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Ailbe of Emly

Saint Ailbe (Irish: [ˈalʲəvʲə]; Latin: Albeus, Alibeus), usually known in English as St Elvis (British/Welsh), Eilfyw or Eilfw,[4] was regarded as the chief 'pre-Patrician' saint of Ireland (although his death was recorded in the early 6th-century). He was a bishop and later saint.[5][6]

Saint Ailbe
or Elvis
Born5th Century
Died528
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
CanonizedPre-Congregation
Feast12 September[2]
PatronageMunster,[3] the Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly, wolves

Little that can be regarded as reliable is known about Ailbe: in Irish sources from the 8th century he is regarded as the first bishop, and later patron saint of Emly in Munster. Later Welsh sources (from the 11th c.) associate him with Saint David whom he was credited with baptizing and very late sources (16th c.) even give him a local Welsh genealogy making him an Ancient Briton.

Saint Ailbe is venerated as one of the four great patrons of Ireland. His feast day is 12 September. He is the patron saint of the Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly.[7]

Sources edit

The life of Ailbe is included in the Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae (VSH), a Latin collection of medieval Irish saints' lives compiled in the 14th century. There are three major manuscript versions of the VSH: the Dublin, Oxford, and Salamanca. Charles Plummer compiled an edition of the VSH based on the two surviving Dublin manuscripts in 1910.[8]

Professor William W. Heist of the University of Michigan compiled an edition of the single Salamanca manuscript in 1965[9] Oxford professor Richard Sharpe suggests that the Salamanca manuscript is the closest to the original text from which all three versions derive. Sharpe's analysis of the Irish name-forms in the Codex Salamanticensis showed similarities between it and the Life of Saint Brigid, a verifiably 7th-century text, leading him to posit that nine (and possibly ten) of the lives were written much earlier, c. 750–850.[10]

He further proposed that this earlier Life of Ailbe in the Codex Salmanticensis was originally composed to further the cause of the Eóganacht Church of Emly. The Law of Ailbe (784) was issued, possibly in response to the Law of Patrick.[11]

The later lives of the Dublin collection go further and make Ailbe the principal 'pre-Patrican' Saint of Ireland (the others are Ciarán of Saighir, Declan of Ardmore, Abbán of Moyarney and Ibar of Beggerin or Beggery Island)[12] The Dublin Life of Ailbe asserts that Munster was entrusted to him by Saint Patrick, while to similar effect, Ailbe is called a "second Patrick and patron of Munster" (secundus Patricius et patronus Mumenie) in the Life of Saint Declán of Ardmore.[13]

Further material is provided by the lives of related saints such as Patrick. All include numerous miraculous events and obvious inconsistencies and anachronisms.[14] In fact the earliest mention of the name Ailbeus would seem to be in Tirechan's late 7th century Life of Saint Patrick[15] although this seems to be about a different 'Ailbe', a priest associated with the Ui Aillello, in Connaught, latterly known as 'Saint Ailbe of Sencua (Shancoe in County Sligo)'. Other early mentions of Ailbe are in the 8th century Navigatio Brendani ("Voyage of Saint Brendan")[16] and in the Martyrology of Tallaght and Martyrology of Oengus from the early years of the 9th century.[17]

 
St Elvis, Pembrokeshire today

Legendary life edit

In a legend that goes back to the Vita, or 'Saint's Life', Ailbhe's father fled King Cronan before the child's birth and his mother's servants—ordered by the king to put the baby to death—instead placed him on a rock in the wilderness where he was found and nursed by a she-wolf.[18] Long afterwards, when Ailbe was bishop, an old she-wolf being pursued by a hunting party ran to the bishop and laid her head upon his breast. Ailbe protected the wolf and thereafter fed her and her cubs every day from his hall.[5] Ailbe was discovered in the forest by visiting Britons: these British foster parents were said to have planned to leave him in Ireland when they returned home but were constantly and miraculously unable to make the passage until they consented to take him with them.[19] They then took Ailbe with them when they returned to Wales (Vita Albei 2).

A tradition also going back to the earliest Vita (Vita Albei 9) held that he went to Rome and was ordained as a bishop by Saint Hilary who was then pope. Upon being ordained in Rome, he was said to have fed the people of the city for three days before returning home.[19] At the end of his life, a supernatural ship came and he boarded to learn the secret of his death. Returning from the faerie world, he went back to Emly to die and be buried.[19]

The earliest Vita states that Saint Ailbe was baptised by Palladius (Vita Albei 2), something that might be compatible with the tradition that made him a 'pre-Patrician' evangelizer of Ireland (since Palladius was recorded as having been sent to Ireland in 431, most likely before Patrick's time). The year of his death – 528 - that is recorded in the 'Annals of Innisfallen' (compiled at Emly probably in 1092),[20] is not, however, compatible with a 'pre-Patrician' career. It may well be, though, a reflection of the fact that many such obits (records of the date of death) of Irish saints were retrospectively added to the annals.

Ailbhe was said to have founded the monastery and diocese of Emly (Irish: Imlech[21]), which became very important in Munster. He was said to have been responsible for King Aengus's donation of island lands for Saint Enda's monastery.[22] He is also associated with the 6th-century foundation of Clane Friary, in modern County Kildare.

Connections with Wales edit

The Life of Saint David, written by Rhigyfarch in the late 11th century,[23] states that Ailbe baptized Saint David,[24][25] the patron saint of Wales. In Welsh traditions, he then fostered the boy[1] while serving as bishop of Menevia (present-day St David's) before leaving on a mission to convert southern Ireland. He was also regarded as the founder of Llanailfyw or St Elvis in Pembrokeshire,[14][26]

Late Welsh sources[27] give him a British ancestry. Thus the 16th c. Achau’r Saint records "Eilvyw a Dirdan Saint Breudan" (variant : "Breudain") while a 16thc. Manuscript of Bonedd y Saint records "Ailvyw vab Dirdan". This would make him a descendant of Guorthemir (Modern Welsh: Gwerthefyr; English: Vortimer the Blessed), and a cousin of saints David, Cybi, and Sadyrnin.[1]

Possible pre-Christian origins edit

Professor Pádraig Ó Riain suggests the cult of Saint Ailbe may have pre-Christian origins.[28] The name Ailbe figures quite extensively in a context of Irish folk tale, with its likely origins mainly in pre-Christian pagan mythology. For instance Ailbe was the name of the 'divine hound' in "The Tale of Mac Da Thó's Pig"[29] associated with the Mag Ailbe or 'plain of Ailbe',[30] where stood a Lia Ailbe, or 'stone of Ailbe'. The 'divine hound' Ailbe defended Leinster, the chief centre of which was Aillen, whose female eponym, Aillen, owned a marvellous lap dog Ailbe, according to the 'Metrical Dindsenchas'.To these 'canine' associations, one might compare the tradition which identified Ailbe's father as ‘Ol-chu’ (‘Olcnais’ in Vita Albei 1), 'great-hound', as well as the (likely related) story of the infant Ailbe being cared for by a she-wolf.

An ‘Ailbe Grúadbrecc’, meanwhile, was the daughter of Cormac mac Airt (premier mythical Irish king) and a wife (as her sister Gráinne) of Finn (= literally, 'white') or Fionn mac Cumhaill in the Tochmarc Ailbe,[31] Echtrae Cormaic maic Airt[32] and "The Burning of Finn's House".[33] Ailbe was also the name of several of Finn's fianna (comrades in his band), and their women in Acallam na Senórach[34] and Duanaire Finn. An Ailbe was also daughter of Mider, son of the Dagda.[35]

The name "Ailbe" edit

The name Ailbe was explained in the Vita Albei as a derivative of ail 'a rock' and beo, 'living'. In the words of Baring Gould and Fisher[36] this is "a very doubtful etymology". It is clearly related to the story of his being exposed behind a rock after his birth, before being cared for by a wolf (Vita Albei 2)[37] and looks very much like a folk-etymology. Nevertheless, we can note a sporadic association of Ailbe (as a saint or mythological figure) with ' rocks' (Irish ail). The Lia Ailbe (stone of Ailbe) on the Magh Ailbe (plain of Ailbe) may be in origin tautological, while a Sliabh Ailbe was associated with a legendary figure Ailbe in Duanaire Finn.[38] The Inbher Ailbhine mentioned in Tirechan's Vita Patricii (Tirechan 5.2)[39] may contain ail, 'a rock', according to Watson.[40] It is at a "marvellous stone altar ( = prominent rock with religious associations ) on the mountain of the Ui Ailello" where Patrick was said to have installed the second St Ailbe (of Sencua) - probably at the old site of the church of Shancoe, County Sligo, where a large rock overlooks a well:.[41] This might all be best explained by a typical process of sound assimilation of ail 'a rock' to the name ail-be.

The root albho- 'white, bright' as in Latin albus, 'white' appears to figure in the names of various deities or semi-deities, or names with likely mythological associations, hence the Mons Albanus. Albula as an old name for the Tiber and the legendary Alba Longa in Latium; the Germanic deities Albiahenae[42] the semi-divine prophetess, Albruna mentioned by Tacitus (Vulgar Latin Aurinia: Germania 8) or the spiritual or demonic beings from the Germanic world, which are represented in modern English by the word, 'elf';[43] the Alphito which was recorded as the name of an 'ogress' or 'nursery bugbear' and might well have been appropriate to an earlier strata of Greek gods;[44] and possibly the ‘R̥bhus’ of Indian mythology and the Rhig Veda.[45] This root may also be found in the names of Celtic deities such as Albarinus, Albocelo[46] (if they do not contain Latin Albus) and possibly the deity Albius recorded in a single inscription from Aignay-le Duc,.[47]

However the root albho- 'white, bright' does not figure in Irish or in fact in any of the extant Celtic languages. It may figure in the Celtic language of ancient Gaul (as in the names above) but there it may, in fact, have been borrowed from the ancient Ligurian language (the root is very common in place names from ancient Liguria). There does, however, appear the root albi(i̭)o-, 'world' in the Brittonic Celtic languages: as seen for instance in Wesh elfydd, 'world, land'. In fact, this root has convincingly been argued to be related to the root albho- 'white, bright'[48] and it certainly appears in the Gaulish divine name albio-rix ("king of the world", parallel to Dumno-rix and Bitu-rix of similar meaning) .[49] However it does not appear in Irish, with one sole exception: the Irish name for 'Britain', that is the Irish version of the name Albion found in ancient sources as the oldest recorded name for Britain. This appears in Irish as Albe-, Alpe- and Albu, Alpu. There is, however, no obvious explanation for this name to appear in the form ailbe and the root albi(i̭)o- would not take that form in Irish, according to the way that language normally developed. The i, in the ai of Ailbe, is not a full vowel but represents an audible 'glide' before a palatalised l.[50] This palatalised l, with i-glide is not found in Irish Albu, 'Britain'.

All of this renders the precise form of the name Ailbe, in Irish, arguably, somewhat mysterious.

Legacy edit

 
St Ailbe's Cross in Emly.

In Emly, there is a Catholic church dedicated to St Ailbe which dates to the late nineteenth century. An ancient and weathered Celtic cross in its churchyard is known as "St Ailbe's Cross". The early nineteenth-century church of St Ailbe is now used as the village hall. A ninth-century monastic rule, written in Old Irish, bears his name.[51][52]

Although St Elvis in Wales is now in ruins,[53] there is still a shrine to the parish's namesake at 51°52′12.7″N 5°10′43.2″W / 51.870194°N 5.178667°W / 51.870194; -5.178667, which bears an inscription concerning his name and connection to St David.[54]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Saint Elvis" in Terry Breverton's Wales: A Historical Companion, pp. 164 f. Amberley Publishing (Stroud), 2009.
  2. ^ Also formerly and in some locations 13 September and 27 February.[1]
  3. ^ Challoner, Richard. A Memorial of Ancient British Piety: or, a British Martyrology, p. 127. W. Needham, 1761. Accessed 14 March 2013.
  4. ^ Plummer, Charles (1968) [1910]. Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae [Lives of the Saints of Ireland] (2nd ed.). Oxford: Clarendon. p. 46 ff., vol. 1.
  5. ^ a b Thurston, Herbert (1907). "St. Ailbe". The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York City: Robert Appleton Company (print); New Advent (web). Retrieved 25 August 2008.
  6. ^ Smith, William; Wace, Henry (1880). A Dictionary of Christian Biography. London: John Murray. p. 82.
  7. ^ a b "History", Emly Parish.
  8. ^ Plummer, Charles (1968) [1910]. Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae. Lives of the Saints of Ireland. Vol. II (2nd ed.). Oxford: Clarendon. pp. xxviii–xxxi, 46–64.
  9. ^ Heist, W. W., ed. (1965). Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae, ex codice olim Salmanticensi nunc Bruxellensi. (Lives of the Saints of Ireland, from the Salamanca manuscript now of Brussels). Subsidia Hagiographica 28. Brussels: Société des Bollandistes.; trans. in De Paor, Liam (1993) "Saint Patrick's World", Dublin: Four Courts Press
  10. ^ Sharpe, Richard (1991). Medieval Irish saints' lives: an introduction to Vitae sanctorum Hiberniae. Oxford: Clarendon. ISBN 9780198215820.
  11. ^ p.19 in Ó Riain-Raedel, Dagmar (1998). "The Question of the 'Pre-Patrician' Saints of Munster" in "Early Medieval Munster. Archaeology, History and Society", ed. M.A. Monk and J. Sheehan. Cork. pp. 17–22.
  12. ^ Sharpe op.cit., pp. 115-116.
  13. ^ Ó Riain-Raedel, op.cit. p. 19.
  14. ^ a b Baring-Gould, Sabine & al. The Lives of the British Saints: The Saints of Wales and Cornwall and Such Irish Saints as Have Dedications in Britain, Vol. I, pp. 128 ff. Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion (London), 1911.
  15. ^ ch. 6.4 and ch. 18 in Bieler, Ludwig (1979) "Patrician Texts from the Book of Armagh", Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. [1]
  16. ^ ch.12 in Selmer, Carl (1959) Navigatio Sancti Brendani Abbatis, ed., Notre Dame, Indiana; http://markjberry.blogs.com/StBrendan.pdf trans Denis O'Donohughe 1893.
  17. ^ Stokes, Whitley (1905). Félire Oengusso Céli Dé: The Martyrology of Oengus the Culdee, Henry Bradshaw Society Publications, vol. 29. London; Henry Bradshaw Society [2]; "The Martyrology of Tallaght from the Book of Leinster and MS. 5100–4 in the Royal Library", ed. Richard Irvine Best and Hugh Jackson Lawlor, Brussels 1931; trans Matthew Kelly, Dublin 1857 [3]
  18. ^ Ballingarry. "Slieveardagh Parish History"
  19. ^ a b c Answers.com. "Ailbhe".
  20. ^ Seán Mac Airt, ed. & trans, "The Annals of Inisfallen", Dublin 1944 ('The Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies' 1951, reprinted 1988)
  21. ^ The diocese's full name in Gaelic is Imleach Iubhair, the "Border of the Lake of the Yew Trees", a reminder of the pre-Christian history of Emly.[7]
  22. ^ Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly
  23. ^ Wade-Evans, A.W. (1913) Rhigyfarch's Life of Saint David, ed. and trans., University of Wales Press, and (1944) Vitae Sanctorum Britanniae, ed. and trans, Cardiff, UWP. (pp. 150-172, 364-387 in new edition, ed. Scott Lloyd, Welsh Academic Press Cardiff, 2013); Sharpe, Richard and Davies, John Reuben, ed. (2007) "Vita S. David" in Evans, J Wyn and Wooding, Jonathan M, ed. "St David of Wales, Cult, Church and Nation", Boydell Press, Woodbridge
  24. ^ Toke, Leslie (1908). "Catholic Encyclopedia: St David". from the original on 21 April 2009. Retrieved 26 May 2009.
  25. ^ BBC. "Saint David".
  26. ^ "GENUKI: St Elvis".
  27. ^ p.67 (no.92), p.70 (no. 35) in Bartrum, P.C.(1966): Early Welsh Genealogical Tracts, Cardiff: UWP.
  28. ^ Padraig O'Riain, s.v. Ailbe in "Dictionary of Irish Biography", Royal Irish Academy, Cambridge University Press [4]
  29. ^ trans. in Cross, T.P. and Slover, C.H. (1936) "Ancient Irish Tales", New York; pp. 68-76 in Koch, John T and Carey, John ed. 2003 "The Celtic Heroic Age", Celtic Studies Publications: Aberystwyth
  30. ^ note 84 in Kenney J.F. (1929) "Sources for the Early History of Ireland: Vol 1, Ecclesiastical", Columbia (reprinted New York 1966)
  31. ^ p. 276 in O’Rahilly, T,F. (1946) "Early Irish History and Mythology", Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies.; p. 151 in J.F.Campbell, Leabhair na Feinne (German trans. in 'Zeitschrift Celtische Philologie' 13)
  32. ^ in Cross, op.cit. pp. 503-7
  33. ^ in 'Eriu', 1904
  34. ^ in Dooley, Anne and Roe, Harry (1999) "Tales of the Elders of Ireland", Oxford University Press
  35. ^ Dooley, op.cit. p.15
  36. ^ Baring-Gould and Fisher (1907), "The Lives of the British Saints" Vol I, p. 130 [5]
  37. ^ Heist op.cit. 167-81; trans. De Paor op.cit pp. 227-43
  38. ^ II, 95, xlii in MacNeill, Eoin and Murphy, Gerard (1908-54) Duanaire Finn, 3 vols, Irish Texts Society 7, 28, 43.
  39. ^ Bieler op.cit p. 127
  40. ^ p. 469, note 1 in Watson, W.J. (1926) "The Celtic Place Names of Scotland", Edinburgh/London.
  41. ^ p. 608 in MacNeill, Maire (1962) "The Festival of Lughnasa", Oxford University Press.
  42. ^ §223 in Whatmough, Joshua (1970) The Dialects of Ancient Gaul, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press; I,79 in Holder, A. (1896-1907) "Alt-Celtischer Sprachschatz", 3 vols, Leipzig: Teubner; p. 523 in De Vries, Jan (1956-7) "Altgermanische Religions-geschichte", Berlin; 1, III, C, 1 in Beck, Noémie (2009) Goddesses in Celtic Religion- Cult and Mythology: A Comparative Study of Ancient Ireland, Britain and Gaul, Université Lumière Lyon 2
  43. ^ De Vries, op.cit § 170, 184, cf. 214; pp. 54-5, 176-4 in Hall, Alaric (2007). Elves in Anglo-Saxon England: Matters of Belief, Health, Gender and Identity. Boydell Press
  44. ^ p. 67 in Chantraine, P (1983) "Dictionnaire Étymologique de la Langue Grecque", Paris: Klincksiek; p. 29 in Pokorny, Julius (1959) "Indogermanisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch", 2vols, Berne and Munich: Francke; 22.g, 2, 52.7 in Graves, Robert (1955) The Greek Myths, 2 vols, Penguin and (1948) pp 67, 366, 434 in "The White Goddess", London: Faber & Faber
  45. ^ De Vries op.cit: II, p.258, note 2; pp. 131-4 in Macdonnel, A.A. (1897) "Vedic Mythology", Strassburg.; Haudre Haudry, Jean (1987) "Les Rbhus et les Alfes", Bulletin d’etudes Indiennes 5, pp.159-219
  46. ^ p. 303 Evans, Ellis 1(967) Gaulish Personal Names, Oxford: Clarendon Press; Whatmough op.cit: §82; Holder op.cit: p.86
  47. ^ Lajoye, Patrice & Crombet, Pierre, (2016) "Encyclopédie de l'Arbre Celtique" s.v Albius, retrieved 25 August 2016. [6] ; Beck op.cit: 4, III, B, 1) c)
  48. ^ Meid, Wolfgang (1990) "Uber Albion, elfydd, Albiorix, und andere Indikatoren eine keltischen Weltbildes" in M.J. Ball, J, Fife, E, Poppe and J.Rowland, ed. Celtic Linguistics: Readings in the Brythonic Languages, Festschrift for T. Arwyn Watkins, Amsterdam/ Philadelphia.
  49. ^ Evansop.cit: 243–9, 301-3; Holder op.cit: I, 85; J Vendries, Revue Celtique 45, p.122; p. 248 in Rivet, A.L.F. and Smith, C. (1979) "The Place Names of Roman Britain", London: Batsford.; p. 109 in Hamp, Eric (1989) "Welsh elfydd and albio-" in Bulletin for the Board of Celtic Studies 36, pp. 109-10.; Whatmough op.cit:§ 7,8, 82
  50. ^ pp. 55-7, §86 in Thurneysen, Rudolf (1946) "A Grammar of Old Irish", Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies
  51. ^ Duffy, Patrick. "St. Ailbe of Emly", CatholicIreland.net
  52. ^ O Neill, J., 'The Rule of Ailbe of Emly', Ériu (1907), pp. 92-115
  53. ^ The Modern Antiquarian. "St Elvis".
  54. ^ Kelsall, Dennis & Jan (2005). Walking in Pembrokeshire. Cicerone Press. p. 61. ISBN 9781849650885.

Sources edit

  • Webb, Alfred (1878). "Ailbe, Saint" . A Compendium of Irish Biography. Dublin: M. H. Gill & son.
  • de Paor, Liam (trans.) (1993). Saint Patrick's World: The Christian Culture of Ireland's Apostolic Age. Dublin: Four Courts Press.
  • Gougaud, Louis (1932). Christianity in Celtic Lands.
  • Ó Riain, Pádraig (ed. and trans.) (2017). Beatha Ailbhe: The Life of Saint Ailbhe of Cashel and Emly. London: Irish Texts Society.

ailbe, emly, ailbhe, redirects, here, name, ailbhe, name, saint, ailbe, irish, ˈalʲəvʲə, latin, albeus, alibeus, usually, known, english, elvis, british, welsh, eilfyw, eilfw, regarded, chief, patrician, saint, ireland, although, death, recorded, early, centur. Ailbhe redirects here For the name see Ailbhe name Saint Ailbe Irish ˈalʲevʲe Latin Albeus Alibeus usually known in English as St Elvis British Welsh Eilfyw or Eilfw 4 was regarded as the chief pre Patrician saint of Ireland although his death was recorded in the early 6th century He was a bishop and later saint 5 6 Saint Ailbeor ElvisSt Ailbe s Church in EmlyBorn5th CenturyDied528Venerated inRoman Catholic ChurchEastern Orthodox ChurchCanonizedPre CongregationFeast12 September 2 PatronageMunster 3 the Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly wolves Little that can be regarded as reliable is known about Ailbe in Irish sources from the 8th century he is regarded as the first bishop and later patron saint of Emly in Munster Later Welsh sources from the 11th c associate him with Saint David whom he was credited with baptizing and very late sources 16th c even give him a local Welsh genealogy making him an Ancient Briton Saint Ailbe is venerated as one of the four great patrons of Ireland His feast day is 12 September He is the patron saint of the Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly 7 Contents 1 Sources 2 Legendary life 3 Connections with Wales 4 Possible pre Christian origins 5 The name Ailbe 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 References 9 SourcesSources editThe life of Ailbe is included in the Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae VSH a Latin collection of medieval Irish saints lives compiled in the 14th century There are three major manuscript versions of the VSH the Dublin Oxford and Salamanca Charles Plummer compiled an edition of the VSH based on the two surviving Dublin manuscripts in 1910 8 Professor William W Heist of the University of Michigan compiled an edition of the single Salamanca manuscript in 1965 9 Oxford professor Richard Sharpe suggests that the Salamanca manuscript is the closest to the original text from which all three versions derive Sharpe s analysis of the Irish name forms in the Codex Salamanticensis showed similarities between it and the Life of Saint Brigid a verifiably 7th century text leading him to posit that nine and possibly ten of the lives were written much earlier c 750 850 10 He further proposed that this earlier Life of Ailbe in the Codex Salmanticensis was originally composed to further the cause of the Eoganacht Church of Emly The Law of Ailbe 784 was issued possibly in response to the Law of Patrick 11 The later lives of the Dublin collection go further and make Ailbe the principal pre Patrican Saint of Ireland the others are Ciaran of Saighir Declan of Ardmore Abban of Moyarney and Ibar of Beggerin or Beggery Island 12 The Dublin Life of Ailbe asserts that Munster was entrusted to him by Saint Patrick while to similar effect Ailbe is called a second Patrick and patron of Munster secundus Patricius et patronus Mumenie in the Life of Saint Declan of Ardmore 13 Further material is provided by the lives of related saints such as Patrick All include numerous miraculous events and obvious inconsistencies and anachronisms 14 In fact the earliest mention of the name Ailbeus would seem to be in Tirechan s late 7th century Life of Saint Patrick 15 although this seems to be about a different Ailbe a priest associated with the Ui Aillello in Connaught latterly known as Saint Ailbe of Sencua Shancoe in County Sligo Other early mentions of Ailbe are in the 8th century Navigatio Brendani Voyage of Saint Brendan 16 and in the Martyrology of Tallaght and Martyrology of Oengus from the early years of the 9th century 17 nbsp St Elvis Pembrokeshire todayLegendary life editIn a legend that goes back to the Vita or Saint s Life Ailbhe s father fled King Cronan before the child s birth and his mother s servants ordered by the king to put the baby to death instead placed him on a rock in the wilderness where he was found and nursed by a she wolf 18 Long afterwards when Ailbe was bishop an old she wolf being pursued by a hunting party ran to the bishop and laid her head upon his breast Ailbe protected the wolf and thereafter fed her and her cubs every day from his hall 5 Ailbe was discovered in the forest by visiting Britons these British foster parents were said to have planned to leave him in Ireland when they returned home but were constantly and miraculously unable to make the passage until they consented to take him with them 19 They then took Ailbe with them when they returned to Wales Vita Albei 2 A tradition also going back to the earliest Vita Vita Albei 9 held that he went to Rome and was ordained as a bishop by Saint Hilary who was then pope Upon being ordained in Rome he was said to have fed the people of the city for three days before returning home 19 At the end of his life a supernatural ship came and he boarded to learn the secret of his death Returning from the faerie world he went back to Emly to die and be buried 19 The earliest Vita states that Saint Ailbe was baptised by Palladius Vita Albei 2 something that might be compatible with the tradition that made him a pre Patrician evangelizer of Ireland since Palladius was recorded as having been sent to Ireland in 431 most likely before Patrick s time The year of his death 528 that is recorded in the Annals of Innisfallen compiled at Emly probably in 1092 20 is not however compatible with a pre Patrician career It may well be though a reflection of the fact that many such obits records of the date of death of Irish saints were retrospectively added to the annals Ailbhe was said to have founded the monastery and diocese of Emly Irish Imlech 21 which became very important in Munster He was said to have been responsible for King Aengus s donation of island lands for Saint Enda s monastery 22 He is also associated with the 6th century foundation of Clane Friary in modern County Kildare Connections with Wales editThe Life of Saint David written by Rhigyfarch in the late 11th century 23 states that Ailbe baptized Saint David 24 25 the patron saint of Wales In Welsh traditions he then fostered the boy 1 while serving as bishop of Menevia present day St David s before leaving on a mission to convert southern Ireland He was also regarded as the founder of Llanailfyw or St Elvis in Pembrokeshire 14 26 Late Welsh sources 27 give him a British ancestry Thus the 16th c Achau r Saint records Eilvyw a Dirdan Saint Breudan variant Breudain while a 16thc Manuscript of Bonedd y Saint records Ailvyw vab Dirdan This would make him a descendant of Guorthemir Modern Welsh Gwerthefyr English Vortimer the Blessed and a cousin of saints David Cybi and Sadyrnin 1 Possible pre Christian origins editProfessor Padraig o Riain suggests the cult of Saint Ailbe may have pre Christian origins 28 The name Ailbe figures quite extensively in a context of Irish folk tale with its likely origins mainly in pre Christian pagan mythology For instance Ailbe was the name of the divine hound in The Tale of Mac Da Tho s Pig 29 associated with the Mag Ailbe or plain of Ailbe 30 where stood a Lia Ailbe or stone of Ailbe The divine hound Ailbe defended Leinster the chief centre of which was Aillen whose female eponym Aillen owned a marvellous lap dog Ailbe according to the Metrical Dindsenchas To these canine associations one might compare the tradition which identified Ailbe s father as Ol chu Olcnais in Vita Albei 1 great hound as well as the likely related story of the infant Ailbe being cared for by a she wolf An Ailbe Gruadbrecc meanwhile was the daughter of Cormac mac Airt premier mythical Irish king and a wife as her sister Grainne of Finn literally white or Fionn mac Cumhaill in the Tochmarc Ailbe 31 Echtrae Cormaic maic Airt 32 and The Burning of Finn s House 33 Ailbe was also the name of several of Finn s fianna comrades in his band and their women in Acallam na Senorach 34 and Duanaire Finn An Ailbe was also daughter of Mider son of the Dagda 35 The name Ailbe editFurther information Elvis name The name Ailbe was explained in the Vita Albei as a derivative of ail a rock and beo living In the words of Baring Gould and Fisher 36 this is a very doubtful etymology It is clearly related to the story of his being exposed behind a rock after his birth before being cared for by a wolf Vita Albei 2 37 and looks very much like a folk etymology Nevertheless we can note a sporadic association of Ailbe as a saint or mythological figure with rocks Irish ail The Lia Ailbe stone of Ailbe on the Magh Ailbe plain of Ailbe may be in origin tautological while a Sliabh Ailbe was associated with a legendary figure Ailbe in Duanaire Finn 38 The Inbher Ailbhine mentioned in Tirechan s Vita Patricii Tirechan 5 2 39 may contain ail a rock according to Watson 40 It is at a marvellous stone altar prominent rock with religious associations on the mountain of the Ui Ailello where Patrick was said to have installed the second St Ailbe of Sencua probably at the old site of the church of Shancoe County Sligo where a large rock overlooks a well 41 This might all be best explained by a typical process of sound assimilation of ail a rock to the name ail be The root albho white bright as in Latin albus white appears to figure in the names of various deities or semi deities or names with likely mythological associations hence the Mons Albanus Albula as an old name for the Tiber and the legendary Alba Longa in Latium the Germanic deities Albiahenae 42 the semi divine prophetess Albruna mentioned by Tacitus Vulgar Latin Aurinia Germania 8 or the spiritual or demonic beings from the Germanic world which are represented in modern English by the word elf 43 the Alphito which was recorded as the name of an ogress or nursery bugbear and might well have been appropriate to an earlier strata of Greek gods 44 and possibly the R bhus of Indian mythology and the Rhig Veda 45 This root may also be found in the names of Celtic deities such as Albarinus Albocelo 46 if they do not contain Latin Albus and possibly the deity Albius recorded in a single inscription from Aignay le Duc 47 However the root albho white bright does not figure in Irish or in fact in any of the extant Celtic languages It may figure in the Celtic language of ancient Gaul as in the names above but there it may in fact have been borrowed from the ancient Ligurian language the root is very common in place names from ancient Liguria There does however appear the root albi i o world in the Brittonic Celtic languages as seen for instance in Wesh elfydd world land In fact this root has convincingly been argued to be related to the root albho white bright 48 and it certainly appears in the Gaulish divine name albio rix king of the world parallel to Dumno rix and Bitu rix of similar meaning 49 However it does not appear in Irish with one sole exception the Irish name for Britain that is the Irish version of the name Albion found in ancient sources as the oldest recorded name for Britain This appears in Irish as Albe Alpe and Albu Alpu There is however no obvious explanation for this name to appear in the form ailbe and the root albi i o would not take that form in Irish according to the way that language normally developed The i in the ai of Ailbe is not a full vowel but represents an audible glide before a palatalised l 50 This palatalised l with i glide is not found in Irish Albu Britain All of this renders the precise form of the name Ailbe in Irish arguably somewhat mysterious Legacy edit nbsp St Ailbe s Cross in Emly In Emly there is a Catholic church dedicated to St Ailbe which dates to the late nineteenth century An ancient and weathered Celtic cross in its churchyard is known as St Ailbe s Cross The early nineteenth century church of St Ailbe is now used as the village hall A ninth century monastic rule written in Old Irish bears his name 51 52 Although St Elvis in Wales is now in ruins 53 there is still a shrine to the parish s namesake at 51 52 12 7 N 5 10 43 2 W 51 870194 N 5 178667 W 51 870194 5 178667 which bears an inscription concerning his name and connection to St David 54 See also editSaint Ailbe of Emly patron saint archiveReferences edit a b c Saint Elvis in Terry Breverton s Wales A Historical Companion pp 164 f Amberley Publishing Stroud 2009 Also formerly and in some locations 13 September and 27 February 1 Challoner Richard A Memorial of Ancient British Piety or a British Martyrology p 127 W Needham 1761 Accessed 14 March 2013 Plummer Charles 1968 1910 Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae Lives of the Saints of Ireland 2nd ed Oxford Clarendon p 46 ff vol 1 a b Thurston Herbert 1907 St Ailbe The Catholic Encyclopedia New York City Robert Appleton Company print New Advent web Retrieved 25 August 2008 Smith William Wace Henry 1880 A Dictionary of Christian Biography London John Murray p 82 a b History Emly Parish Plummer Charles 1968 1910 Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae Lives of the Saints of Ireland Vol II 2nd ed Oxford Clarendon pp xxviii xxxi 46 64 Heist W W ed 1965 Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae ex codice olim Salmanticensi nunc Bruxellensi Lives of the Saints of Ireland from the Salamanca manuscript now of Brussels Subsidia Hagiographica 28 Brussels Societe des Bollandistes trans in De Paor Liam 1993 Saint Patrick s World Dublin Four Courts Press Sharpe Richard 1991 Medieval Irish saints lives an introduction toVitae sanctorum Hiberniae Oxford Clarendon ISBN 9780198215820 p 19 in o Riain Raedel Dagmar 1998 The Question of the Pre Patrician Saints of Munster in Early Medieval Munster Archaeology History and Society ed M A Monk and J Sheehan Cork pp 17 22 Sharpe op cit pp 115 116 o Riain Raedel op cit p 19 a b Baring Gould Sabine amp al The Lives of the British Saints The Saints of Wales and Cornwall and Such Irish Saints as Have Dedications in Britain Vol I pp 128 ff Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion London 1911 ch 6 4 and ch 18 in Bieler Ludwig 1979 Patrician Texts from the Book of Armagh Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies 1 ch 12 in Selmer Carl 1959 Navigatio Sancti Brendani Abbatis ed Notre Dame Indiana http markjberry blogs com StBrendan pdf trans Denis O Donohughe 1893 Stokes Whitley 1905 Felire Oengusso Celi De The Martyrology of Oengus the Culdee Henry Bradshaw Society Publications vol 29 London Henry Bradshaw Society 2 The Martyrology of Tallaght from the Book of Leinster and MS 5100 4 in the Royal Library ed Richard Irvine Best and Hugh Jackson Lawlor Brussels 1931 trans Matthew Kelly Dublin 1857 3 Ballingarry Slieveardagh Parish History a b c Answers com Ailbhe Sean Mac Airt ed amp trans The Annals of Inisfallen Dublin 1944 The Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies 1951 reprinted 1988 The diocese s full name in Gaelic is Imleach Iubhair the Border of the Lake of the Yew Trees a reminder of the pre Christian history of Emly 7 Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly Wade Evans A W 1913 Rhigyfarch s Life of Saint David ed and trans University of Wales Press and 1944 Vitae Sanctorum Britanniae ed and trans Cardiff UWP pp 150 172 364 387 in new edition ed Scott Lloyd Welsh Academic Press Cardiff 2013 Sharpe Richard and Davies John Reuben ed 2007 Vita S David in Evans J Wyn and Wooding Jonathan M ed St David of Wales Cult Church and Nation Boydell Press Woodbridge Toke Leslie 1908 Catholic Encyclopedia St David Archived from the original on 21 April 2009 Retrieved 26 May 2009 BBC Saint David GENUKI St Elvis p 67 no 92 p 70 no 35 in Bartrum P C 1966 Early Welsh Genealogical Tracts Cardiff UWP Padraig O Riain s v Ailbe in Dictionary of Irish Biography Royal Irish Academy Cambridge University Press 4 trans in Cross T P and Slover C H 1936 Ancient Irish Tales New York pp 68 76 in Koch John T and Carey John ed 2003 The Celtic Heroic Age Celtic Studies Publications Aberystwyth note 84 in Kenney J F 1929 Sources for the Early History of Ireland Vol 1 Ecclesiastical Columbia reprinted New York 1966 p 276 in O Rahilly T F 1946 Early Irish History and Mythology Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies p 151 in J F Campbell Leabhair na Feinne German trans in Zeitschrift Celtische Philologie 13 in Cross op cit pp 503 7 in Eriu 1904 in Dooley Anne and Roe Harry 1999 Tales of the Elders of Ireland Oxford University Press Dooley op cit p 15 Baring Gould and Fisher 1907 The Lives of the British Saints Vol I p 130 5 Heist op cit 167 81 trans De Paor op cit pp 227 43 II 95 xlii in MacNeill Eoin and Murphy Gerard 1908 54 Duanaire Finn 3 vols Irish Texts Society 7 28 43 Bieler op cit p 127 p 469 note 1 in Watson W J 1926 The Celtic Place Names of Scotland Edinburgh London p 608 in MacNeill Maire 1962 The Festival of Lughnasa Oxford University Press 223 in Whatmough Joshua 1970 The Dialects of Ancient Gaul Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press I 79 in Holder A 1896 1907 Alt Celtischer Sprachschatz 3 vols Leipzig Teubner p 523 in De Vries Jan 1956 7 Altgermanische Religions geschichte Berlin 1 III C 1 in Beck Noemie 2009 Goddesses in Celtic Religion Cult and Mythology A Comparative Study of Ancient Ireland Britain and Gaul Universite Lumiere Lyon 2 De Vries op cit 170 184 cf 214 pp 54 5 176 4 in Hall Alaric 2007 Elves in Anglo Saxon England Matters of Belief Health Gender and Identity Boydell Press p 67 in Chantraine P 1983 Dictionnaire Etymologique de la Langue Grecque Paris Klincksiek p 29 in Pokorny Julius 1959 Indogermanisches Etymologisches Worterbuch 2vols Berne and Munich Francke 22 g 2 52 7 in Graves Robert 1955 The Greek Myths 2 vols Penguin and 1948 pp 67 366 434 in The White Goddess London Faber amp Faber De Vries op cit II p 258 note 2 pp 131 4 in Macdonnel A A 1897 Vedic Mythology Strassburg Haudre Haudry Jean 1987 Les Rbhus et les Alfes Bulletin d etudes Indiennes 5 pp 159 219 p 303 Evans Ellis 1 967 Gaulish Personal Names Oxford Clarendon Press Whatmough op cit 82 Holder op cit p 86 Lajoye Patrice amp Crombet Pierre 2016 Encyclopedie de l Arbre Celtique s v Albius retrieved 25 August 2016 6 Beck op cit 4 III B 1 c Meid Wolfgang 1990 Uber Albion elfydd Albiorix und andere Indikatoren eine keltischen Weltbildes in M J Ball J Fife E Poppe and J Rowland ed Celtic Linguistics Readings in the Brythonic Languages Festschrift for T Arwyn Watkins Amsterdam Philadelphia Evansop cit 243 9 301 3 Holder op cit I 85 J Vendries Revue Celtique 45 p 122 p 248 in Rivet A L F and Smith C 1979 The Place Names of Roman Britain London Batsford p 109 in Hamp Eric 1989 Welsh elfydd and albio in Bulletin for the Board of Celtic Studies 36 pp 109 10 Whatmough op cit 7 8 82 pp 55 7 86 in Thurneysen Rudolf 1946 A Grammar of Old Irish Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies Duffy Patrick St Ailbe of Emly CatholicIreland net O Neill J The Rule of Ailbe of Emly Eriu 1907 pp 92 115 The Modern Antiquarian St Elvis Kelsall Dennis amp Jan 2005 Walking in Pembrokeshire Cicerone Press p 61 ISBN 9781849650885 Sources editWebb Alfred 1878 Ailbe Saint A Compendium of Irish Biography Dublin M H Gill amp son de Paor Liam trans 1993 Saint Patrick s World The Christian Culture of Ireland s Apostolic Age Dublin Four Courts Press Gougaud Louis 1932 Christianity in Celtic Lands o Riain Padraig ed and trans 2017 Beatha Ailbhe The Life of Saint Ailbhe of Cashel and Emly London Irish Texts Society Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp Ireland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ailbe of Emly amp oldid 1221373978, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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