Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
St. Canice
(Or KENNY).
Commemorated on 11 October, born in 515 or 516, at Glengiven, in what is now
County Derry, Ireland; died at Aghaboe in 600. He was descended from Ui-Dalainn,
a Waterford tribe which dwelt on an island now identified as Inis-Doimhle in the
Suir. The father of the saint was a distinguished bard who found his way to the
North and settled at Glengiven in Cinachta under its chief. His mother was
called Maul; her name is commemorated in the church of Thomplamaul, Kilkenny,
dedicated to God under her invocation. The early years of Canice were spent in
watching his chieftain's flocks, but, God calling him to higher aims, we find
him in 543 at Clonard, under St. Finian, where he was a fellow-pupil of St.
Columba. In 544 he was studying in the school of Glasnevin, with St. Kieran of
Clonmacnoise and St. Comgall of Bangor, under the tuition of St. Mobhi. He was
ordained priest in 545 in the monastery of Llancarvan in Glamorganshire, and set
out for Rome to obtain the blessing of the reigning pontiff. In 550 we find him
again at Glengiven, where he converted his foster-brother, Geal-Breagach, who
afterwards assisted him in founding Drumachose. In 565 he passed over to
Scotland, where his name is recalled in the ruins of an ancient church,
Kil-Chainnech on Tiree Island, and in a burial ground, Kil-Chainnech, in Iona.
He built cells on the island of Ibdon and Eninis, an oratory called Lagan-Kenny
on the shores of Lough Lagan, and a monastery in Fifeshire on the banks of the
Eden. He is known in Scotland as St. Kenneth, was closely associated with St.
Columba in the latter's missionary work, and, next to him and St. Bridget, is
the favourite Irish saint in Scotland (Eammack). See Reeve's Adamnàn
(Dublin,
1857, xxvi, xxxi); also the ancient lives in the Codex Solmanticensis
edited
by De Smedt and Backer (see below), and the Liber Kilkenniensis
in Marsh's
Library, Dublin. His Irish foundations were Drumachose, two miles southeast of
Limavady, Kilkenny West, in County Westmeath, and the great Abbey of Aghaboe in
Ossory, Queens County. Tradition asserts that he founded a monastery in Kilkenny
by the round tower and cathedral which bears his name. A man of great eloquence
and learning, he wrote a commentary on the Gospels, known for centuries as
Glas-Chainnigh.
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