Ireland History

Irish History Guide - Early History to Present Day Ireland

Ireland History - Northern Irish History Belfast Dublin RSS Feed
 
 
 
 

Archive for July 1st, 2008

St. Patrick and His Mission

    We know nothing certain as to either the place or the year of St. Patrick’s birth. It probably took place in the year 387, either at Dumbarton in Britain or Boulogne in Gaul. His parents appear to have been ” provincialised ” Celts, his father holding a minor official position in the Roman administration or Civil Service. In baptism the future saint received the name of Succat. At the age of sixteen he was taken prisoner in one of the many raids of the ” Scots,” and was carried as a slave to Dal-riada,-)- the northern part of Ulaidh. There he spent six years of hardship and privation tending the sheep of his master, Milchu, on the slopes of Sliabh Mis (Slemish). At length he left his place of slavery—instructed, we are told, in a vision—and after travelling two hundred miles, got passage on board a ship which brought him to Gaul.

*Tir na n-Og, Magh Mell, Ui Breasail. f The northern half 0/ County Anttim.

    A period of no less than twenty-three years elapsed before St. Patrick returned to Ireland as its Apostle. Some even say that the interval extended over forty years. Of his life during that time, in an empire which was breaking up under the blows of Teuton and Celt, we know little. But most of it was spent in preparing for the great project which he had formed of carrying the light of Christianity to the island of his captivity. He maintained the knowledge of its language and customs which he had acquired in slavery. He prepared himself for his mission by earnest study first under St. Martin of Tours, then under St. Germanus of Auxerre, who ordained him priest, and afterwards at a famous monastery on the small island of Lerin in the Mediterranean. When news came of the death of Palladius, he was consecrated bishop, and with the apostolic blessing of Pope Celestine (who is said to have given him his name of Patrick or Palricius), he proceeded on his great mission for the conversion of Ireland, a.d. 432.

Poynings’ Parliament: Arrest of Kildare

Sir Edward Polynings

Above: Picture of Sir Edward Poyning

Henry was determined to assert his authority, at least over his own officials and Parliament. Sir Edward Poynings was sent across as Lord Deputy in 1494, and Kildare joined him in an uneventful expedition to the north. Poynings had been accompanied by a full set of new officials and judges. A Parliament was summoned which met at Drogheda and passed some anti-Irish Acts, and also enactments against private wars, coyne and livery, etc.

An Unorganised Nation and the Kildare Gerladines

During this period, then, English influence was at its lowest ebb.The country was independent, and the nation was unified in culture ; but the one had no centre, and the other no head— there was no national focus.

The conditions were remarkably like those after Clontarf or like those of the Italian States down to recent times. Certain definite groupings there were. O’Neill and O’Donnell, O’Brien and Mac Carthy were still the accepted leaders of many subordinate clans.

 Indeed, the continued recognition of the chief family, and of the ruling clan, is striking—in families and clans there were dissensions, but there was very little disloyalty. Those leaders, however, were surrounded by other clans, Gaelic and Norman, over whom they had no traditional claims.

Categories