All About BrigidAlso known as Bride; Bridget of Ireland; Bride of the Isles; Mary of the Gael. Feast: 1 February Born: 453 in Faughart Died 1 February 523 in Kildare; head removed to Jesuit church in Lisbon, Portugal Name Meaning fiery arrow Nationality 5th - 6th century Irish Patronage babies, blacksmiths, boatmen, cattle, children whose parents are not married, dairymaids, dairy workers, fugitives, infants, Ireland, mariners, midwives, newborn babies, poets, sailors, scholars, travellers, watermen. Prayer for a Heavenly Feast by Saint Brigid Representation abbess, usually holding a lamp or candle, often with a cow nearby. Profile Her father was Dubtach, pagan Scottish King of Leinster; her mother, Brocca, a Christian Pictish slave. Just before Brigid's birth, her mother was sold as a slave to a Druid landowner. Brigid remained with her mother till she was old enough to serve her legal owner Dubtach, her father. She grew up marked by her high spirits and tender heart, and as a child, she heard Saint Patrick preach, which she never forgot. She could not bear to see anyone hungry or cold, and to help them, often gave away things that were Dubtach's. When Dubtach protested, she replied that "Christ dwelt in every creature". Dubtach tried to sell her to the King of Leinster, and while they bargained, she gave a treasured sword of her father's to a leper. Dubtach was about to strike her when Brigid explained she had given the sword to God through the leper, because of its great value. The King, a Christian, forbade Dubtach to strike her, saying "Her merit before God is greater than ours". Dubtach solved this domestic problem by giving Brigid her freedom. Brigid's aged mother was in charge of her master's dairy. Brigid took charge and often gave away the produce. But the dairy prospered under her (hence her patronage of milk maid, dairy workers, cattle, etc.), and the Druid gave her mother her freedom. Brigid returned to her father, who arranged a match for her with a young bard. Bride refused, and to keep her virginity, went to Bishop Mel, a pupil of Saint Patrick's, and took her first vows. A possibly apocryphal tales says that when Saint Patrick professed her final vows, he mistakenly used the form for ordaining priests. When told of it he replied, "So be it, my son, she is destined for great things." Her first nunnery started with seven nuns. At the invitation of bishops, she started nunnery after nunnery all over Ireland. She was a great traveller, especially for the horrid conditions of the time, which led to her patronage of travellers, sailors, etc. Brigid invented the double monastery, the monastery of Kildare on the Liffey bring for both monks and nuns. Combeth, noted for his skill in metalwork, became its first bishop; this connection and the installation of a bell that lasted over 1000 years apparently led to her patronage of blacksmiths and those in related fields.
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