APART from the
fabulous accretions which obscure the narrative, it may be that
Kentigern's biographers were warranted in tracing his parentage from
Thaney or Tenew, daughter of the "half-pagan" Loth who ruled the
Lothian province " in Northern Britannia." Culross, likewise, may
have been his birthplace, but the further statement that he received
his education and training at the hands of St. Servanus is an
obvious anachronism. Servanus, in the end of the seventh or
beginning of the eighth century, was associated with the
establishment of religious communities such as those which, by a
similar anachronism, are attributed to Kentigern's agency, and it
has been suggested that in this way the names of these two apostles
of Christianity have been linked together, notwithstanding the
divergence of their labours in point of time. [Skene, ii. 260.]
In an early chapter
of the Life Joceline states that the name, which in the language of
the country was originally "Munghu," meant in Latin cares
amicus—dear or beloved one —and that subsequently Servanus had named
him Kentigern, which was interpreted the head lord. Joceline then
tells that St. Kentigern, to escape the malice of his fellow
students, took his departure from Culross and in the course of his
journey lodged at Kernack in the house of a holy man, Fregus or
Fergus, who died on the night of his arrival. Next morning the body
was placed on a wain to which two untamed bulls were yoked and
enjoined to carry their burden to the place which the Lord had
provided for it. The bulls, in no way disobeying the voice of
Kentigern, who along with many others accompanied them, came by a
straight road as far as Cathures, "which is now called Glasgu," and
halted at a cemetery which had long before been consecrated by St.
Ninian. There the body of Fergus was placed in a tomb which in
Joceline's day was " encircled by a delicious density of
overshadowing trees, in witness of the sanctity and the reverence
due to him who is buried there." [St. Kentigern, p. 52.] At a later
date the south transept of the Cathedral was erected over what was
supposed to be the spot of interment, and the lower aisle or crypt
was dedicated to Fergus. On a stone in the roof over the entrance a
representation of the saint extended on the car is carved, along
with the inscription "This is the Ile of Car Fergus"; but the
completion of the aisle belongs to the closing period in the
building of the cathedral.
The reference to St.
Ninian's connection with Glasgow is consistent with the information
supplied by the Venerable Bede, who states that Ninian successfully
undertook the evangelization of the Southern Picts, whose territory
was situated beyond the Forth. Glasgow was thus in the route of the
founder of Candida Casa, on his northern mission, and it is more
than likely that he made converts among the Strathclyde Britons,
including those in the Glasgow district from whom he apparently had
a grant of ground for a cemetery. Trained at Rome in the doctrine
and discipline of the Western Church he was among the earliest of
the Christian missionaries to this country, and the churches,
chapels and altarages dedicated to him are numerous. [St. Ninian,
pp. xlv, xiii-xvii.] An altarage in Glasgow Cathedral and the Leper
Hospital and Chapel in Gorbals were dedicated to St. Ninian. The
period of his activity in Scotland dates from the year 397, when he
founded the church at Whithorn, in a district which then formed part
of the Roman province and whose inhabitants were provincial Britons,
and it is believed he lived about twenty years after the Romans
finally left Britain.
If Joceline's
allusions to St. Ninian are historically correct the influence of
his teaching seems to have been altogether extinct in Glasgow. We
are told that, at the time of Kentigern's arrival and after some
manifestation of the new evangelist's many miraculous gifts, the
king and clergy of the Cambrian region, with other Christians
"albeit they were few in number," consulted what was to be done to
restore the good estate of the Church, which was well-nigh
destroyed, and thereupon they elected St. Kentigern to be the
shepherd and bishop of their souls, and he was duly consecrated by a
bishop brought from Ireland for the purpose. [St. Kentigern, P. 54.]
Though the narrative is tinged with the experiences of twelfth
century ceremonial it may have a solid enough foundation in fact.
Joceline states the means adopted by him for procuring information
for his theme. He wandered through the streets and lanes of the
city—a phrase, implying no more, perhaps, than that he had made a
diligent inquiry in all likely quarters—seeking the recorded life of
St. Kentigern, and in addition to an already known biography,
"stained throughout by an uncultivated diction," he had found
another little volume "written in the Scotic dialect," filled from
end to end with solecisms, but containing at greater length the life
and acts of the holy bishop. [Ib. pp. 29, 30.] From such sources
Joceline put together the matter collected, "seasoning with Roman
salt what had been composed in a barbarous way," or, in other words,
transforming the uncouth language into elegant diction. The "already
known biography" is supposed to have been that compiled by an
unknown ecclesiastic in the time of Bishop Herbert (1147-64).
About the "little
volume" nothing is known, but it may have been from that work that
particulars regarding the bishop's personal appearance and dress
were obtained. He is said to have been of middle stature, rather
inclining to tallness, he was of robust strength, capable of
enduring great fatigue, beautiful to look upon and graceful in form.
His outward cheerfulness was the sign of that inward peace which
flooded all things with holy joy and exultation, and fleeing from
hypocrisy, he carefully taught his followers to avoid it. With
regard to dress " he used the roughest hair-cloth next the skin,
then a garment of leather made of the skin of the goats, then a cowl
like a fisherman's bound on him, above which, clothed in a white
alb, he always wore a stole over his shoulders. He bore a pastoral
staff, not rounded and gilded and gemmed, as may be seen nowadays,
but of simple wood and merely bent. He had in his hand the
Manual-book, always ready to exercise his ministry, whenever
necessity or reason demanded. And so by the whiteness of his dress
he expressed the purity of his inner life and avoided vainglory."
[St. Kentigern, p. 57.]
What is mentioned
here about the form of the pastoral staff agrees with what is known
regarding the early staves of the British and Irish bishops which
were very short and simple. It would accordingly be croziers of that
description which St. Columba and St. Kentigern exchanged with each
other when they met at "the place called Mellindenor." Joceline
states that the staff which Columba gave was preserved for a long
time in the Church of St. Wilfrid, bishop and confessor, at Ripon;
and, in corroboration of this assertion, Walter Bower, Fordun's
continuator, who wrote about the year 1447, says that in his time it
was still to be seen in that church, where it was held in great
veneration, and preserved in a case inlaid with gold and pearls.
[lb. pp. 343, 106, 109 ; Macgeorge, pp. 14, 15.]
Being only in his
twenty-fifth year, Kentigern at first remonstrated against
ordination at so early an age, but finally acquiescing in his
destiny he "established his cathedral seat in `Glesgu' where he
united to himself a famous and God-beloved family of servants of
God, who lived after the fashion of the primitive church under the
apostles, without private property, in holy discipline and divine
service." But this peaceful course of existence was interrupted by a
plot against his life, instigated by the apostate King Morken and
his kin. Kentigern fled to Wales, where he sojourned for about
twenty years, founding churches and also establishing a monastery.
The site chosen for the monastery was in a vale, at the junction of
the river Elwy with the Clwyd, a name which it has been conjectured
may have been given to it by Kentigern from some fancied resemblance
to the river and valley in the north where he had his original seat.
Joceline gives a description of the work of the monastery, which is
not improbably applicable also to the Glasgow establishment after
making allowance for exaggeration in numbers and other particulars.
Of 965 monks in all, 300 who were unlettered attended to
agriculture, the care of cattle and other necessary duties outside
the monastery. To another 300 were assigned duties within the
cloister, such as doing the ordinary work, preparing food and
building workshops. The remaining 365, a lettered class, celebrated
divine service within the church, and those who were more advanced
in wisdom and holiness, and fitted to teach others, sometimes
accompanied Kentigern when going forth to perform his episcopal
office. [St. Kentigern, p. 79 ; Celtic Scotland, ii. pp. 189-90.]
Neither at St. Asaph's nor at Glasgow is it likely that there would
be accommodation for nearly so large an assemblage of monks, though
it may be supposed that the division of labour and duties would be
somewhat on the lines indicated in the narrative. |