St Ethernan: a philological and historical case-study of a Pictish saint

<p>The persistant endurance of local saints’ cults is an attribute of the ecclesiastical culture of the medieval Celtic societies. Many of these early saints are historically obscure, and this is equally true of the Pictish regions where evidence of early Christian figures is scanty and poo...

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Main Author: Kilpatrick, K
Format: Thesis
Published: 2006
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author Kilpatrick, K
author_facet Kilpatrick, K
author_sort Kilpatrick, K
collection OXFORD
description <p>The persistant endurance of local saints’ cults is an attribute of the ecclesiastical culture of the medieval Celtic societies. Many of these early saints are historically obscure, and this is equally true of the Pictish regions where evidence of early Christian figures is scanty and poorly documented, although much of the material of the later medieval saints’ cults in Scotland is derived from the eighth through tenth centuries. We find that the majority of the saints’ cults in Scotland are to Irish-born ecclesiastics associated with the Columban Church. Most of these saints flourished between years 563 (the year in which St Colum Cille founded the monastery of Iona), and c. 710 when the Pictish king Nechton mac Derili (c. 709-724) converted to the Roman tradition by means of Northumbrian influences.</p> <p>[Introduction continues in thesis]</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:c887122a-c83e-4cfd-bf83-3a009eae45c62022-03-27T06:52:52ZSt Ethernan: a philological and historical case-study of a Pictish saintThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdccuuid:c887122a-c83e-4cfd-bf83-3a009eae45c6ORA Deposit2006Kilpatrick, K<p>The persistant endurance of local saints’ cults is an attribute of the ecclesiastical culture of the medieval Celtic societies. Many of these early saints are historically obscure, and this is equally true of the Pictish regions where evidence of early Christian figures is scanty and poorly documented, although much of the material of the later medieval saints’ cults in Scotland is derived from the eighth through tenth centuries. We find that the majority of the saints’ cults in Scotland are to Irish-born ecclesiastics associated with the Columban Church. Most of these saints flourished between years 563 (the year in which St Colum Cille founded the monastery of Iona), and c. 710 when the Pictish king Nechton mac Derili (c. 709-724) converted to the Roman tradition by means of Northumbrian influences.</p> <p>[Introduction continues in thesis]</p>
spellingShingle Kilpatrick, K
St Ethernan: a philological and historical case-study of a Pictish saint
title St Ethernan: a philological and historical case-study of a Pictish saint
title_full St Ethernan: a philological and historical case-study of a Pictish saint
title_fullStr St Ethernan: a philological and historical case-study of a Pictish saint
title_full_unstemmed St Ethernan: a philological and historical case-study of a Pictish saint
title_short St Ethernan: a philological and historical case-study of a Pictish saint
title_sort st ethernan a philological and historical case study of a pictish saint
work_keys_str_mv AT kilpatrickk stethernanaphilologicalandhistoricalcasestudyofapictishsaint