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19 September 2014
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When Monks Were Magicians!

Saint Columa

It seems, from the sparse records that we have from the early Dark Ages and from legend and subsequent story-telling, that the early pioneers of monasticism in Scotland were often believed to have magical, miracle-working powers.

The Island of Iona, in the Gaelic west of Scotland, has always been particularly steeped in this kind of legend, primarily due to the influence of its monastic founder Saint Columba and his successor and biographer, Adomnan.

There are stories of St Columba venturing into pagan Pictland and meeting King Bridei at his castle near Inverness. There, according to legend, Columba became involved in a contest with the king's Druid - the Saint's miracles against the Druid's magic.

An even more incredible story of miracle-working is ascribed to Adomnan, the ninth Abbot of Iona, involving another, more famous Pictish King named Bridei - the same King Bridei who defeated the Angles at the Battle of Dunnichen. Eight years after the battle the King passed away on Iona with Adomnan praying at his bedside. The legend states that Adomnan prayed all night for the King, who miraculously rose from the dead the next morning. Upon witnessing the miracle one of the monks pointed out to Adomnan that he had worked so great a miracle that all of his successors as Abbot of Iona would be under pressure to equal it, ‘...there may indeed be implications’, said Adomnan. He prayed once again to God, whereupon Bridei promptly expired. He was buried on Iona as so many great kings were.

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