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Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Brigid of Kildare

Ireland has three national saints. Besides St. Patrick and St. Columba there is St. Brigid of Ireland, also called Brigid of Kildare.

Kildare Abbey in County Kildare was said to be founded by Brigid in the 5th century, first as a small oratory but growing into a double monastery, housing both women and men. A monk at Kildare in the 7th century, Cogitosus, wrote a Vita Sanctae Brigidae ("Life of St. Brigid"), probably drawn from earlier documents and stories passed down at the monastery. There was an earlier biography, possibly written by a lector at Kildare named St. Aleran (who also wrote a biography of St. Patrick).

Brigid was born c.451 as a Fothairt, one of the Irish tribes based in Leinster, to a chieftain named Dubhthach and a slave who had been baptized by St. Patrick. When Dubhthach's wife learned of the pregnancy, she forced her husband to sell the slave to a druid. At a moment when Brigid's mother was bringing milk into the house, she went into labor and Brigid was born on the threshold. When the druid tried to feed her, she vomited because of his paganism, but a white cow appeared that provided the babe with milk. The druid, realizing that the child was special, eventually freed her and her mother from slavery.

According to the Cogitosus' biography, she performed farming chores, watching the flocks and churning butter. She cared for the poor, and one day after she gave away all of her mother's butter to a needy person, the butter miraculously replenished itself after Brigid prayed. When she was ten, she went to work in her father's house, where she gave his belongings to the poor.

Dubhthach, annoyed, took her to the King of Leinster to sell her into slavery once more. While Dubhthach was talking to the king, Brigid gave Dubhthach's jeweled sword to a beggar so that he could barter it for food for his family. Seeing this, the king made a decision that would change Brigid's life.

Before I tell you what the king said to Dubhthach, I want to tell you more about the king. This was Crimthann Mac Énnai, who died in 483. This helps us settle the legend of Brigid in these decades of the 5th century—if she existed, that is. We'll talk about that after we look at Crimthann Mac Énnai and why he may have decided to be kind to Brigid.

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