Áed mac Bricc
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Áed mac Bricc (died 589) was an
Irish Irish may refer to: Common meanings * Someone or something of, from, or related to: ** Ireland, an island situated off the north-western coast of continental Europe ***Éire, Irish language name for the isle ** Northern Ireland, a constituent unit ...
bishop and saint.


Life

Áed's principal church was at
Rahugh Rahugh or ''Ráith Aeda Meic Bric'' is an early Christian site founded by Áed mac Bricc (also referred to as Saint Hugh of Rahugh) in the 6th century, inside a ráth or ringfort. The site, located about 8 km north of Tullamore along the L ...
(Ráith Áeda Meic Bricc) in modern County Westmeath. He was regarded as a patron saint of the
Uí Néill The Uí Néill (Irish pronunciation: ; meaning "descendants of Niall") are Irish dynasties who claim descent from Niall Noígíallach (Niall of the Nine Hostages), a historical King of Tara who died c. 405. They are generally divided into t ...
and was said to be a descendant of
Fiachu mac Néill Fiachu mac Néill (flourished 507–514) was a king of Uisnech in Mide of the Ui Neill dynasty. He was the son of the high king Niall Noígíallach. According to the king list in the ''Book of Leinster'', he succeeded his brother Conall Cremthain ...
. When his brothers refused to allow him a share of the land his father had maintained, Áed carried off a girl who belonged to them. He hoped to force his brothers to give him his patrimony through this injury, but then he met the bishop St Illann, who convinced him to give up his claims to the land and to let the girl go."Life of Áed mac Bricc", Monastic Matrix
/ref> Áed mac Bricc's life in the Codex Salmanticensis presents Áed as a peacemaker between Munster and the Uí Néill, and between Mide and Tethbae, befitting his cross-border descent through his mother, Eithne, from the neighbouring Munster people of Múscraige Tíre (north-west co. Tipperary).Stalmans, Nathalie, and Charles-Edwards, T. M., ''Meath, saints of (act. c.400–c.900)'', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2007
An early Latin ''Life'' of Áed, perhaps dating from the period 750–850, survives.Emmons also provides a translation and commentary for the version of the vita in CS. See Appendix A in his "Limits of Late Antiquity" (2002); he updated the preface and translation in 2017 and made it freely available at his page on academia.edu. Although the ''Life'' borrows from Adomnán's life of Columba, a copy of which may have been obtained from the nearby monastery of Durrow, its central concerns are with local violence and with the poverty and insecurity of women, especially nuns. Áed seems to have had a profound interest in the well-being of religious women. He frequently visited settlements of holy virgins who received him with the respect due to a man of his position. On one occasion, when he perceived that the girl serving him was pregnant he fled from the building both to avoid the pollution and to shame her. She confessed her sins and did penance. Áed was not one to leave someone under his care in a difficult situation; he blessed her womb and the baby disappeared as if it had never been there.


Patronage

Medieval incantations against headache enumerate bodily organs to be protected. One 8th-century Latin hymn from Lake Constance using this device is addressed to St. Aid "mechprech", who has been identified as Aed Mac Bricc, Bishop of Killare, 6th century.Isler H, Hasenfratz H, and O'Neill T., "A sixth-century Irish headache cure and its use in a south German monastery", ''Cephalalgia'', 1996 Dec;16(8):536-40
see also the minor changes suggested by JBT Emmons in "A ''Lorica'' Charm against Headache Invoking St. Aed mac Bricc," 14 May 2021, available as a free pdf. at his site on academia.edu.
An episode in the ''Life'' in which he heals Brigit of headache is echoed in the ninth-century Irish life of Brigit. A stone close to the existing church is still associated with the curing of headaches.


References


Sources and further reading

* Charles-Edwards, T. M. (2000), ''Early Christian Ireland'', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, * Emmons, James B. Tschen. "The Limits of Late Antiquity: The Life of St. Aed mac Bricc and the Irish Literati in Late Antiquity." Diss. UC Santa Barbara, 2002. * Emmons, Jim Tschen. "Spiritual Landscapes: The Late Antique Desert in Ireland." In ''The Rhetoric of Power in Late Antiquity: Religion and Politics in Byzantium, Europe and the Early Islamic World''. Robert M. Frakes, Elizabeth dePalma Digeser, and Justin Stephens, eds. London: I.B. Tauris, 2010. pp. 125–143. * Emmons, Jim Tschen. "Preface & Translation of the Vita Aidi/The Life of St. Aed mac Bricc," updated Aug. 2017, and available as a pdf. at his page on academia.edu * Emmons, Jim Tschen. "A Lorica Charm Against Headache Invoking St. Aed mac Bricc," 14 May 2021, available as a pdf. at his page on academia.edu * Nagy, Joseph Falaky (1997), ''Conversing with angels and ancients: literary myths of medieval Ireland'', Ithaca: Cornell University Press, * Nathalie Stalmans and T. M. Charles-Edwards, "Meath, saints of (act. c.400–c.900)", ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press'', 2004; online edn, May 200
accessed 3 Sept 2010
* Sharpe, Richard. ''Medieval Irish Saints' Lives: An Introduction to Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae''. Oxford: Clarendon, 1991. {{DEFAULTSORT:Aed Mac Bricc People from County Westmeath Medieval saints of Meath 6th-century Irish bishops 589 deaths Year of birth unknown