Previous Saint This month Next Saint
[Today's previous saint] [back to Calendar] [Today's next saint]

Died c. 823; feast day formerly on January 15. Blaithmac was an Irish abbot, who, desiring martyrdom, crossed over to England, which was then prey to the heathen Danes.

His contemporary, Walafrid Strabo (died 849), the German Benedictine of Reichenau, narrates his life in a 180-line metrical poem, which has been reprinted in Migne's "Patrologia" and Messingham's "Florilegium Insulae Sanctorum". According to this tradition, Blaithmac was heir to an Irish throne, but entered a monastery instead and later became its abbot. Desiring the crown of martyrs, he obtained permission to live among his brethren at Iona.

During the absence of its abbot Dermait, Blaithmac foretold the Viking raid on Iona and buried the shrine containing the relics of Saint Columba (f.d. June 9). After carefully replacing the sod above the burial site, Blaithmac then gave each of the monks the choice of fleeing or staying.

As he was offering the Holy Sacrifice the next morning, the invaders rushed in. The whole community was slaughtered, until only Blaithmaic, the temporary abbot, was left. He was promised that his life would be spared if he gave them the relics. He refused and was hacked to pieces by the Danes on the altar steps of the abbey church. When his brethren returned, they buried him where he had fallen. The relics were later reposed at Dunkeld in 849 (Benedictines, D'Arcy, Montague, Moran, O'Hanlon, Skene).



Previous Saint This month Next Saint
[Today's previous saint] [back to Calendar] [Today's next saint]