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Vita sancti Cainnechi
prose

Latin Life of St Cainnech of Aghaboe (BHL 1519), which is known in three recensions.

Vita sancti Columbae (Adomnán)
form undefined
Adomnán
Adomnán
(fl. c.628–704)
Adomnán mac Rónáin was abbot of Iona (r. 679–704) and author of the Latin Life of St Columba and an account of the holy places of the Near East (De locis sanctis). He is credited with the proclamation of the Lex innocentium or Cáin Adomnáin at the Synod of Birr.

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Latin Life of St Columba (Ir. Colum Cille), Irish missionary, monk and founder of Iona, written by Adomnán, abbot of Iona, about a century after the saint’s death. The work is organised into three books: one on the saint’s prophetic revelations, another on the miracles performed by him and the final one on angelic apparitions. Despite its hagiographic content, it remains an important source of historical study.

Vita sancti Declani
prose
Latin vita of Declán of Ardmore
Vita sancti Endei abbatis de Arann
form undefined
Medieval Latin Life of St Énda of Aran
Vita sancti Fechini
form undefined
Latin life of St Féchín, abbot of Fore.
Vita sancti Fechini ex MSS Hibernicis (Colgan)
prose
Colgan (John)
Colgan (John)
(d. 1658)
Irish Franciscan at St Anthony’s College, Louvain; scholar, theologian, editor and hagiographer.

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The second vita of St Féchín printed by John Colgan in his Acta sanctorum Hiberniae. Colgan made use of three Irish sources, which he conflated and translated into Latin to produce a composite text. The first life he found in a manuscript associated with Féchín's monastery in the island of Omey (vnam fusam ex Codice Immaciensi in Connacia, quam eius compilator aliàs recentior ... indicat ... desumptam esse ex alia latina); the second life is described as aliam habemus stylo plane uetusto et magnae fidei, sed principio et fine carentem. Plummer suggests that these lives must have corresponded to the vernacular life and homily found in NLI MS G 5. The third source is a metrical version now lost (tertiam uero uetusto et eleganti metro lxxiv distichis constante).

Vita sancti Findani confessoris
form undefined
Life of the 9th-century Irish saint Fintán of Rheinau (modern Switzerland, near Schaffhausen). He is said to be a Leinsterman whom vikings carried off as a captive to the Orkneys, after which he escaped and travelled as a pilgrim to Rome. On his way home, he met and joined the community of anchorites based at Rheinau.
Vita sancti Fintani abbatis de Cluain Ednech
prose

Latin Life of St Fintan of Clúain Eidnech (Clonenagh, Co. Laois). It is reckoned among the so-called O’Donohue saints’ Lives. BHL 2994.

Vita sancti Flannani
prose
Medieval Latin Life of St Flannán, abbot of Killaloe
Vita sancti Mochoemog abbatis de Liath Mochoemog
prose

Latin vita of St Mo Chóemóc, abbot of Liath Mo Chóemóc (Leamakevoge or Leigh, Co. Tipperary).

Vita sancti Patricii (Muirchú)
prose
Muirchú
Muirchú moccu Macthéni
(fl. 7th c.)
Author of a Life of St Patrick

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Vita sancti Senani (breviary)
prose
A Latin work in nine lessons relating the Life of St Senán of Inis Cathaig. It was written for use in Brittany and derives, according to Pádraig Ó Riain, from the metrical version of the saint's Life.
Vita sancti Senani (metrical version)
verse
Latin metrical Life of St Senán of Inis Cathaig (feast-day: 8 March).
Vita sancti Senani (MLA)
prose
Latin prose Life of St Senán of Inis Cathaig (BHL 7574) which is found in copies of the Magnum Legendarium Austriacum [1 July].
Vita sancti Tigernachi
prose
Latin Life of St Tigernach of Clones.