'St Finnian' or 'St. Uinniau' of
Moville (
495 -
589), was a
Christian missionary who became a legendary figure in medieval
Ireland. He should not to be confused with his namesake
Finnian of Clonard. Traditional scholarship has it that he was a descendant of
Fiatach the Fair and born in
Ulster, however this has been questioned lately by the American Celticist
Thomas Owen Clancy. He apparently studied under
Colman of Dromore and
Mochae of Noendrum, and subsequently at
Candida Casa (
Whithorn), whence he proceeded to
Rome, returning to Ireland in 540 with an integral copy of
St. Jerome's
Vulgate. He was the founder of a famous school of
Druim Fionn at about this time. Legend has it that he tried to convert
Tuan mac Cairill, a mythical figure who was the last survivor of the
Partholonian race, and that while doing so had the famous ''Scéal Tuáin maic Cairell'' recounted to him. This is a text about takings of Ireland, a source for the famous ''
Lebor Gabála Érenn''.
Finnian's most distinguished pupil at Moville was
Columba. Tradition has it that Columba's surreptitious copying of a
psalter led eventually to his exile on
Iona. What remains of the copy, together with the casket that contains it, is now in the
National Museum of Ireland. It is known as the
Cathach or Battler, and was wont to be carried by the O'Donnells in battle. The inner case was made by
Cathbar O'Donnell in 1084, but the outer is
fourteenth century work.
Finnian wrote a rule for his monks, also a penitential code, the canons of which were published by Wasserschleben in 1851.
References
★ (1) In 2001
Thomas Owen Clancy, a
Celticist at the
University of Glasgow, argued that St Finnian and
St Ninian were one and the same person, and that the confusion is due no less than to an 8th-century scribal spelling error. There is no consensus yet on this topic.
★ Saint Finnian of Moville's feast-day as it stands is the 10th of September.
External links
★
Catholic Enclyclopedia - St. Finnian of Moville
References
★ Clancy, T. O. "The real St Ninian," in ''Innes Review'', 52 (2001), pp. 1-28
★ MacKillop, James, ''A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology'', (Oxford, 1998)