Celtic and Old English Saints          21 September

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
* St. Landelin of Rouffach
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=


St. Landelin of Rouffach
(Landelinus)
---------------------------------------------------------------

21 September sees the commemoration of an Irish hermit and martyr, Landelin, 
or Landelinus in Latin. Roísín Ní Mheara describes what is known of his life 
and of how his memory has been kept alive for over a millenium in the area 
in which he flourished:

In Murbach we are in reach of the famous Alsatian wine route bordering the 
Rhine. There one should look out for Rouffach, a small town where, on the 
gentle slope of its vineyards large letters proclaim: CLOS ST LANDELIN.

The choicest of Alsatian wines are produced here in Rouffach, and stopping 
to savour them we honour both saint and proprietor who is proud to greet a 
guest from Landelin's homeland. Studying his wine-card we read in French: 
'Saint Landelin, an Irish prince, came to preach the Gospel. Around the year 
640 he suffered the death of martyrdom. In the eighth century the bishop of 
Strasbourg donated to the 'Monks of Landelin' stocks cultivated on the best 
wine-growing slopes of Alsace, since titled 'Saint Landelin's Vineyard'.

Landolin the Martyr and his cult

A leap over the Rgine back into the Ortenau (Breisgau) will take the curious 
to the haunts of this Landelin (Landolino; in the oldest form Lendlin). It 
is a way taken since time immemorial by the inhabitants of Rufach (Rouffach) 
and other Alsatian parishes to Ettenheimmunster. There they take part in a 
long procession, headed with a silver bust reliquary carried on a bier, and 
an old Landelinus-Litanei is sung while they trace the grounds of the 
abbatial domain, long since disappeared. Riders also make the round, 
carrying a banner and a relic of the saint, and their horses are blessed on 
the green beside the holy well. The beautiful and imposing church of St. 
Landelin adjoins the well's sanctuary. Built in 1688 and enlarged again in 
the eighteenth century to serve the never abating concourse of visitors, it 
superseded former pilgrim churches built on the spot where the saint was 
martyred. The new altar, erected by the abbot of Ettenheimmunster, carried 
an inscription in golden letters - S Landelinus Scotiae Regis Filius, 
followed by a Latin hymn of praise with an explicative second verse that 
runs:

Quinque fontes semper manant
Landelini meritis
Aegros, caecos, claudos sanant
Sors magna est inclytis

Five sources always flowing
are Landelin's merit
healing the sick, blind and lame
famed among nobility.

Today the high altar of St. Landelin's has an oil painting of the 
'glorification' of its patron, while a side-altar shows him in a wooden 
statue as a young man. Only in the baroque period did this youthful image 
appear; older ones portray Landelin as a mature, bearded man, often crowned 
in princely robes. On the ceiling his legend is told in seventeen frescoes, 
the first two of which, starting to the right of the west entrance show the 
saint's departure from Ireland.

It seems that the cult of St. Landelin set in straight after his death at 
the hands of a local huntsman, infuriated by the conduct of his hounds, 
which refused to chase deer in the vicinity but became meek and docile when 
nearing the hermit's cell. The huntsman had the backing of his pagan lord, 
Gisico, who considered Landelin a sorcerer.

There in the glad, where Landelin lay outstretched in his blood, spring 
water gushed forth from under the severed head and at each limb's extremity. 
The five sources (some legends say there were four) soon formed a basin, to 
which the natives resorted, and bathing, found healing there for many ills.

Anchorites, settling in the neighbourhood, were gathered together in the 
early eighth century by the bishop of Strassburg to form a colony and 
provide for the increasing number of pilgrims to the spot. Out of this the 
first cella monachorum grew, with time, the impressive resort we find there 
now.

It was Etto (Eddo), the succeeding bishop of Strassburg in the eighth 
century, who caused another monastery to be erected a little further up the 
valley for thirty Benedictines. Etto was deeply impressed by the miracles at 
the well, over which he had a new sanctuary built. His interest may reflect 
Irish sympathies for, before becoming bishop of Strassburg, he was abbot of 
Reichenau, in direct succession to Pirmin.

Etto's monastery, built in honour of Landelin, was given the name of its 
founder - Monachium divi Ettonis - and became 'Ettenheim-Munster'. 
Incorporating the pilgrim church of St Landelin's, it cherished the saint's 
memory through more than a thousand troubled years.

Nothing remains but a monastery wall of this once great seat of learning, a 
centre of theology and music, which radiated into the Rhine valley and 
influenced its spiritual and cultural life for centuries. The percussions 
caused by the French Revolution and the Secularization of 1803 saw its 
library scattered, its archives in ashes, its monks finally dispersed and 
the huge complex razed to the ground after having served as a a factory. 
This all has left us with a great void, concerning Ettenheimmunster's early 
history and also that of its Irish patron saint.

Of the few items salvaged from the abbey after confiscation in 1803 the most 
precious was the bust reliquary of Landeling, made in 1506 as a recipient 
for the saint's skull. It was taken to the pilgrim church of St. Landelin, 
acting from then on as the parish church, and is kept in the sacristy. It is 
exposed on special occasions. That it was saved goes to the credit of an 
undaunted parish priest, pouring condemnation on the heads of those involved 
in transporting the bust on a cart to the smelting foundry. To eschew the 
fires of hell they unloaded it, dropping it into a ditch.

The reliquary, a prime work of art of the late Gothic period, portrays the 
bust of St. Landelin in chased silver. Bejewelled and embossed, it contains 
the saint's skull, and has, inserted on the chest, a figuration of the 
martyrdom, whereby circles around the outstretched limbs and severed head 
demonstrate the pools of rising water. Scenes from the life of the saint 
surround the base of the reliquary, and these are especially interesting for 
they follow early legends that were recorded from oral tradition. Here the 
true peregrinus confronts us, with satchel and staff. This is what we are 
told:

Crossing the Rhine, into the wilds of the Alemanni, Landelin makes his first 
stop at the house of a certain Edulf, where the village of Altdorf now 
stands, at the foot of the northern Black Forest range. Here he wanders off 
up the valley of the Undiz to where it is joined by the Luttenbach, a little 
stream - today Lautenbach - and builds himself a hut in the forest glade. 
Animals befriend him, especially deer, who brings him food. There fate 
overtakes him.

Full of misgivings, Edulf's wife and three daughters set out from Altdorf to 
search for Landelin, accompanied by a guide. One of the daughters is blind, 
and when they come across the body of the murdered hermit, she is left 
behind weeping, while the others go for help. She touches her eyes with 
fingers stained from Landelin's blood, and her eyesight is restored. 
Returning with the intention of bringing their friend's corpse back and over 
the Rhine to receive a Christian burial, which could not be afforded on the 
right side of the river, Edulf's family are convinced by the miraculous cure 
of the hermit's sanctity. They carry his remains down the valley, to a place 
where, having put the load down for a rest, they find it impossible to raise 
it again. Even a team of oxen brought there with a cart, cannot move the 
corpse. This, it is decided, is a sign from heaven that Landelin wished to 
be buried there, and that they proceed to do. They stick the hermit's staff 
into the grave to mark the spot. It sprouts green leaves and eventually 
grows into a huge oak tree.

The church that was built there, where first anchorites had their hermitage, 
is the Munchweier parish church of today. There under the mensa of the altar 
is the tomb with Landelin's relics. The centre of the cult, however, has 
always been the site of his martyrdom and the wellhouse with the holy 
sources.

Since Landelin's Irish origin is today questioned for no other reason than 
his name 'sounds Frankish', it would be gratifying to find in the 
genealogies of Ireland a (F)lann, born around 600, who went abroad on a 
pilgrimage of no return.

Source:
========
Roísín Ní Mheara, Early Irish Saints in Europe - Their Sites and their 
Stories (Seanchas Ard Mhacha, 2001), 123-127.
http://brigid-undertheoak.blogspot.com/2009/09/lesser-known-irish-saints-landelin-of.html


These Lives are archived at:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/celt-saints
***************************************** 

Reply via email to