Caomhán of Inisheer
{{Short description|Patron saint of Inisheer}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2018}}
{{coord|53.064|N|9.514|W|display=title}}
{{Infobox saint
| honorific_prefix=
| name = Caomhán of Inisheer
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| image = Saint Caomhan.jpg
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| caption = Painting on Inisheer
| titles =
| birth_name =Caomhán
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| home_town = Inisheer
| residence =
| death_date = possibly 865
| death_place =
| venerated_in = Catholic Church, Church of Ireland
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| major_shrine =
| feast_day = 14 June (formerly 3 November)
| attributes =
| patronage = Inisheer
| issues =
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Saint Caomhán ({{IPA|ga|ˈkeːwaːn̪ˠ}}; may have died in 865), anglicised as Cavan, sometimes Kevin, is the patron saint of Inisheer ({{langx|ga|Inis Oírr}}), the smallest of the Aran Islands. Although he is "by far the most celebrated of all the saints of the Aran Islands", little is known about him.John O'Donovan, 1839, cited in Peter Harbison, Pilgrimage in Ireland. The monuments and the People, 1991, p 91. He is said to have been a disciple of Saint Enda of Aran.[https://aerarannislands.ie/the-aran-islands/inis-oirr/attractions-of-inis-oirr/ "Teampall Chaomhán", Aer Arran]
The saint's Pattern Day ({{langx|ga|Lá an Phátrúin}}) was formerly 3 November, but was moved to 14 June in the 19th century.Mordecai Cubitt Cooke, John Eller Taylor, Hardwicke's Science-gossip Volumes 10–11 (1874), [https://books.google.com/books?id=49tKAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA272 p. 272]. There used to be a pilgrimage of the sick to his tomb on his day, and an open-air mass is still celebrated there every year.Fionn Davenport, Ireland, Lonely Planet (2010) p. 410.
St Cavan's Church
St Cavan's Church (also "St Kevin's Church", {{langx|ga|Teampall Chaomháin}}) is a ruined church, built in the 10th century,The 10th-century date is given on a notice on site prepared by the Office of Public Works, and is repeated in various travel guides. G. V. Du Noyer in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 9 (1867), [https://books.google.com/books?id=DMg6AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA425 p. 425] still gives a 7th-century date. Hardwicke's Science-gossip (1874) says it is "supposed to be a twelfth-century church". at the location of the saint's grave. The entrance is now below ground level, as the church was nearly buried by drifting sands; it has been excavated and is kept clear of sand by the islanders."the little church of St Cavan, or Kevin, is usually covered by drifting sands, but it is cleared each year in order to hold a service at his tomb, to the north-east of the church." Elizabeth Rees, Celtic Sites and Their Saints (2003), [https://books.google.com/books?id=kfbeBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA10 p. 10]. In recent times{{year needed|date=May 2017}} it has been roofed to resist the incursion of blown sand from the surrounding dunes. All that remains visible of this structure today is the chancel. A century or so after this was built, the rest of the building gave way for a wider nave. The lintel over the original western doorway was reused in the enlarged building to become the entrance from the nave to the priest's residence. Three other features date from the late medieval period: the head of the chancel arch, the pointed doorway in the south wall of the nave and the priest's residence.
The grave of St Caomhan ({{langx|ga|Leaba Chaomháin}} or "Caomhán's Bed") is located to the northeast of the church. It is a tradition on the island to spend the vigil of the saint's feast praying at his grave. It has been written{{citation needed|date=May 2017}} that people were cured of illness here.
File:Ruine d'une chapelle, Inisheer.jpg|The ruins of Saint Caomhan's church, Inisheer (2011 photograph)
File:Caomhan nave 2013.JPG|Saint Caomhan's church, viewed from the priest's residence in the west through the nave and chancel arch to the altar in the east.
File:Caomhan church grave 2013.JPG| Saint Caomhan's church with Caomhan's grave (Leaba Chaomháin) in the background.
File:St Cavan's Grave (Leaba Chaomháin) Inisheer by CFM - 20220707 - 01.jpg|Saint Caomhan's grave (Leaba Chaomháin) in Inisheer cemetery
Modern church
File:St Caomhan plaque.jpg: "Saint Caomhán, be with the fisherman that they might return.")]]
The modern Séipéal Naomh Caomhán was built around 1901.[https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/30412004/seipeal-naomh-caomhan-inisheer-inis-oirr-inisheer-co-galway "Séipéal Naomh Caomhán", NBHS]
References
{{Commons category|Caomhán of Inisheer}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Caomhan of Inisheer}}
Category:Medieval saints of Munster