This is my contribution to the posting anything about Ireland month over at Rebecca Writes. I’ll add her blog to my blogroll so you can access more Irish stuff from her blog. “Dear” and I visited the Isle of Iona last May with 4 of our great friends. I recommend a trip to this tiny island if you ever find yourself on the west coast of Scotland. For such a tiny island it bears the distinction of the spread of Christianity to Scotland and Northern England.
Welcome to History UK – the History of Scotland!
ST. COLUMBA AND THE ISLE OF IONA, SCOTLAND
Lying off the west coast of the Isle of Mull the tiny Isle of Iona, barely three miles long by one mile wide, has had an influence out of all proportion to its size to the establishment of Christianity in Scotland, England and throughout mainland Europe.
Iona’s place in history was secured when in 563 AD St. Columba arrived on its white sandy beaches with 12 followers, built his first Celtic church and established a monastic community.
Once settled, the Irish monk set about converting most of pagan Scotland and northern England to the Christian faith. Iona’s fame as a missionary centre and outstanding place of learning eventually spread throughout Europe turning it into a place pilgrimage for several centuries to come. Iona became a sacred isle where kings of Scotland (48), Ireland (4) and Norway (8) were buried.
So who was St. Columba or Colum Cille in Gaelic…born of royal blood in 521 AD in Ireland or Scotia as it was then called, he was the grandson of the Irish King Niall. He left Ireland for Scotland not as missionary but as an act of self-imposed penance for a bloody mess he had caused at home. He had upset the king of Ireland by refusing to hand over a copy of the Gospels he had illegally copied, this led to a pitched battle in which Columba’s warrior family prevailed. Full of remorse for his actions and the deaths he had ultimately caused he fled, finally setting on Iona as the first place he found from where he couldn’t see his native Ireland. One of the features on the island is even called “The Hill with its back to Ireland”.
St. Columba however, was not the shy retiring type and set about building Iona’s original abbey from clay and wood. In this endeavour he displayed some strange idiosyncrasies, including banishing women and cows from the island, claiming that “where there is a cow there is a woman, and where there is a woman there is mischief”. The abbey builders had to leave their wives, daughters, etc., on the nearby Eilean nam Ban (Woman’s Island). Stranger still, he also banished frogs and snakes from Iona, how he accomplished this feat is not as well documented.
Strangest claim of all however is that Columba was prevented from completing the building of the original chapel until a living person had been buried in the foundations. His friend Oran volunteered for the job and was duly buried. It is said that Columba later requested for the Oran’s face to be uncovered so he could bid a final farewell to his friend. Oran’s face was uncovered and he was found to be still alive but uttering such blasphemous descriptions of Heaven and Hell that Columbus ordered that he be covered up immediately!
Over the centuries the monks of Iona produced countless elaborate carvings, manuscripts and Celtic crosses. Perhaps their greatest work was the exquisite Book of Kells, which dates from 800 AD, currently on display in Trinity College, Dublin. Shortly after this in 806 came the first of the Viking raids when many of the monks were slaughtered and their work destroyed.

The Celtic Church lacking central control and organisation diminished in size and stature over the years to be replaced by the much larger and stronger Roman Church. Even Iona was not exempt from these changes and in 1203 a nunnery for the Order of the Black Nuns was established and the present-day Benedictine Abbey was built. The Abbey was a victim of the Reformation and lay in ruins until 1899 when its restoration started.
Hey Steve,
Is there any way to fix this so you see all the text?
ellen
I think anything can be fixed.
To add the tabs across the front
go to
desktop
manage
pages
create new page
when you add a post to a page, if you look to the right of your edit post page, you will see
a tab called “page Parent” and you want to add your post to the appropriate “parent”
so it makes it in the right tab across the top. So all quotes need to be told to go to the
quotes page.
Hey Mom,
Nice Blog! Good job Uncle Steve for hooking her up.
I look forward to seeing what you are thinking about.
I must confess that it has been so long since I posted on my own blog that I forgot the sign in. Literally! I can’t get on to do any edits….
I guess it serves me right for being “gone” so long. I may have to create a new one.
The isle of Iona looks cool! It would be fun to go there!
Steve,
thanks so much for helping me out of my fixes! I love your recipe and your quote that you left.
Josh,
I’m happy you found my blog. So sad about forgetting your sign in. Yikes…I have to write all that kind of stuff down or it’s gone overnight!
You and Laura would love Great Britain!
love, mom