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St. Comgall
Founder and abbot of the great Irish monastery at Bangor, flourished in the
sixth century. The year of his birth is uncertain, but according to the
testimony of the Irish annals it must be placed between 510 and 520; his death
is said to have occurred in 602 (Annals of Tighernach
and Chronicon
Scotorum
), or 597 (Annals of Innisfallen). He was born in Dalaradia in Ulster
near the place now known as Magheramorne in the present County Antrim. He seems
to have served first as a soldier, and on his release from military service he
is said to have studied at Clonard with St. Finnian, and at Clonmacnoise with St.
Ciaran, who died in 549. We next find him in Ulster in an island on Lough Erne
accompanied by a few friends following a very severe form of monastic life. He
intended to go to Britain, but was dissuaded from this step by Lugidius, the
bishop who ordained him, at whose advice he remained in Ireland and set himself
to spread the monastic life throughout the country. The most famous of the
Comgall is Bangor, situated in the present County Down, on the Southern shore of
Belfast Lough and directly opposite to Carrickfergus. According to the Irish
annals Bangor was founded not later than 552, though Ussher and most of the
later writers on the subject assign the foundation to the year 555. According to
Adamnan's Life of Columba
, there was a very close connection between Comgall
and Columba though there does not appear to be sufficient authority for stating
that Comgall was the disciple of Columba in any strict sense. He is said to have
been the friend of St. Brendan, St. Cormac, St. Cainnech, and Finbarr of Moville.
After intense suffering he received the Eucharist from St. Fiacra and expired in
the monastery at Bangor.
Comgall belonged to what is known as the Second Order of Irish Saints. These
flourished in the Irish Church during the sixth century. They were for the most
part educated in Britain, or received their training from those who had grown up
under the influence of the British Schools. They were the founders of the great
Irish monastic schools, and contributed much to the spread of monasticism in the
Irish Church. It is an interesting question how far Comgall, or men like him,
had advanced in their establishments at Bangor and elsewhere in introducing the
last stages of monasticism then developed on the Continent by St. Benedict. In
other words, did St. Congall give his monks at Bangor a strict monastic rule
resembling the Rule of St. Benedict? There has come down to us a Rule of St.
Comgall in Irish, but the evidence would not warrant us in saying that as it
stands at present it could be attributed to him. The fact, however, that
Columbanus, a disciple of Comgall and himself a monk of Bangor, drew up for his
Continental monasteries a Regula Monachorum
wound lead us to believe that
there had been a similar organization in Bangor in his time. This, however, is
not conclusive, since Columbanus might have derived inspiration from the
Benedictine Rule then widely spread over South-Western Europe. St. Comgall is
mentioned in the Life of Columbanus
by Jonas, as the superior of Bangor, under
whom St. Columbanus had studied. He is also mentioned under 10 May, his
feast-day in the Felire
of Oengus the Culdee published by Whitley Stokes for
the Henry Bradshaw Society (2nd ed.), and his name is commemorated in the Stowe
Missal (MacCarthy), and in the Martyrology of Tallaght.
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