Talk:Rónán
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There were at least twelve saints called Rónán, a common name in early Ireland borne also by several kings Saints[edit]There are twelve Irish saints bearing the name of Ronan commemorated in the Martyrology of Donegal.[1] These include
Today, one of Aer Lingus' A330 aircraft (reg. EI-EAV) is named "St. Ronan"/"Rónán" to commemorate one of these saints. It is not known, however which St. Ronan it tributes. The Legends of Locronan[edit]There are many confusions between the different saints bearing the name Ronan or Rumon. However there is a considerable cult centred on the village of Locronan in Brittany. Locronan, meaning hermitage of Ronan, is centred on its eponyn's shrine amd has an associated group of legends that provide an aetiology. This Ronan is pictured as a wandering missionary of Irish extraction, who became settled in the Forest of Nevez, overlooking the Bay of Douarnenez. Paradoxically, he is accorded a wife, called Ceban, and at least one child. Ceban so became worried or jealous over Ronan's preaching among the heathen Bretons that she plotted to have him arrested. She hid their daughter in a chest and fled to the court of the count of Cornouaille at Quimper (Kemper), where she accused Ronan of being a werewolf. She claimed not only that he savaged sheep, but that he had killed their daughter. Ronan was brought before the court, with the hunting dogs sitting by. Trained to hunt wolves, they would have attacked Ronan immediately if he were a werewolf. Thus the prince was convinced of Ronan's innocence. The daughter was soon found safe and well. However, Ceban's plots against Ronan continued, so he left home and continued his missionary journeys and became celebrated as a healer of the sick. He finally settled at Hillion, where he died. There were great disputes over the body of the saint. The various rulers of Brittany all wanted to provide a last resting place. So the issue was decided by placing the body on a cart, dragged by three previously unyoked oxen, and leaving it for them to drag wherever they would. However, the body could be lifted only by the prince of Cornouaille; and, when the oxen halted, it was in Cornouaille, close to Ronan's old home in the forest of Nevez. There the body was interred and the little settlement of Locronan grew up around the burial place. Gallery[edit]
Lives of Saint Ronan[edit]
References[edit]
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Ronan". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
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