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Saint of the Month
St. Mainchín
Feast Day January 2
St.
Munchin's Church
Gathabawn,
Co. Limerick
Mainchín mac Setnai (fl. late 6th century), also
anglicised to Munchin, was allegedly the founder of the church of
Luimnech, later
Limerick (Ireland), and a saint in Irish tradition, acquiring special
eminence as patron of Limerick city. Both
his origins and the date of his association with the city are debated.
Through his father Sétna, Mainchín is alleged to belong to the
Dál
Cais, given a pedigree linking him to the ancestors of the
O'Brien dynasty. His tutor was the Corco Mruad saint
Mac
Creiche according to the Life of that saint. Mainchín is said
to have founded Luimnech when
Ferdomnach, king from the Dál Cais, granted him land at Inis Sibtond.
A major problem with the above is that the Dál Cais themselves
are unknown by that name before the 930s and are believed by scholars to be the
descendants of a
Déisi population which migrated into the region at an uncertain
period. Before the Dál Cais the greater region appears to have been dominated
for a time by another people entirely, the
Uí
Fidgenti, who eventually found themselves much displaced by the Dál
Cais in the second half of the 10th century and following, although after having
previously overrun many of the Déisi themselves in the very same territories.
Mainchín is also the patron saint of Brug Ríg, now
Bruree, the former royal seat of the Uí Fidgenti. It has been argued
that his appearance in Limerick city is actually due to his adoption by the
later
Norse there, with whom the
O'Donovan family, late representatives of the kingdom (although of
uncertain origins themselves), were closely associated.
In fact no "successors" of Mainchín in Limerick are known
before the 12th century and so his existence there cannot be verified before
then.
In Bruree, his feast day is commemorated on 2 January, but
this date may have been erroneously taken from that recorded for St
Manchán (Manchéne) of Min Droichit in the
Félire Óengusso.
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