- Hiberno-Scottish mission
Irish and Scottish missionaries (Iro-Scottish, Hiberno-Scottish) were instrumental in the spread of
Christianity inAnglo-Saxon England and theFrankish Empire during the 6th and 7th centuries. The Latin term "Scotti" refers to the Gaelic-speaking people of Ireland and the Irish who settled in western Scotland. In early medieval times Ireland was known, not only as Éire, but also asScotia a name that the Romans used to refer to Ireland. The Romans also gave Ireland the name "Hibernia". Thus, the "Scots" missionaries who were so influential in the early Church history of Germany included men from both Ireland and Scotland in the modern sense, but were predominantly Irish.Schottenklöster (meaning "Scottish monasteries" in German, singular: "Schottenkloster") is the name applied to the
monastic foundations of Irish and Scottish missionaries inContinental Europe , particularly to the ScottishBenedictine monasteries inGermany , which in the beginning of the13th century were combined into one congregation whoseabbot -general was the Abbot of the Scots monastery atRegensburg .In the
sixth century migrations into what is now Scotland were Ulster clans such as theAirgíalla and theUí Néill . Among them wasColm Cille ofGartan who, with twelve companions, foundedIona in the early6th century .Adomnán of Donegal wrote his biography in the early 8th century. As late as the 11th and early 12th century the name Scot or Scotus identified the missionary or traveller as aGael and thus monks of Irish as well as Scottish origin were commonly both referred to under the same, at the time shared, nomenclature.Marianus Scotus together with is companions was the founder of St. Peter at Regensburg in1072 .Columba to Columbanus (563-615)
After
Saint Ninian , Christianity first spread to Scotland again in563 with the foundation ofIona byColumcille . Following the foundation ofLindisfarne in635 bySaint Aidan , Hiberno-Scottish missionaries converted most of Anglo-Saxon England during the following decades; the last pagan Anglo-Saxon king,Penda of Mercia , died in655 .Columbanus from590 was active in the Frankish Empire, establishing monasteries throughout what is nowFrance andSwitzerland until his death atBobbio in615 . Other Hiberno-Scottish missionaries active at the time, predominantly inSwabia , were Wendelin,Kilian ,Arbogast ,Landelin ,Trudpert ,Fridolin ,Pirmin (foundedReichenau abbey ), Gallus (Abbey of St. Gall ), Korbinian,Emmeram and Rupert.Examples of Hiberno-Scottish monasteries on the continent include the Scots monasteries in
Regensburg ,Vienna ,Erfurt and Würzburg. In Italy, there are the establishments ofColumbanus , founder of Luxeuil and Bobbio, and Saints Donatus and Andrew of Tuscany, ofFiesole .The first Schottenkloster of which we have any knowledge was Säckingen in
Baden , founded by the Irish missionary, St. Fridolin, towards the end of the 5th century. The same missionary is said to have founded a Schottenkloster atKonstanz . A century laterSt. Columbanus arrived on the continent with twelve companions and founded Annegray,Luxeuil , and Fontaines inFrance ,Bobbio inItaly . During theseventh century the disciples of Columbanus and other Irish and Scottish missionaries founded a long list of monasteries in what is now France, Germany, Belgium, and Switzerland. The best known are: St. Gall inSwitzerland ,Disibodenberg in theRhine Palatinate, St. Paul's atBesançon , Lure and Cusance in theDiocese of Besançon , Beze in theDiocese of Langres ,Remiremont Abbey andMoyenmoutier Abbey in theDiocese of Toul ,Fosses-la-Ville in theDiocese of Liège , Mont-St-Michel atPeronne , Ebersmunster in Lower Alsace,St. Martin at Cologne.After Columbanus (8th to 11th c.)
Hiberno-Scottish activity in Europe declined after the death of Columbanus.
Celtic Christianity was united with Roman Catholicism after theSynod of Whitby in664 , and from698 until the reign ofCharlemagne in the770s , the Hiberno-Scottish efforts in the Frankish Empire were continued by theAnglo-Saxon mission . See:Germanic Christianity .The rule of St. Columbanus, which was originally followed in most of these monasteries, was soon superseded by that of St. Benedict. Later Gaelic missionaries, founded
Honau in Baden (about 721),Murbach in Upper Alsace (about 727),Altomünster in UpperBavaria (about 749), while other Gaelic monks restored St. Michel in Thiérache (940), Walsort near Namur (945), and, at Cologne, the Monasteries of St. Clement (about 953), St. Martin (about 980), St. Symphorian (about 990), and St. Pantaléon (1042).High Middle Ages (11th to 12th c.)
Irish monks known as
Papar are said to have been present in Iceland before its settlement by the Norse in the9th century . Among the Irish monks who were active in Central Europe were two particularly important theologians,Marianus Scotus andJohannes Scotus Eriugena . Legends surrounding Iro-Scottish foundations are recorded in aMiddle High German text known as "Charlemagne and the Scottish Saints" (BL Harley 3971).Towards the end of the eleventh and in the
twelfth century , a number of Schottenklöster, intended for Scottish and Irish monks exclusively, sprang up in Germany. About 1072, three Scottish monks, "Marianus", "Iohannus", and "Candidus", took up their abode at the little Church of Weih-St-Peter at Ratisbon. Their number soon increased and a larger monastery was built for them (about 1090) by Burgrave Otto of Ratisbon and his brother Henry. This became the famous Scottish Monastery of St. Jacob at Ratisbon, the mother-house of a series of other Schottenklöster. It founded the Abbeys of St. Jacob atWürzburg (about 1134), St. Aegidius atNuremberg (1140), St. Jacob atConstance (1142), Our Blessed Lady atVienna (1158), St. Nicolas atMemmingen (1168), Holy Cross atEichstätt (1194), and the Priory ofKelheim (1231). These, together with the Abbey of St. Jacob atErfurt (1036), and the Priory of Weih-St-Peter at Ratisbon formed the famous congregation of the German Schottenklöster which was erected byInnocent III in 1215, with the Abbot of St. Jacob at Ratisbon as abbot-general.14th century onwards
In the 14th and 15th centuries most of these monasteries were on the decline, partly for want of Scottish or Irish monks, partly on account of great laxity of discipline and financial difficulties. In consequence, the abbeys of
Nuremberg andVienna were withdrawn from the Scottish congregation and repeopled by German monks in 1418. TheAbbey of St. Jacob, Würzburg was left without any monks after the death of Abbot Philip in 1497. It was then re-peopled by German monks and in 1506 joined thecongregation of Bursfeld . In 1595, however, it was restored to the Scottish congregation and continued to be occupied by Scottish monks until its suppression in 1803. The abbey of Constance began to decline in the first half of the 15th century and was suppressed in 1530. That of Memmingen also disappeared during the early period of the Protestant Reformation. The Abbey of Holy Cross at Eichstatt seems to have ceased early in the fourteenth century. In consequence of theProtestant Reformation in Scotland many Scottish Benedictines left their country and took refuge in the Schottenklöster of Germany during the 16th century. The Scottish monasteries in Ratisbon,Erfurt , and Würzburg again began to flourish temporarily, but all endeavors to regain the monasteries of Nuremberg, Vienna, and Constance for monks of Scottish nationality were useless.In 1692 Abbot Placidus Flemming of Ratisbon reorganized the Scottish congregation which now comprised the monasteries of Ratisbon, Erfurt, and Würzburg, the only remaining Schottenklöster in Germany. He also erected a seminary in connection with the monastery at Ratisbon. But the forced secularization of monasteries in 1803 put an end to the Scottish abbeys of Erfurt and Würzburg, leaving St. Jacob's at Ratisbon as the only surviving Schottenkloster in Germany. Though since 1827 this monastery was again permitted to accept novices, the number of its monks dwindled down to two capitulars in 1862. There being no hope of any increase,
Pope Pius IX suppressed this last Schottenkloster in his brief of 2 September, 1862. Its revenues were distributed between the diocesan seminary of Ratisbon and the Scotch College atRome .Literature
*Frank Shaw (ed.), "Karl der Große und die Schottischen Heiligen. Nach der Handschrift Harley 3971 der Britischen Bibliothek London", Deutsche Texte des Mittelalters LXXI, Berlin (DDR),
1981 .ee also
*
Anglo-Saxon mission
*Celtic Christianity
*Culdee
*Papar
*Scots Monastery, Regensburg
*Schottenstift, Vienna
*Pirmin
*Quartodecimanism External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13589b.htm Original Catholic Encyclopedia text of this article]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.