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Hierarch · 5th century

Patrick Enlightener of Ireland

Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Patrick, Equal-to-the-Apostles, Enlightener of Ireland

c. 387 – March 17, c. 461 (death dates proposed range from 457 to 461/2 to 492/3)

Also known as Patrick of Ireland

A former captive who returned to evangelize all Ireland.

Life

Saint Patrick, Enlightener of Ireland, was a fifth-century missionary bishop who, after years of captivity in Ireland as a youth, returned to evangelize the island and is venerated in the Orthodox Church as a pre-schism Western saint and Equal-to-the-Apostles. His feast is kept on March 17 (March 30 New Style).

Born around 387 in Roman Britain, traditionally at Kilpatrick near Dumbarton, he was seized by Irish raiders at sixteen and enslaved for six years as a herdsman before escaping. Drawn back by a vision of the Irish people calling him, he trained for the clergy in Gaul and was sent to Ireland as a bishop, where he organized the Church, baptized thousands, and established his head church at Armagh.

Two of his Latin writings survive — the Confessio, a semi-autobiographical defense, and the Letter to the soldiers of Coroticus — making him one of the earliest figures of the British and Irish Church whose own words are preserved.

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Timeline

  1. c. 387 Birth in Roman Britain Born to a Romano-British Christian family, by tradition at Kilpatrick near Dumbarton, son of the deacon Calpurnius and Conchessa.
  2. c. 403 Captured and enslaved Seized at sixteen by Irish raiders and enslaved as a herdsman to the chieftain Milchu in Dalriada (County Antrim) for six years.
  3. c. 409 Escape from Ireland After a vision, fled some two hundred miles to the coast, took ship, and eventually returned through Gaul to Britain.
  4. c. 432 Consecration and commission Ordained priest under Germanus of Auxerre, consecrated bishop, and by tradition commissioned by Pope Celestine I for the Irish mission.
  5. 433 Mission begins; Paschal fire at Tara Landed in Ireland and, on Easter Sunday, kindled the Paschal fire at Tara in defiance of the king's edict.
  6. 445 Foundation of Armagh Established his primary church at Armagh, which became the head church of Ireland.
  7. March 17, c. 461 Repose at Saul Died at Saul, Downpatrick; Saint Tassach administered his last sacraments. Proposed death years range from 457 to 492/3.

Contributions & Legacy

Origins and Captivity

Patrick was born around 387, by tradition at Kilpatrick near Dumbarton in present-day Scotland; other proposed birthplaces include Banna (Birdoswald) on Hadrian's Wall in Cumbria, and locations in Somerset and Wales. He came from a Romano-British Christian family of standing: his father Calpurnius served as a decurion and deacon, and his grandfather Potitus was a priest. His mother Conchessa was said to be a near relative of Saint Martin of Tours. By his own admission Patrick was not religious in his youth, considering himself, in his words, idle and callow.

At the age of sixteen he was captured by Irish raiders and carried into slavery in Ireland, where he served as a herdsman for a chieftain named Milchu in Dalriada (present-day County Antrim). For six years he tended flocks in the valley of the Braid and on the slopes of Slemish. During this captivity his prayer life deepened greatly; tradition relates that he recited as many as a hundred prayers a day.

Escape and Formation

After a vision instructing him to flee, Patrick traveled roughly two hundred miles to the coast, boarded a ship, and after a three-day voyage and a long journey through wilderness reached Gaul, eventually returning to Britain. He then received a further vision in which the Irish people called him to return to them.

He pursued clerical training in Gaul, associated by tradition with Saint Martin's monastery at Tours and the island sanctuary of Lerins, and placed himself under Bishop Germanus of Auxerre, who ordained him to the priesthood. He afterward received episcopal consecration and, by tradition, was commissioned by Pope Celestine I around 432 for the Irish mission.

The Mission to Ireland

Patrick landed in Ireland probably in the summer of 433, by tradition at the Vantry River near Wicklow Head. His most famous confrontation took place at Tara on Easter Sunday, where he kindled the Paschal fire in defiance of the king's edict, processing in full episcopal vestments. He is traditionally said to have used the shamrock — three parts yet one plant — to explain the Holy Trinity to the chieftains, three divine persons in one God.

He approached the tribal chieftains for permission to evangelize, converting wealthy women and the sons of kings, ordaining priests, and establishing an episcopal administration of monastic character. In 445 he established his primary church at Armagh, which became the head church of Ireland. He also withdrew for periods of solitary prayer, spending forty days in fasting on Croagh Patrick and visiting the island of Lough Derg, which became a famous place of pilgrimage.

Writings

Two Latin writings are securely attributed to Patrick: the Confessio (Declaration), a semi-autobiographical defense of his mission, and the Epistola ad milites Corotici (Letter to the soldiers of Coroticus), in which he excommunicated a British king whose soldiers had killed and enslaved some of Patrick's converts. He also composed ecclesiastical canons together with the bishops Auxilius and Isserninus before 460.

The Lorica, known as the Deer's Cry or Saint Patrick's Breastplate (Faeth Fiada), a prayer of Trinitarian theology and spiritual protection, is also attributed to him by tradition.

Death and Legacy

Patrick died at Saul, Downpatrick, on March 17; the death dates proposed by various sources range from 457 to 461/2 and as late as 492/3. By tradition Saint Tassach administered his last sacraments. He was buried near Saul, where the cathedral of Down later arose, his remains said to be wrapped in a shroud woven by Saint Brigid.

Venerated in the Orthodox Church as Equal-to-the-Apostles and Enlightener of Ireland, Patrick is remembered as the principal evangelizer of the Irish and the founder of its episcopal church.

Relics & Shrines

Patrick is traditionally held to be buried at Down Cathedral in Downpatrick, alongside Saint Brigid and Saint Columba.

Saint Patrick's Bell (Clog Phadraig) survives in the National Museum of Ireland, encased in a shrine made for King Domnall Ua Lochlainn between 1091 and 1105. Lough Derg and Croagh Patrick, associated with his periods of prayer and fasting, became enduring sites of pilgrimage.

Notable Works

Related Saints

Notes

Pre-schism Western saint venerated in Orthodoxy.

Sources: Synaxarion