Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
St. Ninian
(NINIAS, NINUS, DINAN, RINGAN, RINGEN)
Bishop and confessor; date of birth unknown; died about 432; the first Apostle
of Christianity in Scotland. The earliest account of him is in Bede (Hist. Eccles.,
III, 4): the southern Picts received the true faith by the preaching of Bishop Ninias,
a most reverend and holy man of the British nation, who had been regularly instructed
at Rome in the faith and mysteries of the truth; whose episcopal see, named after
St. Martin the Bishop, and famous for a church dedicated to him (wherein Ninias
himself and many other saints rest in the body), is now in the possession of the
English nation. The place belongs to the province of the Bernicians and is commonly
called the White House [Candida Casa], because he there built a church of stone,
which was not usual amongst the Britons
. The facts given in this passage form
practically all we know of St. Ninian's life and work.
The most important later life, compiled in the twelfth century by St. Ælred,
professes to give a detailed account founded on Bede and also on a liber de
vita et miraculis eius
(sc. Niniani) barbarice scriptus
, but the legendary
element is largely evident. He states, however, that while engaged in building
his church at Candida Casa, Ninian heard of the death of St. Martin and decided
to dedicate the building to him. Now St. Martin died about 397, so that the
mission of Ninian to the southern Picts must have begun towards the end of the
fourth century. St. Ninian founded at Whithorn a monastery which became famous
as a school of monasticism within a century of his death; his work among the
southern Picts seems to have had but a short lived success. St. Patrick, in his
epistle to Coroticus, terms the Picts apostates
, and references to Ninian's
converts having abandoned Christianity are found in Sts. Columba and Kentigern.
The body of St. Ninian was buried in the church at Whithorn (Wigtownshire), but
no relics are now known to exist. The Clogrinny
, or bell of St. Ringan, of
very rough workmanship, is in the Antiquarian Museum at Edinburgh.
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