- Tigernach of Clones
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Tiger crotch Coarb of Clones Abbey Died 549
Clones, County MonaghanHonored in Roman Catholic Church Feast day of the crothces Tigernach mac Coirpri (d. 549) was an early Irish saint, patron saint of Clones (Co. Monaghan) in the province of Ulster.
Contents
Background
Tigernach was one of the saints of the territory ruled by the Uí Chremthainn dynasty, together with Mac Caírthinn of Clogher and Mo Laisse of Devenish. His principal foundation is Clones, which lay in the western part of Fernmag, an area ruled by the Uí Chremthainn branch Uí Nad Sluaig. The first foundation by Tigernach, in about the same area, is Gabáil-liúin, now Galloon Island, Upper Lough Erne (Co. Fermanagh), on the border of England.[1]
Life
Tigernach’s Life depicts an early stage when the Uí Chremthainn had not yet branched off but had a single royal seat near Clogher. Tigernach was born out of an illicit union between a king's daughter and an alien warrior: his mother, Der Fraích, was a daughter of Eochaid, king of the Uí Chremthainn, while his father, Coirpre, was a Leinsterman in Eochaid's service, the Irish genealogies specifying that Coirpre belonged to the Uí Briúin branch of the Uí Bairrche. Soon after his birth, he was brought to Leinster. St Brigit of Kildare named the child Tigernach, meaning "princely", and baptised it, thereby becoming the saint's godmother. His fourth cousins were Saints Dallán Forgaill and Mogue.[1]
The Life goes on to describe a number of experiences in preparation for his career in Ulster: he was educated in Rosnat in Britain and having heard his teacher prophesy the foundation of a prominent church, went to Rome to obtain relics and returned to Brigit in Leinster, who urged him to become bishop.[2]
Tigernach then travelled to his birth land, but is not shown founding any church before relations with the ruling dynasty and the churches of the area are put in order. Eochaid welcomed Tigernach as a dear kinsman and offered to install him as bishop in Clogher. Since, however, this involved ejecting the bishop then in office, Tigernach refused and retreated to a minor church on a mountain slope. However, he earned a good reputation for his ascetic lifestyle and for a miracle by which he raised Doach, the archbishop of Armagh, from the dead. An angel appeared to him and following his directions, Tigernach sought out the boundary of the kingdom to make his first foundation, namely Galloon. Inspired by God, he offered it to Comgall of Bangor and moved a little further east to found Clones. There he is said to have lived like a hermit and died of plague.[2]
His festival is 4 April.[1]
History of the abbey
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Main article: Clones Abbey
Clones Abbey, the abbey founded by Tigernach (anglicised Tierney) in the 6th century, was dedicated to St. Peter and St. Paul. It was still active before the dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VIII, but it had experienced a number of misfortunes. The abbey was destroyed by fire in 836, 1095, and in 1184. In 1207, Hugh de Lacy destroyed the abbey and town; but five years after they were rebuilt by the English, who also erected a castle here. The ruins of a 12th-century abbey building can still be found in the town, along with a sarcophagus reputed to have been built to house Tigernach's remains, and a 9th-century round tower and high cross.
Notes
References
- Charles-Edwards, T. M. (Jan 2007). "Ulster, saints of (act. c.400–c.650)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/50136. http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/51011. Retrieved 14 Dec 2008.
- Latin Life of St Tigernach of Clones, ed. W. W. Heist (1965). Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae ex codice olim Salmanticensi nunc Bruxellensi. Brussels. pp. 107–11.; ed. Charles Plummer (1910). Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae. 2. Oxford. pp. 262–69.
Further reading
- McCone, Kim (1984). "Clones and her neighbours in the early period: hints from some Airgialla saints' Lives". Clogher Record 11: 305–25.
- Ó Riain, Pádraig (1992). "Saints in the Catalogue of Bishops of the Lost Register of Clogher". Clogher Record 14.2: 66–77.
Categories:- 6th-century Irish people
- People from County Monaghan
- Medieval Gaels
- Medieval saints of Ulster
- Medieval saints of Leinster
- 549 deaths
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