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St. Aengus (the Culdee)
An Irish saint who flourished in the last quarter of the eighth century, and
is held in imperishable honour as the author of the Feliré, or Festology of the
Saints. Born near Clonengh, Ireland, Aengus was educated at the monastic school,
founded there by St. Fintan, not far from the present town of Mountrath.
Becoming a hermit, he lived for a time at Disert-beagh, where, on the banks of
the Nore, he is said to have communed with the angels. From his love of prayer
and solitude he was named the Culdee
; in other words, the Ceile Dé, or
Servant of God.
Not satisfied with his hermitage, which was only a mile from
Clonenagh, and, therefore, liable to be disturbed by students or wayfarers,
Aengus removed to a more solitary abode eight miles distant. This sequestered
place, two miles southeast of the present town of Maryborough, was called after
him the Desert of Aengus
, or Dysert-Enos
. Here he erected a little oratory
on a gentle eminence among the Dysert Hills, now represented by a ruined and
deserted Protestant church. His earliest biographer (ninth century) relates the
wonderful austerities practiced by St. Aengus in his desert
, and though he
sought to be far from the haunts of men, his fame attracted a stream of visitors.
The result was that the good saint abandoned his oratory at Dysert-Enos, and,
after some wanderings, came to the monastery of Tallaght, near Dublin, then
governed by St. Maelruain. He entered as a lay-brother, concealing his identity,
but St. Maelruain soon discovered him, and collaborated with him on the work
known as the Martyrology of Tallaght
, about the year 790. This is a prose
catalogue of Irish saints, and is the oldest of the Irish martyrologies. About
the year 805 St. Aengus finished his famous Feliré, a poetical work on the
saints of Ireland, a copy of which is in the Leabhar Breac. The last touches
were given to this work in the cell at Disert-beagh (St. Aengus had left
Tallaght, not long after the death of St. Maelruain), where he passed away on
Friday, 11 March, 824. He was buried in Clonenagh, as we read in his metrical
life, and his death is commemorated 11 March.
Acta SS. (1867), March II, 84-87; Colgan, Acta SS. Hibern. (1645), I, 579-583; O'Hanlon, The Life and Works of Aengus the Culdee, in Irish Eccl. Record (Dublin, 1869); D'Arbois de Jubainville, Revue Critique (1881), B. XI, 183-188; Mabillon, Acta SS. Ord. S. Bened. (1685), V, 906; Hardy, Descriptive Catalogue, etc. (1862), II, ii, 511.
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