Diocesan News
New publication: ‘Patrick, Ulster’s Scottish Saint’
A new publication charting centuries of shared traditions of Saint Patrick in Ulster and Scotland has been launched by the Ulster–Scots Agency to coincide with this year’s annual celebrations.
Commenting on the new booklet Patrick, Ulster’s Scottish Saint, Ulster–Scots Agency Chief Executive Ian Crozier said: “The Ulster we know today was shaped in the 1600s – when the Ulster–Scots emerged as a distinct people – but the peoples of these islands were living together and influencing each other for thousands of years before that – diverse yet interdependent. There is no better example than Patrick, the man who brought Christianity to Ireland.
“For centuries, it was well known and accepted by all communities here that Ireland’s Patron Saint was born and raised on the banks of the Clyde, kidnapped as a youth and brought to Ulster as a slave. Six years later he escaped and found his way home, only to return and bring the good news of Christianity to his former captors, changing this place forever. Sadly, over the past hundred years or so, this once–familiar knowledge has declined, to the extent that even some of the most acclaimed recent writing about Patrick has missed or dismissed it. The aim of our new publication is to recover these traditions so that people today can reclaim a part of our heritage that was in danger of being lost.”
The new publication looks at the extensive Roman presence in Scotland, which people often don’t know about, and which leads them to conclude that Patrick must have come from England because they think the Romans only got as far as Hadrian’s Wall. It highlights the long–standing stories and placenames in Scotland and east Ulster relating to Patrick, some of which were passed from the Irish to newly arrived Scottish settlers; and also sets out a range of examples of learned folk from all communities here writing about Patrick’s Scottish story. Most importantly, it compares these local traditions to the only two surviving documents written by Patrick himself.
To mark the launch of the new publication, the Agency’s Chief Executive, Ian Crozier, visited St Anne’s Cathedral and met with Very Reverend Stephen Forde, the Dean of Belfast, who showed him the Cathedral’s wonderful mosaic of St Patrick, which depicts the saint’s journey across the North Channel and includes a Scottish Saltire at his feet. The mosaic is part of a side chapel of the Cathedral which was dedicated in 1932 to mark the 1500th anniversary of St Patrick’s arrival in Ireland.
Patrick, Ulster’s Scottish Saint is available free of charge from the Discover Ulster–Scots Centre in Belfast and St Anne’s Cathedral. Updates on additional outlets will be posted on the Ulster–Scots Agency Facebook page.
Belfast Cathedral, known locally as St Anne’s, is a Cathedral of the
Church of Ireland, serving the two dioceses of Connor and Down & Dromore which cover the city.
The Cathedral Church of St Anne
Donegall Street
Belfast
BT1 2HB
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