- Cumméne Find
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For other Irish saints of the same given name, see Cumméne .
Cumméne Find (Latinised, Cummeneus Albus, Cumméne "the White") was the seventh abbot of Iona (657–669). It was during Cumméne's abbacy that the Northumbrians decided against the Gaelic dating of Easter at the Synod of Whitby, resulting in the loss of control of the Ionan offshoot Gaelic church at Lindisfarne. In 664, the last Gaelic abbot/bishop of Lindisfarne, Colmán, resigned his post and returned to Iona. It was during Cumméne's abbacy that the Book of Durrow was first produced, although this probably happened at Durrow itself, rather than Iona. Cumméne is known to have visited Ireland in 663, perhaps on a tour of daughter houses. He is known to have written a now largely lost Vita of Columba. He died on February 24, 669.
Bibliography
- Sharpe, Richard, Adomnán of Iona: Life of St. Columba, (London, 1995)
Preceded by
SuibneAbbot of Iona
657–669Succeeded by
FailbeCategories:- 669 deaths
- Medieval Gaels
- Abbots of Iona
- Irish writers
- Irish Christian monks
- Medieval Irish writers
- 7th-century writers
- Medieval Irish historians
- 7th-century Irish people
- 7th-century Christian clergy
- Irish expatriates in the United Kingdom
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