See Columba (disambiguation) and St Columb (disambiguation) for other uses.

Columba of Cornwall (Welsh, and in Latin, translated to modern English as dove), also called Columb (English),[1] was a saint from Cornwall who lived in the 6th century. She was born to pagan royalty, but became a Christian after the Holy Spirit, in the form of a dove, appeared to her in a vision. Her parents arranged a marriage to a pagan prince, but she refused the marriage and they imprisoned her. She escaped to Cornwall, where she was again captured and martyred. She is the patron of two churches in Cornwall, in St Columb Major and St Columb Minor, where well-developed traditions arose about her. The traditions include a tale about a spring gushing forth along the path of her blood at the site of her execution and another about a well at the site containing water that would not boil. Various dates in November have been cited as her feast day.

Saint

Columba of Cornwall
From a stained glass window at St Columba's Major Church
Virgin & Martyr
Bornunknown
Lothian, Scotland probably
Died6th century
Ruthvoes, Cornwall
Venerated inRoman Catholicism
Anglican Communion
Eastern Orthodox Church
Major shrineSt Columba's Church, St Columb Major
Feast11 November/15 November
AttributesFemale carrying a palm branch and a sword, a dove hovering above

Life

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Columba was born in the 6th century, to pagan royals King Lodan and Queen Manigild, probably in Lothian, Scotland. According to hagiographer David Nash Ford, her parents' name may be corrupt forms of names of King Lot and Queen Morgause in the Arthurian legends.[1] She might have had nine sisters, one of whom was named Wendon (or Wedern).[2] Most of what is known of Columba is due to two parishes in Cornwall that name her as their patron saint and a manuscript in the collection of the University Library of Cambridge, written by Cornish Roman Catholic activist and scholar Nicholas Roscarrock during the reign of Elizabeth I and based on local tradition.[3]

Columba became a Christian when the Holy Spirit appeared to her in a vision, in the form of a dove, promising her love and blessings.[1][3] Her parents arranged a marriage for her to a pagan prince, even though she had taken a vow of virginity and had refused to attend the pagan temple with them; she rejected the marriage, and her parents, who "dissuaded her first with kindness, then with cruelty",[4] imprisoned her. An angel helped her escape and led her into the desert, where she was captured again by a local king, who admired her beauty and grace, and offered to marry her to his son if she renounced her faith.[1][2] She refused, so she was tortured on the breaking wheel and gallows, but she did not die, and was again imprisoned. An angel again helped her escape, and she fled to the coast and boarded a ship that took her to Cornwall at what is now Trevelgue Head (which is translated to English as "red dirt"; Cornish historian Nicholas Orme speculates that this refers to the color of the soil at the site of the martyrdom and the manner in which it took place).[2] The king found her at Ruthvoes in central Cornwall, three km south of St Columb Major and 10.5km east of Newquay, and beheaded her.[1][3][2] She was buried at St Columb Major.[1]

Legacy and veneration

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Hagiographer and historian Sabine Baring-Gold has suggested that Columba might have been a man, but there is no evidence of it and it is commonly accepted that she was a woman.[1][5] She is the patron of the churches of St Columba Major and St Columba Minor in Cornwall, documented in c.1240 and 1284 respectively.[2] St Columba Church Major was one of the wealthiest churches in Cornwall, so it was staffed by parish priests and seven chantry priests during the 15th and early 16th centuries, which may explain why there are well-developed traditions surrounding Columba. They were written down in Cornish by the late 16th century by a physician who worked in St Columb Minor or a nearby town and were addressed to Roscarrock. In 1607, Roscarrock described the text as a poem to his friend, historian William Camden.[4][6] Local tradition states that at the site of Columba's execution,  "a spring gushed forth along the path of her fallen blood",[3] and was marked in Roscarrock's day by a well; as of 2000 traces of the well and a cemetery remained there. Roscarrock reports the legend that the water from the well would not boil.[2]

Orme states the feast day of Columba has "a complex history".[2] There are differences in the date it was celebrated; at St Columba Major, the dates cited are the Thursday after 1 November, the nearest Sunday to 17 November and the Sunday after the second Thursday before 13 November. At St Columb Major, her feast day was held on about 15 November, "depending upon the full moon".[2] Her feast day was then moveable, like at other Cornish parishes, but at some point apparently changed from Thursday to Sunday at St Columb Major. Fairs were held at St Columb Major on 25 April and on 24 June.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Nash Ford, David (2006). "St. Columba the Virgin". Early British Kingdoms. Archived from the original on 30 October 2006. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Orme, p. 92
  3. ^ a b c d Hutchison-Hall, p.145
  4. ^ a b Orme, p. 91
  5. ^ Orme, pp. 92-93
  6. ^ Hutchinson-Hall, p. 146

Works cited

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  • Hutchison-Hall, John (Ellsworth) (2017). Orthodox Saints of the British Isles, Vol. 4. St. Eadfrith Press. pp. 145–146. ISBN 1542718228.
  • Orme, Nicholas (2000). The Saints of Cornwall. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 91–93. ISBN 1-280-44546-7. OCLC 252553265