Celtic and Old English Saints          27 April

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* St. Assic of Elphin
* St. Enoder of Wales
* St. Winebald of Beverley
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St. Assic of Elphin, Bishop
(also known as Asic, Assicus, Tassach)
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Died c. 490. Bishop and Patron of Elphin, in Ireland, one of St.
Patrick's converts, and his worker in iron.

In the "Tripartite Life of St Patrick" (ed. Whitley Stokes) we read:

"Bishop St Assic was Patrick's coppersmith, and made altars and square
bookcases. Besides, he made our saint's patens in honour of Bishop
Patrick, and of them I have seen three square patens, that is, a paten
in the Church of Patrick in Armagh, and another in the Church of Elphin,
and a third in the great-church of Donough-patrick (at Carns near
Tulsk)."

Asicus was a coppersmith and was married when he first met St. Patrick.
In time he was made the first abbot-bishop of Elphim Monastery in
Roscommon, Ireland. Humble and not believing he was worthy of the
office, Asicus went to an island in Donegal Bay, where he resigned his
rank and became a hermit. After seven years the monks of Elphin found
him and persuaded him to return to the monastery. He died at Raith
Cungilor on the return journey.

St. Assicus was a most expert metal worker, and was also renowned as a
bellfounder. Some remarkable specimens of his handicraft are extant.
There is confusion between this saint and Tassach (April 14), which
suggests that they may be the same person. They were both skilled metal
workers, their names are similar, and they died the same year.

Of his last days the following graphic description is given by
Archbishop Healy:

"Assicus himself in shame because of a lie told either by him, or, as
others say, of him, fled into Donegal, and for seven years abode in the
island of Rathlin O'Birne. Then his monks sought him out, and after much
labour found him in the mountain glens, and tried to bring him home to
his own monastery at Elphin. But he fell sick by the way and died with
them in the wilderness. So they buried the venerable old man in the
churchyard of Rath Cunga, now Racoon, in the Barony of Tirhugh, County
Donegal. The old churchyard is there still, though now disused, on the
summit of a round hillock close to the left of the road from
Ballyshannon to Donegal, about a mile to the south of the village of
Ballintra. We sought in vain for any trace of an inscribed stone in the
old churchyard. He fled from men during life, and, like Moses, his grave
is hidden from them in death."

His feast is celebrated 27 April, as is recorded in the "Martyrology of
Tallaght" under that date.

Troparion of St Asic Tone 4
Thou didst glorify God both by preaching the Word and by thy
coppersmith's skill,/ O glorious Father Asic./ Thou wast abbot and
bishop and didst die a hermit./ Pray to Christ our God that we may find
grace/ to devote our gifts and skills to His service.


St. Enoder (Cynidr, Keneder, Quidic), Abbot
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6th century. Saint Enoder is said to be one of the grandsons of the
prolific Welsh chieftain, Brychan. He may be identical to Saint Enodoch.
Enoder's memory is perpetuated by Llangynidr in Brecknockshire, and
possibly St. Enoder or Enodoc in Cornwall (Benedictines).


St. Winebald (Winewald) of Beverley, Abbot
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Died c. 731. Saint Winebald succeeded Saint Bercthun (f.d. September 24)
as abbot of Beverley (Benedictines).


Sources:
========

Benedictine Monks of St. Augustine Abbey, Ramsgate.
(1947). The Book of Saints. NY: Macmillan.

Montague, H. P. (1981). The saints and martyrs of Ireland.
Guildford: Billing & Sons.

For All the Saints:
http://www.saintpatrickdc.org/ss/ss-index.htm

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