and made popular by The Dubliners. the opening verse is as follows "In glendalogh there lived an auld saint, renowned for his learning and piety, his manners were curious and quaint and he looked upon girls with disparity."

The independent film-maker Kevin Smith refers irreverently to his namesake 'Saint Kevin' and the key events of his life in the introduction to Sold Out: A Threevening with Kevin Smith, his 2008 live Q & A show.

One of the most widely known poems of the the Novel prizewinner Seamus Heaney, 'St Kevin and the Blackbird', relates the story of Kevin holding out his hand with trance-like stillness while a blackbird builds a nest in it, lays eggs, the eggs hatch and the chicks fledge.[8]

References

  1. ^ "Kevin". Patron Saints Index. Retrieved 5 December 2007.
  2. ^ a b c Haggerty, Bridget, "St. Kevin - founder of Glendalough", Irish Culture and Customs
  3. ^ a b c Edmonds, Columba. "St. Kevin (Coemgen)." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 4. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908. 8 Feb. 2013
  4. ^ "Legends of St. Kevin", Glendalough Monastice History
  5. ^ "Introduction to Glendalough", County Wicklow
  6. ^ "Kevin's Bed", County Wicklow
  7. ^ a b c "Kevin of Glendalough", Dublin Diocese Jubilee
  8. ^ Heaney, Seamus, The Spirit Level (London: Faber and Faber, 1996), pp20-1.

Further reading

Primary sources

  • Latin vita of St Kevin, ed. Charles Plummer, "Vita Sancti Coemgeni (Life of St. Kevin)." In Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae. Vol. 1. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1910. 234–57.
  • Irish vita of St Kevin, ed. Charles Plummer, "Betha Caimgin (Life of St. Kevin)." In Bethada Nóem nÉrenn (Live of Irish Saints). Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1922. Vol. 1: 125–67 and vol. 2: 121–61. Edition available from CELT.
  • Gerald of Wales, Topographia Hibernica.

Secondary sources

  • Barrow, Lennox. Glendalough and Saint Kevin. Dundalk: Dundalgan Press, 1972.
  • MacShamhrain, A.S. "The 'unity' of Cóemgen and Ciarán. A convent between Glendalough and Clonmacnoise in the tenth to eleventh centuries." In Wicklow: history and society: interdisciplinary essays on the history of an Irish county, ed. by Ken Hannigan and William Nolan. Dublin: Geography Publications, 1994. 139-50.

Template:Persondata