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(Notice the Anglicization in this article)
St Brendan's Isle Or: Who Really Discovered America? Maps of Columbus's time often included an island called St. Brendan's = Isle that was placed in the western Atlantic ocean. Map makers of the = time had no idea of it's exact position but did believe it existed some = where west of Europe. It was mentioned in a Latin text dating from the = ninth century titled Navigatio Santi Brendani Abatis (Voyage of Saint = Brendan the Abbot). It described the voyage as having taken place in the = sixth century. Several copies of this text have survived in monasteries = throughout Europe. It was an important part of folklore in medieval = Europe and may have influenced Columbus.=20 Historians relate that Brendan was born about 484 A.D. near Tralee in = County Kerry. He was ordained by Bishop Erc and sailed about northwest = Europe spreading the Christian faith and founding monasteries, the = largest at Clonfert, County Galway, where he was buried in 577 A.D. at = the age of 93.=20 The account of Brendan=92s voyage contained a detailed description of = the construction of his boat which was not unlike the currachs still = made in County Kerry today. Skeptics could not accept that such a = fragile vessel could possibly sail in the open sea. Several passages in = the legend also seemed incredible=97they were =93raised up on the back = of sea monsters=94, they =93passed by crystals that rose up to the = sky=94, and were =93pelted with flaming, foul smelling rocks by the = inhabitants of a large island on their route=94. They finally arrived at = the beautiful land they called =93Promised Land of the Saints.=94 They = explored until they came to a great river that divided the land. The = journey of Brendan and his fellow monks took seven years. The return = trip was probably the longest part of the odyssey.=20 In 1976, Tim Severin, a British navigation scholar, embarked from = Brandon Creek on the Dingle peninsula in a carrach that he constructed = using the details described by Brendan. His goal was to determine if the = voyage of Brendan and his fellow monks was possible. They tanned = ox-hides with oak bark, stretched them across the wood frame, sewed them = with leather thread and smeared the hides with animal fat which would = impart water resistance. Examination of nautical charts led Severin to = believe that Brendan's route would be governed by the prevailing winds = that would take him across the northernmost part of the Atlantic. This = would take him close to Iceland and Greenland with a probable landfall = at Newfoundland (St. Brendan's Isle). This would be the route that Leif = Erickson would have taken in the tenth century. Many of Brendan's stops = on his journey were islands where Irish monks had set up primitive = monasteries. Norsemen that traveled on these waters visited these = islands and recorded their meeting with "Papers" (fathers). Severin and his crew were surprised at how friendly the whales were that = they encountered. The whales swam around and even under their boat. It = could have been recognized as another whale by the giant mammals. The = whales could have been even friendlier in Brendan's time, before = motorized ships would make them leery of man. So friendly that they may = have lifted the monk,s boat in a playful gesture. After stopping at the Hebrides islands Severin proceeded to the Danish = Faroe Islands. At the island of Mykines, they encountered thousands of = seabirds. Brendan called this island "The Paradise of Birds. "He = referred to the larger island as the "Island of Sheep." The word Faroe = itself means Island of Sheep. There is also a Brandon Creek on the main = island of the Faroes, that the local people believe was the embarkation = point for Brendan and his crew.=20 Severin's route carried them to Iceland where they wintered, as did = Brendan. The volcanoes on the island have been active for many centuries = and might well have been erupting when the monks stayed there. This = could have accounted for the "pelting with flaming, foul smelling = rocks", referred to in the ninth century text. The monks had never seen = icebergs before, so their description of them as "towering crystals" = would make sense.=20 Severin's boat was punctured by floating ice off the coast of Canada. = They were able make a repair with a piece of leather sewn over the hole. = They landed on the island of Newfoundland on June 26, 1977. This might = well have been Brendan's "Land promised to the Saints" referred to in = the Navigatio.=20 Severin's journey did not prove that Brendan and his monks landed on = North America. However it did prove that a leather currach as described = in the Navigatio could have made such a voyage as mapped out in the = text. There is also no doubt that the Irish were frequent seafarers of = the North Atlantic sea currents 900 years before the voyage of Columbus. = More conclusive evidence of Irish exploration of North America has come = to the fore in West Virginia. There, stone carvings have been discovered = that have been dated between 500 and 1000 A.D. Analysis by archaeologist = Dr. Robert Pyle and a leading language expert Dr. Barry Fell indicate = that they are written in Old Irish using the Ogham alphabet. According = to Dr. Fell, "the West Virginia Ogham texts are the oldest Ogham = inscriptions from anywhere in the world. They exhibit the grammar and = vocabulary of Old Irish in a manner previously unknown in such early = rock-cut inscriptions in any Celtic language." Dr. Fell goes on to = speculate that, "It seems possible that the scribes that cut the West = Virginia inscriptions may have been Irish missionaries in the wake of = Brendan's voyage, for these inscriptions are Christian. The early = Christian symbols of piety, such as the various Chi-Rho monograms (Name = of Christ) and the Dextra Dei (Right Hand of God) appear at the sites = together with the Ogham texts."=20 The lack of any written account of this exploration could be explained = by the explorers not being able to return to their homeland. If they = indeed did reach what is now West Virginia, it would be extremely = doubtful that they could manage to return to Ireland from a embarkation = point that far south. The design of their currach required favorable = winds and currents in the right direction in order to navigate. Severin = discovered that it was extremely difficult to tack as other sailing = ships were able to do. Perhaps that is the reason that it took Brendan = seven years for his journey.=20 We can conclude that the voyage of St.Brendan was not a mere medieval = fantasy but a highly plausible tale. These were special men. They sought = the lands beyond the horizon, the wondrous realms to be revealed by God, = "the Promised Lands." --=20 katysails s/v Chanteuse Kirie Elite 32 http://katysails.tripod.com "Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein |
#2
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Where was this published?
"katysails" wrote in message ... (Notice the Anglicization in this article) St Brendan's Isle Or: Who Really Discovered America? snip interesting essay |
#3
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Steve asked: Where was this published?
http://www.castletown.com/brendan.htm --=20 katysails s/v Chanteuse Kirie Elite 32 http://katysails.tripod.com "Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein |
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