Báetán moccu Chormaic

Báetán moccu Chormaic, abbot of Clonmacnoise, died 1 March 664.

Báetán was a member of the Moccu Chormaic, a prominent line of the Conmaicne Mara (now Connemara). In 653 he became ninth abbot of Clonmacnoise in succession to Aedlug mac Caman. He held office for twelve years, a considerable period considering most candidates were elderly.

He may have been an exegetical scholar. Michael Richter argues that he was a teacher of the Irish "Augustine" (died 665), identifying him with the Bathanus named by Augustine in his De mirabilibus sacrae scripturae.[1]

He was included in the martyrologies, which implies he was considered, at least by some, to be a man of saintly character. He was succeeded by Colmán Cass mac Fualascaig, of the Corcu Moga of what is now north-east County Galway

Notes

  1. Richter, Ireland and her neighbours in the seventh century (1999): p. 188.

References

  • Records Relating to the Dioceses of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise, p. 82, Rev John Monahan, Dublin, 1886.
  • Lives of the Irish Saints, Canon John O'Hanlon, 1876-1905.
  • Abbatial succession at Clonmacnois, p. 496, Feil-sgribhinn Eoin Mhic Neill, 1938.
  • Ireland and her neighbours in the seventh century, Michael Richter, 1999.
  • Dictionary of Irish Biography from the Earliest Times to the Year 2002, p. 214, Cambridge, 2010.
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