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Ronan of Locronan

Saint Ronan (fl. c. sixth century?) was an Irish pilgrim saint and hermit in western Brittany. He was a son of Saint Berach[1][dubious ] and the eponymous founder of Locronan and co-patron of Quimper (France), together with its founder, Saint Corentin.

Saint

Ronan
Renan, Ronan the Silent
Saint Ronan statue in Locronan church (Brittany, France)
Personal details
BuriedLocronan
NationalityIrish
Sainthood
Feast day1 June
PatronageLocronan, Quimper

From Locronan to Quimper edit

The village of Locronan (lit. "the place of Ronan"), which is located about 17 km northwest of Quimper, owes its name to its reputed founder, the Irish pilgrim Ronan. To judge by his entry in the cartulary of the abbey of Quimper, he is known to have been venerated at Locronan since at least the 1030s.[2][3]

At some later stage, his remains were translated to the nearby abbey of Quimper, whose patron saint was St Corentin. This must have occurred by 1274 at the latest, when the abbey produced an inventory mentioning the saint's body and head among its cherished relics.[3]

Sometime in the same century, a Latin life of the saint, the Vita S. Ronani, was written at Quimper to familiarise the local community with the origins of the saint and his posthumous importance for the town through the miracles wrought by his relics.[3]

Synopsis of Ronan’s earliest Life edit

 
Scenes from the life of St Ronan on the polychrome pulpit at the Locronan parish church. One scene portrays the episode in which Keban charged the saint with lycanthropy.
 
More scenes on the Locronan pulpit. The discovery of his daughter hidden in a chest is shown in the first picture. The dragging of his body to Locronan is in the third picture.

Life edit

The text begins by telling that Ronan was a well-educated native of Ireland whose good works as a bishop had brought him great renown in his home country (§ 1). However, he longed to have a closer communion with God and so, at the height of his career in Ireland, he chose voluntary exile, per Genesis 12:1–3, by severing all ties with kin and country and embarking on a voyage to Brittany. Having landed "in the region of Léon", he continued his journey southwards to the kingdom of Cornouaille (Latin Cornubia) and set up a hermitage at what would become known as Locronan, near the woods of Névez. Here he devoted himself to prayer and an ascetic way of life, through which he soon attracted a multitude of admirers from the region (§ 2). In this way, his presence also came to the attention of Gradlon, king of Cornouaille and a prominent figure in Breton legend (§ 3).

A local peasant much admired the saint, offering hospitality and paying frequent visits to his cell, but Keban, the peasant's wife, grew jealous and devised a scheme to bring the holy man into disrepute (§ 4). Before Gradlon at his court in Quimper, she openly accused the saint, saying that he was a sorcerer who could transform himself into a wild animal and that, in the shape of a wolf, he had devoured numerous sheep and her only daughter (§ 5). Ronan was put to the test to prove his sanctity. First, the king's two ferocious dogs were unleashed on him, but by the token of Christ, Ronan managed to pacify them (§ 6). Second, he was given the opportunity to account for the disappearance of the peasant's daughter. He revealed that Keban had locked up her own daughter in a place so small that she had stifled to death, and named the exact location (§ 7). When the girl was found dead just as the saint had told, local citizens insisted on Keban's execution. Ronan, however, prevented this, preferring to practise Christian benevolence, and brought the dead girl back to life (§ 8). In spite of this, the saint continued to be harassed by Keban's malice and therefore left for the petty kingdom of Domnonia in northwest Brittany, where he settled near Hillion (§ 9). He died in his cell (§ 10).

Miracles and cult edit

 
Reliquary of St Ronan at Locronan

The second part of the text focuses on events after Ronan's death, his miracles, the growth of his cult and the fate of his relics. Since he died outside of Cornouaille, a quarrel arose over where to bury his body. The issue was decided by placing the body on a cart, dragged by wild oxen, and leaving it for them to drag wherever they would. The king of Cornouaille proved to be the only person able to lift the body and place it on a bier, which healed his arm of an old wound. The wild oxen driving the cart walked straight to the saint's cell in the forest of Névez. There the body was interred and the little settlement of Locronan grew up around the burial place (§ 11).

The text subsequently makes a few leaps through time. It is said, for instance, that following a wave of Viking incursions, a new chapel was built at the site (§ 12). Without giving any explicit explanation, the final chapters relate that the saint's relics were at some date translated, with appropriate pomp, to Quimper (Latin Confluentia). The presence of his relics in the town and the control over them by the clergy led to a series of miracles. One man is said to have been cured of dumbness after praying at the altar on which the saint's relics were placed; another was freed from demonic possession after spending a night under the saint's shrine; and the town was spared destruction by fire when the clergy used the relics to ward off the flames (§ 12–15).

Although at Quimper, Ronan was only an 'imported' saint next to the native saint Corentin, so the manifestation of his presence through such tangible means as his relics gave him one advantage in his favour.[3] Possession of Ronan's relics and the written word gave the clergy distinct instruments by which to defend and promote the saint's cult.[3] By contrast, Corentin enjoyed a strong local cult, which was little disturbed by the loss of relics and did not depend for its survival on the production of a written Life (though one was produced).[3]

Early Modern period edit

Albert Le Grand, in his Lives of the Saints of Brittany (1636), and the Bollandists produced biographies of the saint.

Festival edit

 
St Ronan, pictured on the banner of the parish church of Locronan, Brittany. The banner will be used particularly on the saint's feast day, 1 June, and on the Troménies or pardons held at Locronan in July.

Ronan's feast day is celebrated on 1 June.[4][5]

La grande Troménie edit

The Grande Tromenie happens every six years, with Petite Tromenies every year. The tromenies are the Locronan equivalent of the "pardons" which take place throughout Brittany. The Grande Tromenie goes around the hill tracing the boundary of the 12th-century Benedictine priory. The priory was a place of retreat, thus the name of the "pardon" is Tro Minihi or "Tour of the Retreat", Gallicized as Tromenie.[6][7]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Gwynn, Lucius; O'Duigenan, David (1 January 1911). "The Life of St. Lasair". Ériu. 5: 73–109. JSTOR 30007557.
  2. ^ Cartulaire de l’abbayé de Sainte-Croix de Quimperlé, ed. Maître and Léon, pp. 138–40.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Smith (1990), "Oral and written", pp. 329–30.
  4. ^ Great Synaxaristes: (in Greek) Ὁ Ὅσιος Ρουαδανὸς τῆς Κορνουάλης. 1 Ιουνίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  5. ^ June 1. Latin Saints of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Rome.
  6. ^ Office de Tourisme de Locronan: The Troménie
  7. ^ David Kidd from the Michelin Tourist Guide

References edit

Primary sources
  • Maître, Léon; de Berthou, Paul, eds. (1904). Cartulaire de l'abbayé de Sainte-Croix de Quimperlé (2nd ed.). Rennes. pp. 138–40.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Vita S. Ronani (BHL 7336), ed. "Vita S. Ronani," Catalogus codicum hagiographicorum Latinorum in Bibliotheca Nationali Parisiensi. 4 vols: vol. 1. Brussels, 1889–93. pp. 438–58.
  • Henschen, Godfrey; Papebroch, Daniel; Baert, Baert; Janninck, Conrad, eds. (1741). Acta Sanctorum. Vol. 21. Venice: Sebastian Colet. pp. 83–4. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
Secondary sources
  • Smith, Julia M.H. (1990). "Oral and Written: Saints, Miracles, and Relics in Brittany, c. 850–1250". Speculum. 65 (2): 309–43. doi:10.2307/2864295. JSTOR 2864295. S2CID 162747789.

Further reading edit

  • Bourgès, André-Yves (2006). "Robert d'Arbrissel, Raoul de la Fûtaie et Robert de *Locunan: la trinité érémitique bretonne de la fin du 11e siècle". Britannia Monastica. 10: 9–19.
  • Lapidge, Michael; Sharpe, Richard; Mac Cana, Proinsias (foreword), eds. (1985). A Bibliography of Celtic-Latin Literature, 400–1200. RIA Dictionary of Medieval Latin from Celtic Sources. Ancillary Publications 1. Dublin: Royal Irish Academy.
  • Merdrignac, B. (1979). "Saint Ronan". In M. Dilasset (ed.). Un pays de Cornouaille: Locronan et sa région. Paris: Nouvelle Librairie de France. pp. 190–51.
  • Ó Riain, Pádraig (1995). "Saint Ronan de Locronan: le dossier irlandais". Saint Ronan et la Tromenie (colloque de Locronan 1989). Locronan. pp. 157–8.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Poulin, Joseph-Claude (2009). L'hagiographie bretonne du haut Moyen Âge: répertoire raisonné. Beihefte der Francia 69. Ostfildern.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

External links edit

  • Route of the Troménie
  • The Life of Saint Ronan by Albert Le Grand, 1636 – In French, this gives a general sketch of the saint's life and covers the charge of lycanthropy.
  • The Legend of Saint Ronan by Hersart La Villemarqué, 1839 – In the local Breton dialect of French, this later tract adds details like those relating to Ronan's wife.

ronan, locronan, others, with, given, name, rónán, saint, ronan, sixth, century, irish, pilgrim, saint, hermit, western, brittany, saint, berach, dubious, discuss, eponymous, founder, locronan, patron, quimper, france, together, with, founder, saint, corentin,. For others with the given name see Ronan Saint Ronan fl c sixth century was an Irish pilgrim saint and hermit in western Brittany He was a son of Saint Berach 1 dubious discuss and the eponymous founder of Locronan and co patron of Quimper France together with its founder Saint Corentin SaintRonanRenan Ronan the SilentSaint Ronan statue in Locronan church Brittany France Personal detailsBuriedLocronanNationalityIrishSainthoodFeast day1 JunePatronageLocronan Quimper Contents 1 From Locronan to Quimper 2 Synopsis of Ronan s earliest Life 2 1 Life 2 2 Miracles and cult 3 Early Modern period 4 Festival 4 1 La grande Tromenie 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksFrom Locronan to Quimper editThe village of Locronan lit the place of Ronan which is located about 17 km northwest of Quimper owes its name to its reputed founder the Irish pilgrim Ronan To judge by his entry in the cartulary of the abbey of Quimper he is known to have been venerated at Locronan since at least the 1030s 2 3 At some later stage his remains were translated to the nearby abbey of Quimper whose patron saint was St Corentin This must have occurred by 1274 at the latest when the abbey produced an inventory mentioning the saint s body and head among its cherished relics 3 Sometime in the same century a Latin life of the saint the Vita S Ronani was written at Quimper to familiarise the local community with the origins of the saint and his posthumous importance for the town through the miracles wrought by his relics 3 Synopsis of Ronan s earliest Life edit nbsp Scenes from the life of St Ronan on the polychrome pulpit at the Locronan parish church One scene portrays the episode in which Keban charged the saint with lycanthropy nbsp More scenes on the Locronan pulpit The discovery of his daughter hidden in a chest is shown in the first picture The dragging of his body to Locronan is in the third picture Life edit The text begins by telling that Ronan was a well educated native of Ireland whose good works as a bishop had brought him great renown in his home country 1 However he longed to have a closer communion with God and so at the height of his career in Ireland he chose voluntary exile per Genesis 12 1 3 by severing all ties with kin and country and embarking on a voyage to Brittany Having landed in the region of Leon he continued his journey southwards to the kingdom of Cornouaille Latin Cornubia and set up a hermitage at what would become known as Locronan near the woods of Nevez Here he devoted himself to prayer and an ascetic way of life through which he soon attracted a multitude of admirers from the region 2 In this way his presence also came to the attention of Gradlon king of Cornouaille and a prominent figure in Breton legend 3 A local peasant much admired the saint offering hospitality and paying frequent visits to his cell but Keban the peasant s wife grew jealous and devised a scheme to bring the holy man into disrepute 4 Before Gradlon at his court in Quimper she openly accused the saint saying that he was a sorcerer who could transform himself into a wild animal and that in the shape of a wolf he had devoured numerous sheep and her only daughter 5 Ronan was put to the test to prove his sanctity First the king s two ferocious dogs were unleashed on him but by the token of Christ Ronan managed to pacify them 6 Second he was given the opportunity to account for the disappearance of the peasant s daughter He revealed that Keban had locked up her own daughter in a place so small that she had stifled to death and named the exact location 7 When the girl was found dead just as the saint had told local citizens insisted on Keban s execution Ronan however prevented this preferring to practise Christian benevolence and brought the dead girl back to life 8 In spite of this the saint continued to be harassed by Keban s malice and therefore left for the petty kingdom of Domnonia in northwest Brittany where he settled near Hillion 9 He died in his cell 10 Miracles and cult edit nbsp Reliquary of St Ronan at LocronanThe second part of the text focuses on events after Ronan s death his miracles the growth of his cult and the fate of his relics Since he died outside of Cornouaille a quarrel arose over where to bury his body The issue was decided by placing the body on a cart dragged by wild oxen and leaving it for them to drag wherever they would The king of Cornouaille proved to be the only person able to lift the body and place it on a bier which healed his arm of an old wound The wild oxen driving the cart walked straight to the saint s cell in the forest of Nevez There the body was interred and the little settlement of Locronan grew up around the burial place 11 The text subsequently makes a few leaps through time It is said for instance that following a wave of Viking incursions a new chapel was built at the site 12 Without giving any explicit explanation the final chapters relate that the saint s relics were at some date translated with appropriate pomp to Quimper Latin Confluentia The presence of his relics in the town and the control over them by the clergy led to a series of miracles One man is said to have been cured of dumbness after praying at the altar on which the saint s relics were placed another was freed from demonic possession after spending a night under the saint s shrine and the town was spared destruction by fire when the clergy used the relics to ward off the flames 12 15 Although at Quimper Ronan was only an imported saint next to the native saint Corentin so the manifestation of his presence through such tangible means as his relics gave him one advantage in his favour 3 Possession of Ronan s relics and the written word gave the clergy distinct instruments by which to defend and promote the saint s cult 3 By contrast Corentin enjoyed a strong local cult which was little disturbed by the loss of relics and did not depend for its survival on the production of a written Life though one was produced 3 Early Modern period editAlbert Le Grand in his Lives of the Saints of Brittany 1636 and the Bollandists produced biographies of the saint Festival edit nbsp St Ronan pictured on the banner of the parish church of Locronan Brittany The banner will be used particularly on the saint s feast day 1 June and on the Tromenies or pardons held at Locronan in July Ronan s feast day is celebrated on 1 June 4 5 La grande Tromenie edit The Grande Tromenie happens every six years with Petite Tromenies every year The tromenies are the Locronan equivalent of the pardons which take place throughout Brittany The Grande Tromenie goes around the hill tracing the boundary of the 12th century Benedictine priory The priory was a place of retreat thus the name of the pardon is Tro Minihi or Tour of the Retreat Gallicized as Tromenie 6 7 See also editLocranon Parish closeNotes edit Gwynn Lucius O Duigenan David 1 January 1911 The Life of St Lasair Eriu 5 73 109 JSTOR 30007557 Cartulaire de l abbaye de Sainte Croix de Quimperle ed Maitre and Leon pp 138 40 a b c d e f Smith 1990 Oral and written pp 329 30 Great Synaxaristes in Greek Ὁ Ὅsios Royadanὸs tῆs Kornoyalhs 1 Ioynioy MEGAS SYNA3ARISTHS June 1 Latin Saints of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Rome Office de Tourisme de Locronan The Tromenie David Kidd from the Michelin Tourist GuideReferences editPrimary sourcesMaitre Leon de Berthou Paul eds 1904 Cartulaire de l abbaye de Sainte Croix de Quimperle 2nd ed Rennes pp 138 40 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Vita S Ronani BHL 7336 ed Vita S Ronani Catalogus codicum hagiographicorum Latinorum in Bibliotheca Nationali Parisiensi 4 vols vol 1 Brussels 1889 93 pp 438 58 Henschen Godfrey Papebroch Daniel Baert Baert Janninck Conrad eds 1741 Acta Sanctorum Vol 21 Venice Sebastian Colet pp 83 4 Retrieved 12 March 2018 Secondary sourcesSmith Julia M H 1990 Oral and Written Saints Miracles and Relics in Brittany c 850 1250 Speculum 65 2 309 43 doi 10 2307 2864295 JSTOR 2864295 S2CID 162747789 Further reading editBourges Andre Yves 2006 Robert d Arbrissel Raoul de la Futaie et Robert de Locunan la trinite eremitique bretonne de la fin du 11e siecle Britannia Monastica 10 9 19 Lapidge Michael Sharpe Richard Mac Cana Proinsias foreword eds 1985 A Bibliography of Celtic Latin Literature 400 1200 RIA Dictionary of Medieval Latin from Celtic Sources Ancillary Publications 1 Dublin Royal Irish Academy Merdrignac B 1979 Saint Ronan In M Dilasset ed Un pays de Cornouaille Locronan et sa region Paris Nouvelle Librairie de France pp 190 51 o Riain Padraig 1995 Saint Ronan de Locronan le dossier irlandais Saint Ronan et la Tromenie colloque de Locronan 1989 Locronan pp 157 8 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Poulin Joseph Claude 2009 L hagiographie bretonne du haut Moyen Age repertoire raisonne Beihefte der Francia 69 Ostfildern a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links editRoute of the Tromenie The Life of Saint Ronan by Albert Le Grand 1636 In French this gives a general sketch of the saint s life and covers the charge of lycanthropy The Legend of Saint Ronan by Hersart La Villemarque 1839 In the local Breton dialect of French this later tract adds details like those relating to Ronan s wife Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp Ireland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ronan of Locronan amp oldid 1135948171, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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