His
festival
was
tion appears to have come down from remote times.
tion appears to have come down from remote times.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v7
3
That St. Maelruain had only been regarded as abbot,* and not as bishop,s
in Tallagh, seems most probable, from the fact, that his apparently immediate
6
successorthere,Airerain, surnamedtheWise,? isonlystyledanAbbotofthat
Sun of the South Plain of Meath. ''' 1 In the Book of 2 there is Leinster,
great
an incident of his history related, from which the holy Abbot concludes, that it is better for a man to give his offering to the Lord than to earthly men. Into the version of St. Maelruain's Rule, which has been published, is ad- mitted the following account, that what Moelruain heard from learned men concerning the desertion of the land was : That Patrick, and the faithful whom he brought into Erin, will be repulsive in Heaven to any man who deserts his land, except so far as to remove from the east of it to the west, and from the north to the south. This seems to have reference to the great
place. However, it cannot be denied, that even in the time of Maelruain therewasabishopatTallagh andweknow,thatataperiod,notlongsub-
—— united in his own person the offices of bishop and abbot. 9 Nay more ; it is almost certain, that St. Maelruain himself would not assume the functions of
;
sequent, there had been a St. Eochaidh 8 successor of Maelruain who
the episcopate through humility, while he enjoined on Eochaidh the duty of
receiving consecration, to serve the purposes of the community, according to the custom of that time.
it —he is entered as a bishop. This addition to his name was probably a late interpolation,
6
l in
Chapter hi. See "Transactions of Martyrclogy, the "Book of Leinster,"
the Royal Irish Academy," Irish Manuscript edited by Robert Atkinson, M. A. , LL. D. , Series, vol. i. , part i. On the Calendar of the following entry at iii. Idus Februarii,
The "cumhal " in the Latin documents is expressed by " ancilla. " Its literal meaning
is "bondmaid," whose equivalent was
reckoned at three cows. See Dr. O'Dono-
van's LeAbharv ha 5-CeArtf;, or "Book of
Rights," p. 139, —n. (n). 7 Thus we find in that copy of the Tallagh
^Engus, by Whitley Stokes, LL. D. , p. xx.
"
Airerain Sapientis et Abbatis Tamlactan
2
LL. D. , fol. 286a.
lagh,
bishop,
Edited by Robert Atkinson, M. A. ,
post Maelruain. " Seep. 356. 8"
See "The Culdees of the British Islands,
as they appear in History," &c. By Very Rev. WilliamReeves,D. D. Evidences,H, p. 91, and note.
4
Kl. Eochaid Eps. — Februarii,
See ibid. , p. 356^'.
et abb. Tamlac. "
3
In the list of the community-folk of
9 His feast occurs at the 28th January, where some notices of him occur, in Firsl Tal- Volume v. —how-
he is not called a
Poem of Cormac Mac Cuillenan.
nor in the
ever, we did not ass—
ign his place which
5 However, in Rev. Dr. Kelly's version of
corded in Dr. O'Donovan's Annals of the Four Masters," at A. D. 807, recle 8 1 2, vol. i. f pp. 418, 419.
the "Martyrologyof Tallagh"—whichwefind to have been drawn from the earliest copy of
See an account of him, in the Second V—olumeofthiswork,atthe10thofFebruary
the date for his feast, Art. i.
Thus entered, at the 28th of January : iii.
of this work, Art. There,
undoubtedly was here whilejhis deatli is re- "
July 7. ] LIVES 0* 1HE IRISH SAINTS.
107
It has been assumed, that Tallagh had been a rural episcopal See,
10
even
from the time of St. Maelruan, and also because in our Annals and Calendars
there are obituary notices of its bishops j" but, the fact does not appear to
be well established. The oldest records extant represent it as a rectory
belonging to the Archbishop of Dublin. In the thirteenth century, Henry de
Loundres I2 annexed it to the Deanery of St. Patrick's, to maintain the
dignity of the Dean, who as head of the Chapter was subject to the greatest
1 * The
built on the same site. 15
Protestant church x * is at least the third
church,
expense.
present
It was parallel to the former one, while the latter
stood on the rude remains of one older still. In mediaeval records, Tallagh
is written Taulagh, and sometimes Tavelach. The church here was also
called Taulaght-Maelruny—a corruption from the patron's name—while the
chapels of Killohan l6 and St. Bride x ? were subservient to it. Besides the
tithes, the Dean of St. Patrick's formerly possessed the right of presentation
to the 18 A stone font is in the —at
vicarage. large graveyard Tallagh ;
to the shrine of St. pronunciation wereaccustomedtowashtheirfeetinit.
and, such was the local
it is
said,
that— pilgrims
Mollrooney
Near
in the same parish, there is a townland still denominated Kilnamanagh 9 or "theChurchoftheMonks. " ItwasprobablyadependencyontheMonas- tery founded by St. Maelruain. Not far from the site of St. Maelruain's old foundation was the former palace of the Archbishops of Dublin. * This mediaeval and semi-baronial structure, from the pictures of it which remain, was a large castellated mansion, having several massive square towers and thick external walls, pierced with many narrow loop-hole windows. 21 It was even inhabited to a comparatively recent period. However, having become ruinous, and inconvenient for the usages of modern social life, the Arch-
bishop'spalacewasunroofedin1825. Afterwards,thissitebecamethepro- perty of a lay gentleman, who repaired and converted a portion of its ruins into a modern mansion. Subsequently, he transferred the title and possession to the fathers of the Dominican Order. Soon again was a noble building
erected for their religious establishment. At present, a spacious Dominican
Convent occupies the site once covered by the archiepiscopal palace. Of the latter—in the true architectural taste and spirit of restoration—the former bell-tower has been preserved, and it still serves its original purpose. In the garden attached, there is an immense walnut tree, which is said to have been
10
Previous to a. d. 1 152. See John of St. Joseph, Bishop of Tallagh, Art. iv.
D'Alton's "
l6 It was situated without the cross-lands of the Archbishop in the townland of Old- This seems to have been in accordance, bawn, but it has been waste since A. D.
lin," p. 761.
11
History
of the
County
of Dub-
with that monastic discipline observed at
Iona, and probably in other places through- out Ireland, where bishops were attached
only to their respective religious houses, and for the purpose of ordaining the subjects of those houses.
1 532.
12 He flourished in the thirteenth
and presided over the See of Dublin, from vey Townland Maps for the County of
century, A. D. l2l3to 1228. See Harris' Ware, vol. i. ,
to
" of Archbishops
2° A of this medioeval mansion picture
Dublin," pp. 318
13 See "The History and Antiquities of the Collegiate and Cathedral Church of St.
Patrick, near Dublin," by William Monck Mason, Esq. , book i. , chap, v. , p. 26.
14 It was erected in 1829.
15 An engraving of the Protestant Church at Tallagh may be seen in the First Volume of this work, at the 5th of January, the feast
320.
may be seen, in vol. i. , p. 201, of new edition of Rev. Mervyn Archdall's "Monasticon Hi- bernicum," edited by Right Rev. Patrick F. Moran, D. D. , Lord Bishop of Ossory, &c, at present Cardinal Archbishop of Sydney.
'7 ruins.
This chapel nearer the Dodder is now in
l8
These privileges were confirmed to him by a Bull of Pope Gregory IX. , in the first year of his pontificate, A. D. 1227.
J 9 It is described on the " Ordnance Sur- Dublin," sheets 21, 22.
Dublin, 1873, et se1-> 4to«
2t The accompanying illustration, copied from a faithful drawing of the original by
Tallagh,
and
x
to8 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
[July 7.
planted by the hand of St. Madman himself. 22 Not far from it, there is a
promenade, called the Friars' Walk. The enclosed grounds are admirably
secluded from the high road, while they present a true picture of monastic retirement.
The course of St. Maelruain having been usefully and religiously run, the time for his eternal reward began to open before him. We cannot doubt, but his departure was a sore bereavement to his community, in whose spiritual welfare he had always taken so deep an interest. In view of his approaching end, it seems likely, he made provision for their future wants, and on his
Ancient Palace of the Archbishop of Dublin, at Tallaght.
death-bed blessed them and their place. It has been stated, in the "Annals oftheFourMasters,"23 thatSt. Maelruain,BishopofTamhlachtMaelruain, died, on the 7th of July, a. d. 787. Yet, under the head of Tamlacht, Duald
Mac Firbis enters, Maolruain, bishop of Tamlacht, at a. d. 789,^ and at the
2
7th of July. According to the Annals of Ulster, * Maelruain of Tamlacht, a
bishop and soldier of Christ, slept in peace, in the year 791.
O'Donovan states, that the true date for his death is a. d.
However, Dr.
2? St. Maelruain was interred in his at
of his grave is yet pointed out by the people of that village.
stated,
William F. Wakeman, has been transferred
by him also to the wood, engraved by Mrs. Millard.
22 An illustration of this tree forms the
attached to the First Volume of this work. These larger illustrations have been designed to commemorate scenes, in connexion with the compilation of Irish Hagiology ; and accordingly, as affixed to the present volume, Trinity College, Dublin, has a special interest for having a close and an intimate relation with the learned Arch-
bishop Ussher, Sir James Ware, the Rev. Drs. Todd and Reeves, who have laboured
so well in the field of Irish Hagiology and
Ecclesiastical History.
23 See Dr. O'Donovan's edition, vol. i. ,
pp. 392, 393-
* See " of the Irish Proceedings Royal
Academy," Irish Manuscript Series, vol. i. , part i. , pp. 128, 129.
25 See -AniialA Ul<voh. Edited with a
Translation and Notes, by William M.
Frontispiece,
792. cemetery Tallagh,
already
Ilennessy, M. R. I. A. , vol. i. , pp. 270, 271. 26 "
See Annals of the Four Masters,"
vol. i. , pp. 392, 393.
27 See the First Volume of this work, at
the 5th of January, Art. iv.
26
As
and the site
For the spot,
July 7. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 109 extraordinary veneration is manifested ; nor will the people suffer any corpse
to be interred too near it.
His festival was
tion appears to have come down from remote times.
kept
was long commemorated by the people with processions.
7th
This commemora-
2? that at the of veneration was to Maol- Tallagh records, 7th July, given
ruain, Bishop of Tamlachta. This name appears in the Martyrology of Donegal,30 nlso, at the same date, as Maelruain, Bishop of Tamlacht, in Leinster. Tamlacht, says the Calendarist, lies between Ath-cliath and Cill- dara ; but it should have been observed, not in a direct line. Even, St. Maelruain was venerated in Scotland, as we find him entered at the 7th of
intheKalendarofDrummond31 fromwhichwefurther thathis ; learn,
July,
life was distinguished, not alone by his virtues, but by miracles. After his death,
as we learn from the
"
Feilire," which was soon composed by his contempo-
rary St. ^ngus, the people began to frequent his tomb,32 and after pious service there, with purity, was " healed every heart's sigh. " 33 A pattern was
kept up at Tallagh, on the 7th of July, by the people of the town, and they were accustomed to call it St. Mollrooney's day. 3* They had an incorrect
idea of the patron saint,35 according to the popular tradition.
Many centuries have passed since holy men first lived, prayed, and studied at
Tallagh;andalthoughtimehaswroughtmanychangesforits records,thepresent age witnesses asuccession of religious men, and a learned band of ecclesiastical scholars there, serving to maintain its former glories. The Catholic prelates of Dublin formerly made it a place for repose and retreat. Their fine man- sion has been levelled, and hardly a vestige of it now remains. However, at the present time, the Dominican fathers 36 have their convent and their novi- ciate, on its site ; and, as of old, it is still a house for monastic seclusion and discipline, as also a school for imparting instruction to those youthful aspi- rants, who desire the perfect state, and who have resolved to perpetuate in the present age the blessings of bye-gone centuries. The very graves 3 ? there are
28
See Ordnance Survey Volume of festival. To these we have already alluded,
""
Extracts for the County of Dublin, p.
131, now preserved in the Library of the Royal Irish Academy.
in the First Volume of this work, at January 5th, Art. iv.
35 Probably owing to their mode of pro- nouncing this saint's name, the people sup- posed St. Maelruan was a female, and they show an object called her griddle and her
29 Edited by Rey. Dr. Kelly, p. xxviii.
His feast is also, at this date, in the Martyr-
ology of Christ Church, Dublin, edited by
John Clarke Crosthwaite, A. M. , and Rev. cake, in the churchyard. This information
Dr. James Henthorn Todd, p. 134.
30 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
the writer has received from W. D. Hand- cock, Esq. , in a letter, headed 52 Dame- street, Dublin, 26th of November, 1874.
36 In connexion with their and in a order,
work of this nature, it may not be well to
188, 189.
31 Thus at Nonae
!
Hiber- niam Natale Sancti Confessoris Maelruain cujus V—ita Virtutibus et Miraculis plena re-
Julise, "Apud
omit allusion to a distinguished and truly fulsit. " Bishop Forbes' Kalendars of learned member, who has bequeathed to
"
Scottish Saints," p. 17.
3a The original word in the Leabhar Breac
them and to Ireland a record of undoubted historical value. We mean the " Hibernia
copy is ocAleAchc,
"
his own tomb," as dis-
Dominicana," and its
Father Thomas De
also Bishop of Ossory, towards the middle of the last century. Coloniae Agrippinse, a. d.
1762, et seq. , 4to.
3? Among these is to be seen that of the
eloquent and admired preacher of the Domi- nican Order, whose career is so minutely
and elaborately compiled, in the interesting " Life of the Very Rev. Thomas N. Burke,
O. P. , by William J. Fitz- Patrick, F. S. A. ,
— from the CAmhleAchc or " tinguished plague
"
"Supplementum," by
tomb
antithesis and play upon the word, as the ingenious and critically learned Irish scholar,
Very Rev. Bartholomew M'Carthy, D. D. , has pointed out me.
33
See "Transactions of the Royal Irish
an elegant and imaginative poetic
Academy," Irish Manuscript Series, vol. i. , part i. On the Calendar of Oengus. By
Whitley Stokes, LL. D. , p. xx.
34 Certain
practised, on the yearly recurrence of the
&c. Two volum—es.
religious
London, 1885,
celebrations
were
8vo. These were a great and
Article ii.
*
on the
of 28 and it July,
The Martyrology of
Burgo, O. P. ,
who was
i io LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [J uly 7.
notforgotten,andwithareverentcuriositytheyareoftenvisited. Thatfinearchi- tectural group of buildings, which now adorns Tallaght, also forms an admir- able exemplar of the ecclesiastical renaissance, which has been so energetically achieved, while secular enterprise has been so restricted and oppressed, under the peculiar political and social conditions that obstruct the happiness andprosperityof Ireland.
Article II. —St. Willibald, First Bishop and Patron of Aich-
stadt, Germany. \_Eighth Century. '] Although we have a very genuine Life—and even written by a contemporary and a relative—of this saint, yet, it is to be regretted, that no definite statement in it conveys an idea of where Willibaldwasborn,orconcerninghisdescentandrace. Thisisallthemore remarkable, that his parents are never named in it, although frequent occasions occur for referring to them. Considerable doubt attaches, therefore, to the present holy bishop's place of nativity. While some writers consider him to have belonged to the people called Suevi x others make him a Scot or a
; Hibernian,andothersanEnglishman. ThemostancientwriterofhisActs,2
a nun, as also a relation and a contemporary of his own, does not record the countryofhisbirth;3 althoughfromtheallusionmadetohisearlyeducation and family we might be inclined to consider him an Englishman. It is to be observed, that the nun of Heidenheim, who wrote his Acts, belonged to the community of his sister St. Walburge, and she had the relation of his travels and much of his life from the mouth of St. Willibald himself, to whom personallyshewaswellknown. TheBollandist,*FatherJohnBaptistSoller, whohaseditedtheseActs,tooreadilyadoptsthisconclusion;5 forwhich,it seems to us, there is no positive proof. An old anonymous writer, whose Acts 6 of this saint had previously appeared in Canisius' collection, sets Willibald down, however, as derived from the nation of the Angles. 7 Notwithstanding, that well-known mediaeval German writer, John of Trittenham, tells us, that
of
warlike nation of their Germany;
was a Scot 8 and a brother to St. by birth,
first
Walpurgis, or Walburge,' a virgin and abbess of Heidenheim. Other old Lives of St. Willibald are said to have been written by Reginald, bishop of
Willibald,
bishop
Aichstadt,
territory extending from the Rhine to the Elbe, ac-
5 He writes: " Scotumaut Siquis Suevum,
Ilibernum fingere voluerit Sanctum nostrum,
is a me non et ncc his responsum expect ;
cording
to Strabo's " lib. vii. Geographia,"
A very interesting account of their manners,
diutius immoranduin video, cum pridem e—x- Commentarius Prsevius, sect, i. , par. 3.
customs and power is given by Ciesar, in tra oninen controversial! ) posita sint. "
his work, De Bello Gallico, lib. iv. , cap. i. ,
ii. , iii.
2
These are given by the Bollandist*, in four chapters, with notes, and in forty-five paragraphs, including three of Praefacio Sanctimonialis. —
3 He—r biography one of great interest and
* See the Acts of this holy bishop, very
"
Acta Sanctorum," tomus ii. , Julii vii. De S. Willibaldo Episcopo Eys- tadii in Germania, pp. 485 to 519. These are prefixed by a Previous Commentary, in
eight sections and sixty-five paragraphs, written by Father John Baptist Soller.
6
The Bollandi»ts have them as Vita
fully given in the
* He was the thirty-ninth in succession, and he ruled from A. n. 1306 to 132 2.
9 See an account of her, in Rev. Albaii Butler's "Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and other principal Saints," vol. vii. ,
July vii.
J0
AccordingtoCanisius,hewastheeleventh bishop in succession. He lived A. D. 1322.
:
Hodceporicon,
Vna seu
in eighteen paragraphs, and written by Bishop Philip.
value is intituled
auctore virgine consanguinea Sanctimoninli Heidenheimensi, ex editione Canisii correcta ex variis lect. Gretseri.
Altera. Auctore Anonymo per antiquo. Fx editione Canisii. This is in three chapters,
containing nineteen paragraphs, with notes. It is followed in their work with Miracula,
7 He writes thus, " de genere Anglorum . . . . oriundus," cap. i. , sect. I.
July 7. ]
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. m
12 of Aichstadt. 1 ' errors. The Acts of this saint have received illustration from Surius, 1 * Father
10
one Adalbert," and
the
The latter, although a laboured and an extended treatise, abounds in historic
Aichstadt,
by
by
bishop Philip,
Dean
and Les Petits Bollandistes. 1'
16 1? Rev. Alban 8 Bishop Challenor, Butler,'
Were we to adopt the accounts of English
John Mabillon/s
Cressy,
writers, this holy man was born in the kingdom of the West Saxons, near the
place where Southampton now stands, and it is said his father was the holy
king, St. Richard. 20 However, it is not at all certain, that his father 2I had
been of Wessex—as some writers have stated—but on the 22 King contrary,
he belonged apparently to a grade less elevated in society. Moreover, it does notappearcertain,thateventhen—ameofhisfatherisknown. 23 Accordingto oneaccounthismotherwasBonna saidtohavebeenasistertoSt. Boniface; it is needless to observe, however,- that such a statement rests on no good
2
authority. 24 His birth has been referred —to about a. d. 704, s by various
Soller who
this saint's Acts states, that it ought to be placed about a. d. 700.
writers j
—Father
however, John Baptist
the of analyzes chronology
26
another holy and an older brother, named Winibald,2? and a sister, St. Wal-
28 Their relative
ancient writers of their Acts. 20
Boniface, 30 the illustrious Apostle of Germany ; but, there are good reasons for doubting such statement. So various have been the entries of this holy man's name in old records, that it has been questioned if they refer to one and the
same person. Thus, he is styled, Wilibaldus, Wilbaldus, Bilibaldus, Bilbaldus, 1
bert, Abbot of who flourished Heidenheim,
in the time of Pope Eugenius III. , who reigned from A. D. 1 145 to a. d. 1153, more than three hundred and fifty years after the death of St. Willibald.
burga.
places
as to have been the most seniority stated, by
11 He a brief notice, only gives
regarding Saints Willibald, Wunebald and Walburgis, in reference to the monastery of Heidenheim. Nor is this always in accord with what had
been stated by the nun of that place.
12 The strictures of those two latter writers
These are stated to have been cousins of St.
Williboldus, and Willeboldus p while its probable derivation has engaged
23 In that most genuine Life of St. Willi- are to be found in Gretser's work, De bald by his relative the nun, his father is not
Ecclesia Eystettensis Divis Tutelaribus, printed at Ingoldstadt, A. D. 1617.
"
13 See John of Tottenham's Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum," fol. Hi. , &c.
14 See "De Probatis Sanctorum Vitis," tomus iv. , Julii vii.
15 In "Annates Ordinis S. Benedicti," tomus ii. , lib. xx. , xxi. , xxii. , xxiii. , xxiv. , xxv. 16 See " The Church History of Brittany,"
book xxiv. , chap, xvii. , pp.
That St. Maelruain had only been regarded as abbot,* and not as bishop,s
in Tallagh, seems most probable, from the fact, that his apparently immediate
6
successorthere,Airerain, surnamedtheWise,? isonlystyledanAbbotofthat
Sun of the South Plain of Meath. ''' 1 In the Book of 2 there is Leinster,
great
an incident of his history related, from which the holy Abbot concludes, that it is better for a man to give his offering to the Lord than to earthly men. Into the version of St. Maelruain's Rule, which has been published, is ad- mitted the following account, that what Moelruain heard from learned men concerning the desertion of the land was : That Patrick, and the faithful whom he brought into Erin, will be repulsive in Heaven to any man who deserts his land, except so far as to remove from the east of it to the west, and from the north to the south. This seems to have reference to the great
place. However, it cannot be denied, that even in the time of Maelruain therewasabishopatTallagh andweknow,thatataperiod,notlongsub-
—— united in his own person the offices of bishop and abbot. 9 Nay more ; it is almost certain, that St. Maelruain himself would not assume the functions of
;
sequent, there had been a St. Eochaidh 8 successor of Maelruain who
the episcopate through humility, while he enjoined on Eochaidh the duty of
receiving consecration, to serve the purposes of the community, according to the custom of that time.
it —he is entered as a bishop. This addition to his name was probably a late interpolation,
6
l in
Chapter hi. See "Transactions of Martyrclogy, the "Book of Leinster,"
the Royal Irish Academy," Irish Manuscript edited by Robert Atkinson, M. A. , LL. D. , Series, vol. i. , part i. On the Calendar of the following entry at iii. Idus Februarii,
The "cumhal " in the Latin documents is expressed by " ancilla. " Its literal meaning
is "bondmaid," whose equivalent was
reckoned at three cows. See Dr. O'Dono-
van's LeAbharv ha 5-CeArtf;, or "Book of
Rights," p. 139, —n. (n). 7 Thus we find in that copy of the Tallagh
^Engus, by Whitley Stokes, LL. D. , p. xx.
"
Airerain Sapientis et Abbatis Tamlactan
2
LL. D. , fol. 286a.
lagh,
bishop,
Edited by Robert Atkinson, M. A. ,
post Maelruain. " Seep. 356. 8"
See "The Culdees of the British Islands,
as they appear in History," &c. By Very Rev. WilliamReeves,D. D. Evidences,H, p. 91, and note.
4
Kl. Eochaid Eps. — Februarii,
See ibid. , p. 356^'.
et abb. Tamlac. "
3
In the list of the community-folk of
9 His feast occurs at the 28th January, where some notices of him occur, in Firsl Tal- Volume v. —how-
he is not called a
Poem of Cormac Mac Cuillenan.
nor in the
ever, we did not ass—
ign his place which
5 However, in Rev. Dr. Kelly's version of
corded in Dr. O'Donovan's Annals of the Four Masters," at A. D. 807, recle 8 1 2, vol. i. f pp. 418, 419.
the "Martyrologyof Tallagh"—whichwefind to have been drawn from the earliest copy of
See an account of him, in the Second V—olumeofthiswork,atthe10thofFebruary
the date for his feast, Art. i.
Thus entered, at the 28th of January : iii.
of this work, Art. There,
undoubtedly was here whilejhis deatli is re- "
July 7. ] LIVES 0* 1HE IRISH SAINTS.
107
It has been assumed, that Tallagh had been a rural episcopal See,
10
even
from the time of St. Maelruan, and also because in our Annals and Calendars
there are obituary notices of its bishops j" but, the fact does not appear to
be well established. The oldest records extant represent it as a rectory
belonging to the Archbishop of Dublin. In the thirteenth century, Henry de
Loundres I2 annexed it to the Deanery of St. Patrick's, to maintain the
dignity of the Dean, who as head of the Chapter was subject to the greatest
1 * The
built on the same site. 15
Protestant church x * is at least the third
church,
expense.
present
It was parallel to the former one, while the latter
stood on the rude remains of one older still. In mediaeval records, Tallagh
is written Taulagh, and sometimes Tavelach. The church here was also
called Taulaght-Maelruny—a corruption from the patron's name—while the
chapels of Killohan l6 and St. Bride x ? were subservient to it. Besides the
tithes, the Dean of St. Patrick's formerly possessed the right of presentation
to the 18 A stone font is in the —at
vicarage. large graveyard Tallagh ;
to the shrine of St. pronunciation wereaccustomedtowashtheirfeetinit.
and, such was the local
it is
said,
that— pilgrims
Mollrooney
Near
in the same parish, there is a townland still denominated Kilnamanagh 9 or "theChurchoftheMonks. " ItwasprobablyadependencyontheMonas- tery founded by St. Maelruain. Not far from the site of St. Maelruain's old foundation was the former palace of the Archbishops of Dublin. * This mediaeval and semi-baronial structure, from the pictures of it which remain, was a large castellated mansion, having several massive square towers and thick external walls, pierced with many narrow loop-hole windows. 21 It was even inhabited to a comparatively recent period. However, having become ruinous, and inconvenient for the usages of modern social life, the Arch-
bishop'spalacewasunroofedin1825. Afterwards,thissitebecamethepro- perty of a lay gentleman, who repaired and converted a portion of its ruins into a modern mansion. Subsequently, he transferred the title and possession to the fathers of the Dominican Order. Soon again was a noble building
erected for their religious establishment. At present, a spacious Dominican
Convent occupies the site once covered by the archiepiscopal palace. Of the latter—in the true architectural taste and spirit of restoration—the former bell-tower has been preserved, and it still serves its original purpose. In the garden attached, there is an immense walnut tree, which is said to have been
10
Previous to a. d. 1 152. See John of St. Joseph, Bishop of Tallagh, Art. iv.
D'Alton's "
l6 It was situated without the cross-lands of the Archbishop in the townland of Old- This seems to have been in accordance, bawn, but it has been waste since A. D.
lin," p. 761.
11
History
of the
County
of Dub-
with that monastic discipline observed at
Iona, and probably in other places through- out Ireland, where bishops were attached
only to their respective religious houses, and for the purpose of ordaining the subjects of those houses.
1 532.
12 He flourished in the thirteenth
and presided over the See of Dublin, from vey Townland Maps for the County of
century, A. D. l2l3to 1228. See Harris' Ware, vol. i. ,
to
" of Archbishops
2° A of this medioeval mansion picture
Dublin," pp. 318
13 See "The History and Antiquities of the Collegiate and Cathedral Church of St.
Patrick, near Dublin," by William Monck Mason, Esq. , book i. , chap, v. , p. 26.
14 It was erected in 1829.
15 An engraving of the Protestant Church at Tallagh may be seen in the First Volume of this work, at the 5th of January, the feast
320.
may be seen, in vol. i. , p. 201, of new edition of Rev. Mervyn Archdall's "Monasticon Hi- bernicum," edited by Right Rev. Patrick F. Moran, D. D. , Lord Bishop of Ossory, &c, at present Cardinal Archbishop of Sydney.
'7 ruins.
This chapel nearer the Dodder is now in
l8
These privileges were confirmed to him by a Bull of Pope Gregory IX. , in the first year of his pontificate, A. D. 1227.
J 9 It is described on the " Ordnance Sur- Dublin," sheets 21, 22.
Dublin, 1873, et se1-> 4to«
2t The accompanying illustration, copied from a faithful drawing of the original by
Tallagh,
and
x
to8 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS.
[July 7.
planted by the hand of St. Madman himself. 22 Not far from it, there is a
promenade, called the Friars' Walk. The enclosed grounds are admirably
secluded from the high road, while they present a true picture of monastic retirement.
The course of St. Maelruain having been usefully and religiously run, the time for his eternal reward began to open before him. We cannot doubt, but his departure was a sore bereavement to his community, in whose spiritual welfare he had always taken so deep an interest. In view of his approaching end, it seems likely, he made provision for their future wants, and on his
Ancient Palace of the Archbishop of Dublin, at Tallaght.
death-bed blessed them and their place. It has been stated, in the "Annals oftheFourMasters,"23 thatSt. Maelruain,BishopofTamhlachtMaelruain, died, on the 7th of July, a. d. 787. Yet, under the head of Tamlacht, Duald
Mac Firbis enters, Maolruain, bishop of Tamlacht, at a. d. 789,^ and at the
2
7th of July. According to the Annals of Ulster, * Maelruain of Tamlacht, a
bishop and soldier of Christ, slept in peace, in the year 791.
O'Donovan states, that the true date for his death is a. d.
However, Dr.
2? St. Maelruain was interred in his at
of his grave is yet pointed out by the people of that village.
stated,
William F. Wakeman, has been transferred
by him also to the wood, engraved by Mrs. Millard.
22 An illustration of this tree forms the
attached to the First Volume of this work. These larger illustrations have been designed to commemorate scenes, in connexion with the compilation of Irish Hagiology ; and accordingly, as affixed to the present volume, Trinity College, Dublin, has a special interest for having a close and an intimate relation with the learned Arch-
bishop Ussher, Sir James Ware, the Rev. Drs. Todd and Reeves, who have laboured
so well in the field of Irish Hagiology and
Ecclesiastical History.
23 See Dr. O'Donovan's edition, vol. i. ,
pp. 392, 393-
* See " of the Irish Proceedings Royal
Academy," Irish Manuscript Series, vol. i. , part i. , pp. 128, 129.
25 See -AniialA Ul<voh. Edited with a
Translation and Notes, by William M.
Frontispiece,
792. cemetery Tallagh,
already
Ilennessy, M. R. I. A. , vol. i. , pp. 270, 271. 26 "
See Annals of the Four Masters,"
vol. i. , pp. 392, 393.
27 See the First Volume of this work, at
the 5th of January, Art. iv.
26
As
and the site
For the spot,
July 7. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 109 extraordinary veneration is manifested ; nor will the people suffer any corpse
to be interred too near it.
His festival was
tion appears to have come down from remote times.
kept
was long commemorated by the people with processions.
7th
This commemora-
2? that at the of veneration was to Maol- Tallagh records, 7th July, given
ruain, Bishop of Tamlachta. This name appears in the Martyrology of Donegal,30 nlso, at the same date, as Maelruain, Bishop of Tamlacht, in Leinster. Tamlacht, says the Calendarist, lies between Ath-cliath and Cill- dara ; but it should have been observed, not in a direct line. Even, St. Maelruain was venerated in Scotland, as we find him entered at the 7th of
intheKalendarofDrummond31 fromwhichwefurther thathis ; learn,
July,
life was distinguished, not alone by his virtues, but by miracles. After his death,
as we learn from the
"
Feilire," which was soon composed by his contempo-
rary St. ^ngus, the people began to frequent his tomb,32 and after pious service there, with purity, was " healed every heart's sigh. " 33 A pattern was
kept up at Tallagh, on the 7th of July, by the people of the town, and they were accustomed to call it St. Mollrooney's day. 3* They had an incorrect
idea of the patron saint,35 according to the popular tradition.
Many centuries have passed since holy men first lived, prayed, and studied at
Tallagh;andalthoughtimehaswroughtmanychangesforits records,thepresent age witnesses asuccession of religious men, and a learned band of ecclesiastical scholars there, serving to maintain its former glories. The Catholic prelates of Dublin formerly made it a place for repose and retreat. Their fine man- sion has been levelled, and hardly a vestige of it now remains. However, at the present time, the Dominican fathers 36 have their convent and their novi- ciate, on its site ; and, as of old, it is still a house for monastic seclusion and discipline, as also a school for imparting instruction to those youthful aspi- rants, who desire the perfect state, and who have resolved to perpetuate in the present age the blessings of bye-gone centuries. The very graves 3 ? there are
28
See Ordnance Survey Volume of festival. To these we have already alluded,
""
Extracts for the County of Dublin, p.
131, now preserved in the Library of the Royal Irish Academy.
in the First Volume of this work, at January 5th, Art. iv.
35 Probably owing to their mode of pro- nouncing this saint's name, the people sup- posed St. Maelruan was a female, and they show an object called her griddle and her
29 Edited by Rey. Dr. Kelly, p. xxviii.
His feast is also, at this date, in the Martyr-
ology of Christ Church, Dublin, edited by
John Clarke Crosthwaite, A. M. , and Rev. cake, in the churchyard. This information
Dr. James Henthorn Todd, p. 134.
30 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp.
the writer has received from W. D. Hand- cock, Esq. , in a letter, headed 52 Dame- street, Dublin, 26th of November, 1874.
36 In connexion with their and in a order,
work of this nature, it may not be well to
188, 189.
31 Thus at Nonae
!
Hiber- niam Natale Sancti Confessoris Maelruain cujus V—ita Virtutibus et Miraculis plena re-
Julise, "Apud
omit allusion to a distinguished and truly fulsit. " Bishop Forbes' Kalendars of learned member, who has bequeathed to
"
Scottish Saints," p. 17.
3a The original word in the Leabhar Breac
them and to Ireland a record of undoubted historical value. We mean the " Hibernia
copy is ocAleAchc,
"
his own tomb," as dis-
Dominicana," and its
Father Thomas De
also Bishop of Ossory, towards the middle of the last century. Coloniae Agrippinse, a. d.
1762, et seq. , 4to.
3? Among these is to be seen that of the
eloquent and admired preacher of the Domi- nican Order, whose career is so minutely
and elaborately compiled, in the interesting " Life of the Very Rev. Thomas N. Burke,
O. P. , by William J. Fitz- Patrick, F. S. A. ,
— from the CAmhleAchc or " tinguished plague
"
"Supplementum," by
tomb
antithesis and play upon the word, as the ingenious and critically learned Irish scholar,
Very Rev. Bartholomew M'Carthy, D. D. , has pointed out me.
33
See "Transactions of the Royal Irish
an elegant and imaginative poetic
Academy," Irish Manuscript Series, vol. i. , part i. On the Calendar of Oengus. By
Whitley Stokes, LL. D. , p. xx.
34 Certain
practised, on the yearly recurrence of the
&c. Two volum—es.
religious
London, 1885,
celebrations
were
8vo. These were a great and
Article ii.
*
on the
of 28 and it July,
The Martyrology of
Burgo, O. P. ,
who was
i io LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [J uly 7.
notforgotten,andwithareverentcuriositytheyareoftenvisited. Thatfinearchi- tectural group of buildings, which now adorns Tallaght, also forms an admir- able exemplar of the ecclesiastical renaissance, which has been so energetically achieved, while secular enterprise has been so restricted and oppressed, under the peculiar political and social conditions that obstruct the happiness andprosperityof Ireland.
Article II. —St. Willibald, First Bishop and Patron of Aich-
stadt, Germany. \_Eighth Century. '] Although we have a very genuine Life—and even written by a contemporary and a relative—of this saint, yet, it is to be regretted, that no definite statement in it conveys an idea of where Willibaldwasborn,orconcerninghisdescentandrace. Thisisallthemore remarkable, that his parents are never named in it, although frequent occasions occur for referring to them. Considerable doubt attaches, therefore, to the present holy bishop's place of nativity. While some writers consider him to have belonged to the people called Suevi x others make him a Scot or a
; Hibernian,andothersanEnglishman. ThemostancientwriterofhisActs,2
a nun, as also a relation and a contemporary of his own, does not record the countryofhisbirth;3 althoughfromtheallusionmadetohisearlyeducation and family we might be inclined to consider him an Englishman. It is to be observed, that the nun of Heidenheim, who wrote his Acts, belonged to the community of his sister St. Walburge, and she had the relation of his travels and much of his life from the mouth of St. Willibald himself, to whom personallyshewaswellknown. TheBollandist,*FatherJohnBaptistSoller, whohaseditedtheseActs,tooreadilyadoptsthisconclusion;5 forwhich,it seems to us, there is no positive proof. An old anonymous writer, whose Acts 6 of this saint had previously appeared in Canisius' collection, sets Willibald down, however, as derived from the nation of the Angles. 7 Notwithstanding, that well-known mediaeval German writer, John of Trittenham, tells us, that
of
warlike nation of their Germany;
was a Scot 8 and a brother to St. by birth,
first
Walpurgis, or Walburge,' a virgin and abbess of Heidenheim. Other old Lives of St. Willibald are said to have been written by Reginald, bishop of
Willibald,
bishop
Aichstadt,
territory extending from the Rhine to the Elbe, ac-
5 He writes: " Scotumaut Siquis Suevum,
Ilibernum fingere voluerit Sanctum nostrum,
is a me non et ncc his responsum expect ;
cording
to Strabo's " lib. vii. Geographia,"
A very interesting account of their manners,
diutius immoranduin video, cum pridem e—x- Commentarius Prsevius, sect, i. , par. 3.
customs and power is given by Ciesar, in tra oninen controversial! ) posita sint. "
his work, De Bello Gallico, lib. iv. , cap. i. ,
ii. , iii.
2
These are given by the Bollandist*, in four chapters, with notes, and in forty-five paragraphs, including three of Praefacio Sanctimonialis. —
3 He—r biography one of great interest and
* See the Acts of this holy bishop, very
"
Acta Sanctorum," tomus ii. , Julii vii. De S. Willibaldo Episcopo Eys- tadii in Germania, pp. 485 to 519. These are prefixed by a Previous Commentary, in
eight sections and sixty-five paragraphs, written by Father John Baptist Soller.
6
The Bollandi»ts have them as Vita
fully given in the
* He was the thirty-ninth in succession, and he ruled from A. n. 1306 to 132 2.
9 See an account of her, in Rev. Albaii Butler's "Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and other principal Saints," vol. vii. ,
July vii.
J0
AccordingtoCanisius,hewastheeleventh bishop in succession. He lived A. D. 1322.
:
Hodceporicon,
Vna seu
in eighteen paragraphs, and written by Bishop Philip.
value is intituled
auctore virgine consanguinea Sanctimoninli Heidenheimensi, ex editione Canisii correcta ex variis lect. Gretseri.
Altera. Auctore Anonymo per antiquo. Fx editione Canisii. This is in three chapters,
containing nineteen paragraphs, with notes. It is followed in their work with Miracula,
7 He writes thus, " de genere Anglorum . . . . oriundus," cap. i. , sect. I.
July 7. ]
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. m
12 of Aichstadt. 1 ' errors. The Acts of this saint have received illustration from Surius, 1 * Father
10
one Adalbert," and
the
The latter, although a laboured and an extended treatise, abounds in historic
Aichstadt,
by
by
bishop Philip,
Dean
and Les Petits Bollandistes. 1'
16 1? Rev. Alban 8 Bishop Challenor, Butler,'
Were we to adopt the accounts of English
John Mabillon/s
Cressy,
writers, this holy man was born in the kingdom of the West Saxons, near the
place where Southampton now stands, and it is said his father was the holy
king, St. Richard. 20 However, it is not at all certain, that his father 2I had
been of Wessex—as some writers have stated—but on the 22 King contrary,
he belonged apparently to a grade less elevated in society. Moreover, it does notappearcertain,thateventhen—ameofhisfatherisknown. 23 Accordingto oneaccounthismotherwasBonna saidtohavebeenasistertoSt. Boniface; it is needless to observe, however,- that such a statement rests on no good
2
authority. 24 His birth has been referred —to about a. d. 704, s by various
Soller who
this saint's Acts states, that it ought to be placed about a. d. 700.
writers j
—Father
however, John Baptist
the of analyzes chronology
26
another holy and an older brother, named Winibald,2? and a sister, St. Wal-
28 Their relative
ancient writers of their Acts. 20
Boniface, 30 the illustrious Apostle of Germany ; but, there are good reasons for doubting such statement. So various have been the entries of this holy man's name in old records, that it has been questioned if they refer to one and the
same person. Thus, he is styled, Wilibaldus, Wilbaldus, Bilibaldus, Bilbaldus, 1
bert, Abbot of who flourished Heidenheim,
in the time of Pope Eugenius III. , who reigned from A. D. 1 145 to a. d. 1153, more than three hundred and fifty years after the death of St. Willibald.
burga.
places
as to have been the most seniority stated, by
11 He a brief notice, only gives
regarding Saints Willibald, Wunebald and Walburgis, in reference to the monastery of Heidenheim. Nor is this always in accord with what had
been stated by the nun of that place.
12 The strictures of those two latter writers
These are stated to have been cousins of St.
Williboldus, and Willeboldus p while its probable derivation has engaged
23 In that most genuine Life of St. Willi- are to be found in Gretser's work, De bald by his relative the nun, his father is not
Ecclesia Eystettensis Divis Tutelaribus, printed at Ingoldstadt, A. D. 1617.
"
13 See John of Tottenham's Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum," fol. Hi. , &c.
14 See "De Probatis Sanctorum Vitis," tomus iv. , Julii vii.
15 In "Annates Ordinis S. Benedicti," tomus ii. , lib. xx. , xxi. , xxii. , xxiii. , xxiv. , xxv. 16 See " The Church History of Brittany,"
book xxiv. , chap, xvii. , pp.
