THE CULDEES OF DRUIDICAL
DAYS.
So many questions have been raised concerning the mysterious community,
called Culdees, and such various opinions have been expressed
concerning them, that one may be excused inquiring whether in their midst
we can trace reminiscences of old Irish faiths. The notion has been long
prevalent that the Culdees were only Scotch, having nothing to do with
Ireland; whereas, they were originally from that country.
Their most bitter enemy in early Christian days was the Venerable Bede,
who denied their claims to orthodoxy. But, since he was a Saxon, and a
priest under Roman rule, his charges have been slightly heeded. Their
maintenance of an hereditary priesthood was not merely Jewish, as he
supposed, but of Druidical sympathy.
Prof. Rhys judiciously remarks--"Irish Druidism absorbed a certain
amount of Christianity, and it would be a problem of considerable
difficulty to fix on the period where it ceased to be Druidism, and from
which onwards it could be said of Christianity in any restricted sense of
that term."
As both St. Patrick and St. Columba have been regarded by some modern
writers as simply Culdees, and not following orthodox views and methods,
might not the many stories told of their conflicts with Druids have been
brought forth by ancient chroniclers, in refutation of the slanders abroad
concerning their heretical, Druidical tendency? The same supposition may
be equally directed against the early Welsh missionaries, though these
were almost all from Ireland. Certainly their assumed miraculous powers
inclined to the old traditions of Druidical performances. They had all of
them a control over the powers of nature, and had' even raised the dead;
at least, their biographers claimed it for them.
Dr. Carpenter speaks thus:--"The incidents in St. Columba's life have
been originally recorded in the contemporary fasti of his religious
foundation, and transmitted in unbroken succession to Abbot Adamnan, who
first compiled a complete Vita of his great predecessor, of which
there exists a MS copy, whose authenticity there is no reason to doubt,
which dates back to the early part of the eighth century, not much more
than one hundred. years after St. Columba's death. Now, Adamnan's Vita
credits its subject with the possession of every kind of miraculous power.
He cured hundreds of people afflicted with inveterate diseases, accorded
safety to storm-tossed vessels, himself walked across the sea to his
island home, drove demons out of milk-pails, outwitted sorcerers, and gave
supernatural powers to domestic implements."
All this reminds one strongly of the powers attributed by tradition to
the Druids of the period, and points suspiciously to some outgrowth from
Druidism in his case.
Columba was an Irishman of Donegal, and died, as it is said, in 597.
Adamnan declares that his staff (without which a Druid could do but
little), when once left behind at Iona, went of itself over the sea to its
master in Ireland. He founded a monastery at Durmagh, King's Co. At Iona
the ruins are those of the Cluniac monks; for, says Boulbee, "not a trace
can well remain of the primitive settlement of Columba." But Iona was
certainly a Druidical college at first.
Like the Druids before them, the Culdees formed communities. Richey
tells us--"The Church consisted of isolated monasteries, which were
practically independent of each other; the clergy exercised no judicial
power over the laity." On the other hand, Wood-Martin of Sligo supposes,
"Christianity must have been first introduced into Ireland by"
missionaries of the Greek Church." He notes the fact that Bishops were to
be found in almost every village. It is also pointed out that Columba
never sought Papal sanction for the conversion of the Picts.
The Iona tonsure, like that of St. Patrick's time, was the shaving of
all the hair in front of a line drawn over the top of the head from ear to
ear. The Roman, as all know, was a circle at top, and appears to have been
first adopted at Iona early in the eighth century. The first, or crescent,
shape was Druidical.
It was about that date, also, that the Roman way of keeping Easter
succeeded the so called Irish mode. At the Council of Whitby, Colman of
Iona was outvoted, though protesting the antiquity of his own practice.
McFirbis's MS. speaks thus of the year 896--"In this year the men of Erin
consented to receive jurisdiction and one rule from Adamnan respecting the
celebration of Easter on Sunday on the 14th of the moon of April, and the
coronal tonsure of Peter was performed upon the clerics of Erin." Again,
it says, "The clergy of Erin held many Synods and they used to come to
those Synods with weapons, so that pitched battles used to be fought
between them, and many used to be slain." After this authority, one need
not wonder at the assertion that Irish Druids formerly led contending
parties.
Iona had certainly a Druidical college till the community was expelled
by Columba for his own community and the Highlanders still recognize it as
the Druid's Isle. An old statistical work says, "The Druids
undoubtedly possessed Iona before the introduction of Christianity." It
must be admitted that the Culdees wore a white dress, as did the Druids,
and that they occupied places which had a Druidical reputation. They used
the Asiatic cross, now called that of St. Andrew's. Dr. J. Moore is
pleased to say, "The Culdees seem to have adopted nearly all the Pagan
symbols of the neighbourhood."
As to the origin of the word, Reeves might well remark in his notes on
Columba's Life, "Culdee is the most abused term in Scotic church history."
As the Ceile De, the Four Masters mentions them in 806. Todd
writes of them thus--"The earliest Christian missionaries found the native
religion extinct, and themselves took the name of Culdees from inhabiting
the Druids' empty cells." Jamieson styles them Culdees or
Keldees, Kyldees, Kylledei. O'Brien has them the Irish Ceile
De, servant of God. Another call them Clann Dia, Children of
God. Barber considered them Mithraists.
Higgins, in Celtic Druids, will have Culdees only changed
Druids, and regarded the Irish hereditary Abbots of Iona, the Coarbs
or Curbs, as simply Corybantes. Latin writers knew them as
Colidei or God-worshippers. Bishop Nicholson thought them Cool Dubh,
from their black hoods. As C and G are commutable letters in
Irish, we have Giolla De, Servant of God. The word Culdee was used
by Boece in 1526. Dr. Reeves, in the Irish Academy, calls the Servus
Dei by the Celtic Celi-Dé, and notes the name Ceile-n-De
applied to the Sligo Friars in the Four Masters, 1595. Monks were
reputed Keledei in the thirteenth century. Brockham's Lexicon finds
regulars and seculars called so in the ninth century.
The Four Masters record that "Maenach, a Celae-Dé, came
across the sea westward to establish laws in Ireland." In the poem of
Moelruein, it is the Rule of the Celae-n-dé. The Keledei
of Scotland, according to Dr. Reeves, had the same discipline as the Irish
Colidei. One Collideus of the Armagh church died in 1574.
One Celi-dé of Clonmacnois, dying in 1059, left several sons, who
became Abbots after him.
The canons of York were Culdees in Atheistan's time. Ceadda, Wilfrid's
predecessor, was a Culdee. They were also called, from their mode of
celebrating Easter, Quartadecimans. The last known in Scotland were
in 1352. As Bede says, the Irish, being Culdees, would as soon communicate
with pagans as with Saxons; the later following Latin or Romish
Christianity.
Ireland, as reported by Giraldus, had a chapel of the Colidei on
an island of Tipperary, as he declared some were on islands of Wales. They
were in Armagh in 920. Ussher, Archbishop of Armagh, asserts that the
Northern Irish, "continued still their old tradition," in spite of the
declaration of Pope Honorius. In Tirechan's Life of St Patrick,
Cele-de came from Briton to Ireland in 919; but in 811 some were said
to have been miraculously conveyed across the sea. Bede, who opposed them,
whether from Ireland or Scotland, was shocked at their holding his
religion "in no account at all," nor communicating with his faithful "in
anything more than with pagans." He banished those who came to his
quarter.
He found these Irish, Welsh, and Scotch Christians to have, in addition
to many heresies, the Jewish and Druidical system of hereditary
priesthood. Property of the Church even descended from father to son; and,
says Dr. Reeves, "was practically entailed to members of certain
families." He adds that they were understood in the 12th century as "a
religious order of clerks who lived in Societies, under a Superior, within
a common enclosure, but in detached cells; associated in a sort of
collegiate rather than nobical brotherhood."
Giraldus, as well as Bede, complained of their hereditary priesthood.
The same principle prevailed in the Druidical region of Brittany, and only
yielded to the force of the Council of Tours in 1127.
Although St. Columba had no exalted idea of the other sex, saying,
"Where there is a cow there will be a woman, and where there is a woman
there will be mischief"--yet his followers practised marriage But while,
says Mylin, they "after the usage of the Eastern Church, had wives they
abstained from them, when it came to their turn to minister." The "Woman's
Island" of Loch Lomond was one of the female sanctuaries on such an
occasion. Their opposition to celibacy brought them much discredit with
other priests.
Archbishop Lanfranc was shocked at their not praying to Saints, not
dedicating churches to the Virgin or Saints, not using the Roman Service,
and because, wrote he, "Infants are baptized by immersion, without the
consecrated chrism."
St. Bernard was distressed at what he heard of these Irish Culdees, who
had no Confession, never paid tithes, and lived like wild beasts, as they
disdained marriage by the clergy. In his righteous anger, he stigmatized
them as "beasts, absolute barbarians, a stubborn, stiff necked, and
ungovernable generation, and abominable; Christian in name, but in
reality pagans." This harsh language is not worse than that employed by
the Pope, when he entreated our Henry II. to take over Ireland, so as to
bring the Irish into the Christian Church, compel them to pay tithes, and
so civilize them.
One would fancy, with Algernon Herbert, that the Culdees performed
secret rites, and indulged, like their Druidical fathers, in human
sacrifice, from the legend of St. Oran being buried underneath the church
erected by Columba, to propitiate the Powers, and secure good fortune. In
that case, however, St. Oran offered to be the victim, so as to avert evil
from bad spirits.
If St. Patrick, St. Columba, and other early Irish Saints had been true
monks, why did St. Bernard, in his Life of Malachy, Archbishop of
Armagh, 1130, say that up to that time there was not a monk in Ireland?
Columba certainly took Culdeeism to Scotland from Ireland. In the Bog of
Monaincha are two islands. On one was a monastery for men, their wives
occupying the neighbouring Woman's Isle. Giraldus Cambrensis, who wrote of
the Community of Monaincha in the twelfth century, called it the church of
the old religion, and politely designated as "Demons" all who belonged to
that former church. The Abbey church, the ruins of which still remain, and
which was 38 feet by 18 feet in size, was erected after the time of
Giraldus.
Thus R. F. Gould, in his Freemasonry, had some grounds for
saying--"The Druidism of our ancestors must have been powerfully
influenced by the paganism of the Empire at the period when Christianity
dawned on Britain." He deemed it probable that the early clerics of
Christianity, "the cultores deorum, the worshippers of the gods,
gradually merged into cultores Dei, worshippers of the true God."
So it might be that, as Higgins wrote, "The Culdees were the last remains
of the Druids." |