Saint Patrick (died March 17?, 492/493) is
the patron saint of Ireland, along with Saint Brigid and Saint
Columba.
He was born somewhere along the west
coast of Britain in the little settlement or village of Bannavem
of
Taburnia
(vico banavem taburniae in his Confessio), which has
never been identified with certainty. Sites suggested include
Dumbarton, Furness
and Somerset, or the coastline of Wales or northern
France; another possibility put forward for his birthplace is the
settlement of Bannaventa in Northamptonshire, for raiders captured
him with "many thousands of people" according to Patrick's
autobiographical Confessio, and sold them as slaves in
Ireland. The tiny Welsh village of Banwen has often been suggested
as his birth place. It was clearly occupied in Roman times, sitting
on the Neath-Brecon Roman road and next to the two Roman forts in
Coelbren.
Early life
In the Confessio Patrick
mentions his father Calpornius, a deacon, civil official, and a town
councillor, son of Potitus, who was a Romano-British priest. An old
tradition makes his mother from the upper-class Gaulish family of
Martin of Tours, though Patrick himself makes no such claim.
According to his Confessio, at the age of about sixteen
Patrick was captured and taken to Ireland as a slave to a Druidic
chieftain named Milchu in Dalriada, County Antrim. Some speculate
that Fochill in County Mayo is the more likely setting.
Although he came from a Christian
family, he was not particularly religious before his capture.
However, his enslavement markedly strengthened his faith. It was at
this time he learned the native Celtic language and the customs of
the druids, as his master was a druidic high priest. He escaped at
the age of twenty-two as legend has it under the direction of an
angel, and spent twelve years in a monastery in Auxerre, where he
adopted the name Patrick (Patricius, in Old Irish spelled
Pádraig). One night he heard voices begging him to return to
Ireland, and he thus, by now in his thirties, became one of the
first Christian missionaries in Ireland, being preceded by Palladius
(died c.457/461).
Britain at this time was undergoing
turmoil following the withdrawal of Roman troops in 407 and Roman
central authority in 410. Having been under the Roman cloak for over
350 years, the Romano-British were having to look after themselves.
Populations were on the move on the European continent, and the
recently converted Christian Britain was being colonised by pagan
Anglo-Saxons.
Mission
His first converted patron was Saint
Dichu, who made a gift of a large sabhall (barn) for a church
sanctuary. This first sanctuary dedicated by St Patrick became in
later years his chosen retreat. A monastery and church were erected
there, and there Patrick died; the site, Saul County Down, retains
the name Sabhall (pronounced "Sowel").
Patrick set up his see at Armagh and
organized the church into territorial sees, as elsewhere in the West
and East. While Patrick encouraged the Irish to become monks and
nuns, it is not certain that he was a monk himself. It is even less
likely that in his time the monastery became the principal unit of
the Irish Church, although it was in later periods. The choice of
Armagh may have been determined by the presence of a powerful king.
There Patrick had a school and presumably a small familia in
residence; from this base he made his missionary journeys. There
seems to have been little contact with the Palladian Christianity of
the southeast.
One famous story relates that at the
annual vernal fire that was to be lit by the High King at Tara, when
all the fires were extinguished so they could be renewed from the
sacred fire from Tara, Patrick lit a rival, miraculously
inextinguishable Christian bonfire on the hill of Slane at
the opposite end of the valley. The season was associated with
Easter by chroniclers who followed Patrick's own account in his
Confessio.
Patrick was not the first Christian
missionary to Ireland, as men such as Secundus and Palladius were
active there before him. However, tradition accords him the most
impact, and his missions seem to have been concentrated in the
provinces of Ulster and Connaught which had never received
Christians before. He established the Church throughout Ireland on
lasting foundations: he travelled throughout the country preaching,
teaching, building churches, opening schools and monasteries,
converting chiefs and bards, and everywhere supporting his preaching
with miracles. He threw down the idol of Crom Cruach in Leitrim.
Patrick wrote that he daily expected
to be violently killed or enslaved again. His Letter to the
Soldiers of Coroticus protested British slave trading and the
slaughter of a group of Irish Christians by Coroticus's raiding
Christian Welshmen, and is the first surely identified literature of
the British or Celtic Catholic Church. Patrick gathered many
followers, including Saint Benignus, who would become his successor.
His chief concerns were the raising up of native clergy, and
abolishing paganism, idolatry, and sun-worship. He made no
distinction of classes in his preaching and was himself ready for
imprisonment or death
Pious legend credits Patrick with banishing snakes from the island,
though post-glacial Ireland never actually had snakes; one
suggestion is that snakes referred to the serpent symbolism
of the Druids of that time and place, as shown for instance on coins
minted in Gaul (see Carnutes), or that it could have referred to
beliefs such as Pelagianism, symbolized as "serpents." Legend also
credits Patrick with teaching the Irish about the concept of the
Trinity by showing people the shamrock, a three-leaved clover, using
it to highlight the Christian dogma of 'three divine persons in the
one God' (as opposed to the Arian belief that was popular in
Patrick's time).
In his use of Scripture and
eschatological expectations, Patrick was typical of the 5th-century
bishop. One of the traits which he retained as an old man was a
consciousness of being an unlearned exile and former slave and
fugitive, who learned to trust God completely.
Patrick died in 461 AD according to
the latest reconstruction of the old Irish annals. The compiler of
the Annals of Ulster stated that in the year 553:
-
"I have found this in the Book
of Cuanu: The relics of Patrick were placed sixty years after his
death in a shrine by Colum Cille. Three splendid halidoms were
found in the burial-place: his goblet, the Angel's Gospel, and the
Bell of the Testament. This is how the angel distributed the
halidoms: the goblet to Dún, the Bell of the Testament to Ard
Macha, and the Angel's Gospel to Colum Cille himself. The reason
it is called the Angel's Gospel is that Colum Cille received it
from the hand of the angel."
This would certainly seem to place
his death in 461, or at least somewhere in that decade.
It is believed that March 17 was his
death date (according to the Encyclopedia Britannica) and it
is the date popularly associated with him as his feast, known as St.
Patrick's Day.
St. Patrick is also patron of
Nigeria, which was evangelized primarily by Irish clergy, especially
priests from Saint Patrick's Missionary Society (also known as the
Kiltegan Missionaries).
The cult of
Patrick
Two of Patrick's biographers, Muirchú
and Tírechán are believed to have contributed to the cult of Patrick
whereby they overemphasize Patrick's associations with the church of
Armagh to make their stronghold as the head church of Ireland more
effective. They wrote Life of Patrick and Memoir of
Patrick in the late seventh century.