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St. Kilian
(Killena, Cillíne).
Apostle of Franconia and martyr, born about 640 of noble parents probably in
Ireland (according to others in Scotland though Scottica tellus, as it is called
by the elder Passio
, may also in medieval times have meant Ireland. The later
Passio
says: Scotia quæ et Hibernia dicitur
); died 8 July, probably in 689.
He was distinguished from his youth for his piety and love of study, and,
according to the later Passio
, embraced the monastic life. Trithemius and
later writers say that he was a monk in the celebrated monastery of Hy: that he
was later the abbot of this monastery is also held by Trithemius; however, that,
a supposition, cannot be proved. The statement in the older Passio
that Kilian
was raised to the purple before leaving his native land may be accepted as
trustworthy, although the later Passio
refers this event to his sojourn in
Rome. In accordance with the custom then prevailing in the Irish Church, he was
assigned to no particular diocese, but was district bishop or travelling bishop.
One day he made up his mind to be a missionary, left his native country with
eleven companions, travelled through Gaul, thence across the Rhine, and finally
reached the castle of Würzburg, inhabited by the Thuringian (Frankish) Duke
Gozbert, who was, like his people, still pagan. Kilian resolved to preach the
Gospel here, but first journeyed with his companions to Rome to receive
missionary faculties from the pope. John V, whom he expected to find, had died
meanwhile (2 August, 686), and was succeeded by Conon from whom Kilian obtained
his faculties. From the sources already cited, we learn that the arrival of St.
Kilian and his companions at Würzburg and the journey to Rome occurred in the
summer of 686, that they arrived in the latter city in the late autumn, and that
their labours at Würzburg continued during 687 and the following years. The
original group separated on the return journey - some departing to seek other
fields of missionary work, while St. Kilian with two companions, the priest
Coloman and the deacon Totnan, came back to Würzburg. He took this town as the
base of his activity, which extended over an ever-increasing area in East
Franconia and Thuringia, and converted Duke Gozbert with a large part of his
subjects to Christianity. Concerning the cause of the martyrdom of the three
missionaries, the early documents supply the following information: After Duke
Gozbert had become a Christian, St. Kilian explained to him that his marriage
with Geilana, his brother's widow, was unlawful under the Christian dispensation,
and secured the duke's promise to separate from her. In consequence of this
action, Geilana plotted vengeance against the saint, and caused him and his two
companions to be secretly murdered in the absence of the duke, their corpses
being immediately buried at the scene of the crime together with the sacred
vessels, vestments, and holy writings. This is generally held to have happened
on 8 July, 689, although opinions vary as to the exact year. The early documents
relate further that, after the duke's return, Geilana at first denied any
knowledge of what had become of the missionaries; the murderer, however, went
mad, confessed his crime, and died miserably, Geilana also dying insane. Recent
critics, especially Hauck and Riezler (see bibliography), question without
sufficient grounds the authenticity of these statements in the matter of detail,
especially as regards the cause and the immediate circumstances of the martyrdom
of the three missionaries. Through prejudice against the Irish Church the
Protestant party has also disputed the absolutely reliable information about the
journey to Rome undertaken by St. Kilian and his assistants. His missionary
labours through Eastern Franconia and his martyrdom are, however, accepted
without question by everyone. Although Kilian's work was not continued after his
death, St. Boniface on his arrival in Thuringia found at least evidence of his
predecessor's influence. The relics of the three martyrs, after wonderful cures
had brought renown to their burial place, were transferred in 743 by Saint
Burchard, first Bishop of Würzburg, to the Church of Our Lady, where they were
temporarily interred. Later, when Burchard had obtained Pope Zachary's
permission for their public veneration, they were solemnly transferred -
probably on 8 July, 752 - to the newly finished Cathedral of the Saviour. Still
later they were buried in St. Kilian's vault in the new cathedral erected on the
spot where tradition affirms the martyrdom to have taken place. The New
Testament belonging to St. Kilian was preserved among the treasures of Würzburg
Cathedral until 1803, and since then has been in the university library. Kilian
is the patron saint of the diocese, and his feast is celebrated in Würzburg on 8
July with great solemnity.
The chief source of information is the older and shorter Passio
(which
begins Fuit vir vitæ venerabilis Killena nomine
), formerly considered to date
from the tenth or ninth century. Emmerich (after the example of the Histoire
littéraire de la France
, IV, Paris, 1738, p. 86), and Hefner (see below) on
very good grounds now connect the appearance of this chronicle with the solemn
translation of the relics in 752, which raises its historic value beyond the
reach of attack. The later and more voluminous Passio
is an amplified and
embellished version of the earlier one and cannot be relied upon when the
accounts differ. Both have been published by H. Canisius, Antiquae lectiones
,
IV, pt. ii (Ingolstadt, 1603), pp. 625-47; by Mabillon, Acta Sanctorum O.S.B.
,
II (Paris, 1669), p. 991-3; in the Acta Sanctorum
for 8 July (see below), and
finally, with a collection of later sources and with the office of St. Kilian of
the Würzburg Church, by Emmerich (see below).
Acta SS., II, July (Paris and Rome, 1867), 599-619;
Eckhart, Commentarii de rebus Franciæ orientalis, I (Würzburg, 1729), 270-83,
451 sqq.; Gropp, Lebensbeschreibung des hl. Kiliani und dessen Gesellen
(Würzburg, 1738); Stamminger, Franconia sancta, I (Würzburg, 1881), 58-133;
Emmerich, Der heilige Kilian, Regionarbischof u. Martyrer (Würzburg, 1896;
Göpfert, St. Kilianus-Büchlein (Würzburg, 1877; 2nd ed., 1902); Bellesheim,
Gesch. der kath. Kirche in Irland, I (Mainz, 1890), 168-71; Schrödl in
Kirchenlex., s.v.; O'Hanlon, Lives of the Irish Saints, VII (Dublin, s.d.),
122-43; Moore in Dict. Nat. Biog., s.v. Cilian. The authenticity of the older
Passio
is combated by: Hauck, Kirchengesch. Deutschlands, I (3rd and 4th ed.),
386 sq.; Riezler, Die Vita Kiliani in Neues Archiv der Gesellschaft für ältere
deutsche Geschichtskunde, XXVIII (1903), 232-4. In opposition to the views put
forward in these works, the authenticity of the document is upheld in Hefner,
Das Leben des hl. Burchard in Archiv des historischen Vereins von Unterfranken u.
Aschaffenburg, XLV - published separately (Würzburg, 1904), pp. 33, 57; cf. also
Hagiographischer Jahresbericht für die Jahre 1904-1906 (Kempten and Munich,
1908), 110.
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