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Iona
is a small island off the Isle of Mull in western Scotland. It
has been a "Holy isle" from time immemorial. An early
Gaelic name for it was "Isle of the Druids". In the
sixth century St.Columba (Columkille) went there from Ireland
and founded a monastic settlement; still later there was a Medival
Beuedietine Abbey on the same site; in the 1930's this was rebuilt
by Sir George MacLeod for the newly founded Iona Community - a
centre for prayer, reflection and reconciliation.
We
know a great deal about the life of St.Columba. He went to Iona
in 563. The settlement there would have been in the Celtic style.,
the monks living in seperate cells, coming together for meals
and community prayer. From Iona the monks went to mainland Scotland,
preaching the Gospel and setting up other foundations.
Columba
went back to Ireland in 575AD where he defended the poets of Ireland
at the council of Drumcaet. From there he travelled on, visiting
some of his earlier foundations and founded the monastic settlement
at Drumcliffe. He returned to Iona, which was now his home, and
died there in 597.
Iona
continued to grow and flourish, and during the 7th Century it
had the largest library in Europe and there are supposed to have
been 300 crosses. The Viking invasions meant the total destruction
of the library and almost all the crosses - there are now only
three left, the most famous being the cross dedicated to St.Martin
of Tours. This cross was probabaly carved towards the end of the
8th Century.
Martin
lived in France in the last years of the 4th Century. He was a
soldier, a member of the Roman Imperial Army. He became a Christian
but remained in the army to complete his appointed term. There
is a famous painting by El Greco narrating a story from this period
of his life - the sharing of his cloak with a beggar. At some
time in his life he had read about St.Antony of Egypt who had
left city life to live as a hermit in the desert. This appealed
to Martin and when he left the army he set up a hermitage near
Poitiers in France. He gathered other men around him on an organised
basis. Each monk/hermit had his own cell but they all met for
meals and communal prayers and were bound in obedience to the
head of the settlement. When Martin was chosen Bishop of Tours
he moved his fellow hermits to a settlement just over a mile from
Tours and continued to live as a monk among them. It is a matter
for conjecture how a cross on Iona in Scotland, an island that
had such close and continuing connection with the Columban monasteries
in Ireland, is dedicated to this French saint.
In fact
many churches in Scotland and England are named after him and it
is thought that St.Ninian of Scotland visited Tours. Also St.Martin's
life by Sulpican Severus is reproduced in the "Book of Armagh:,
one of the great irish Manuscripts now in Trinity College, Dublin.
Certainly the early Irish monks also knew about St.Antony and St.Paul,
the desert fathers, reproducing the story of the raven who fed them
in the desert as a allegory for the Eucharist, on several of the
Irish High crosses. It is easy then to see how the story of St.Martin
and his monastic settlement would have appealed to them as a man
to be admired and venerated.
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