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Elaeth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Eleth" redirects here. For the daughter of Urizen in the writings of William Blake, seeUrizen.
Not to be confused withEleleth.

Elaeth (sometimes recorded asEleth) was a Christian king and poet in Britain in the 6th century who is venerated as a saint. After losing his territory in the north of Britain, he retreated toAnglesey, north Wales, where he lived at a monastery run bySt Seiriol atPenmon. Some religious poetry is attributed to him, as is the foundation ofSt Eleth's Church, Amlwch, also in Anglesey.

Life and commemoration

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Little is known for certain about Elaeth's life, and his dates of birth and death are unknown. He lived in the 6th century.[1] He is said to have been the son of Meurig ab Idno and his wife Onen Greg, the daughter ofGwallog ap Llaennog.[2] Elaeth was apparently a chieftain in the north of Britain, and is sometimes referred to as "Elaeth Frenhin" (the Welsh for "Elaeth the king"). He was ousted from his land and thereafter travelled toAnglesey, an island off the coast of north Wales, and settled there in the monastery run bySt Seiriol atPenmon, at the south-eastern corner of the island. Hisfeast day in the Welsh calendars of saints is 10 November;[3] one calendar, apparently by mistake, gives the date as 11 November.[2]

Some religious poetry that he is said to have written has been preserved in medieval manuscripts. TheBlack Book of Carmarthen, from the 12th century, attributes two poems of seven stanzas to his authorship, one of simple construction and the other more complicated. Both "are written in a strain of deepest piety."[2]

He is the reputed founder ofSt Eleth's Church, Amlwch, in the north of Anglesey.[3] A holy well near there, known as "Ffynnon Elaeth" in Welsh, was named after him, and was regarded as having healing qualities and providing a method ofdivination. A nearby "priest" would interpret the behaviour and activities of an eel kept in the well; on some occasions, the eel would remain out of sight and those seeking answers would have to wait for its re-emergence.[2]

See also

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Other Anglesey saints commemorated in local churches include:

References

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  1. ^Williams, Robert (1852).Enwogion Cymru: A biographical dictionary of eminent Welshmen, from the earliest times to the present, and including every name connected with the ancient history of Wales. W. Rees. p. 138.
  2. ^abcdBaring-Gould, Sabine (1907).The lives of the British Saints: the Saints of Wales and Cornwall and such Irish Saints as have dedications in Britain (volume 2).Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion. pp. 425–6.
  3. ^abRees, Rice (1836).An essay on the Welsh saints or the primitive Christians, usually considered to have been the founders of the churches in Wales. Longman. p. 271.
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