Celtic and Old English Saints          28 April

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* St. Cronan of Roscrea
* St. Gerard the Pilgrim
* St. Probe and St. Germaine
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St. Cronan (Croman) of Roscrea, Abbot
-------------------------------------------------------
Born in Munster, Ireland; died c. 626. Cronan was a monk and a maker of
monks. He is patron of Roscrea, County Tipperary, one of the several
monasteries that he founded, and highly venerated in the region
Another Life:

Saint Cronan was born in Munster and grew up in Clare. When he was old
enough, he went with his two brothers Mochoinne and Mobi, to study at
various religious houses; Scattery Island and Clonmacnois were among
those they visited. When Cronan returned to his native county, he
founded a monastery at a very remote spot, Seanruis, where there are
still ruins of his settlement to be seen, near Lough Cree, which has
since dried up. There is a story that the saint lost a precious copy of
the Gospels in the lake, and although it was in the water for forty days
and nights before it was recovered, he was delighted to find not a
single letter had been destroyed. Here he was visited by Sr. Molua and
to whom he gave the Sacrament before his death, receiving in return the
charge of his monastery Clonfert-Molua.

St. Cronan was particularly noted for his generosity and hospitality,
and these particular characteristics caused him to move his monastery.
Some travellers came to pay him a visit, but so remote was the place
that they could not discover it and had to spend the night in the open
amid the bogs that surrounded the lake. Cronan was so distressed by this
that he built a new abbey at Rosecrea, where people on their journeys or
those in distress could more easily find refreshment, and this was the
beginning of the township on the road between Port Laoise and Nenagh.
There are still remains of a round tower, a Romanesque doorway, a High
Cross and a much weathered figure of St. Cronan to mark this second
foundation. The Book of Dimma in the library of Trinity College Dublin
belonged to the monastery.

Cronan was much revered by his contemporaries, and King Fingen had a
great regard for him. There is a record of his visiting Cashel, when he
was very old, just before his death, on April 28th about 620 (Baring
Gould, Benedictines, Encyclopaedia, Flanagan, Gill, Husenbeth, Montague,
Neeson).

Medieval Irish Book Shrines and Book Satchels
http://www.eskimo.com/~hmiller/cumdachs.html ]


Troparion of St Cronan Tone 1
O holy Cronan, in the monasteries that thou didst found/ thou wast known
for thy hospitality to the poor and to travellers./ Pray for us that we
may follow thine example/ and welcome all in Christ's Name, to His
glory.



St. Gerard the Pilgrim
------------------------------
Died c. 639 (?). Gerard was one of four English pilgrims--the other
three were Ardwine, Bernard, and Hugh--who died at Galinaro in southern
Italy (Benedictines).


Ss. Probe and Germaine, Virgin Martyrs
-------------------------------------------------------
4th century. These two were Irish virgins who refused marriage and were
found near Laon, then murdered (Encyclopaedia).

Sources:
========

Baring-Gould, S. (1882) The Lives of the Saints
(15 volumes) John Hodges.

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

Benedictine Monks of St. Augustine Abbey, Ramsgate.
(1966). The Book of Saints. NY: Thomas Y. Crowell.

Bowen, Paul. When We Were One: A Yearbook of the
Saints of the British Isles Complied from Ancient Calendars.

Encyclopaedia of Catholic Saints, July. (1966).
Philadelphia: Chilton Books.

Flanagan,L.A. (1990). Chronicle of Irish Saints,
The Blackstaff Press, Belfast.

Gill, F. C. (1958). The Glorious Company: Lives of Great
Christians for Daily Devotion, vol. I. London:
Epworth Press.

Husenbeth, Rev. F. C., DD, VG (ed.). (1928). Butler's
Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and Other Principal Saints.
London: Virtue & Co.

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

Neeson, E. (1967). The Book of Irish Saints,
The Mercier Press, Cork.

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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