Senach
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Saint Senach (also called Seanach, Seanoir, Senóir, Senior, c. 550 – 11 April 610) was the
Bishop of Armagh A bishop is an ordained clergy member who is entrusted with a position of authority and oversight in a religious institution. In Christianity, bishops are normally responsible for the governance of dioceses. The role or office of bishop is ca ...
,
Ireland Ireland ( ; ga, Éire ; Ulster Scots dialect, Ulster-Scots: ) is an island in the Atlantic Ocean, North Atlantic Ocean, in Northwestern Europe, north-western Europe. It is separated from Great Britain to its east by the North Channel (Grea ...
from 598 to 610.


Genealogy and birth

Saint Senach was a member of the Ui Nialláin clan, who were the rulers of the present baronies of
Oneilland West Oneilland West (, the name of an ancient Gaelic district) is a barony in County Armagh, Northern Ireland. It is also called Clancann (''Clann Chana''), after the Mac Cana clan. It lies in the north of the county on the south-western shore of Lo ...
and
Oneilland East Oneilland East (, the name of an ancient Gaelic district) is a barony in the north-east of County Armagh, Northern Ireland. It is also called Clanbrasil (from ''Clann Bhreasail'', "offspring of Breasal"). It lies in the north-east corner of the ...
, County Armagh, Ireland. The patriarch of the clan was Nialláin m. Féicc m. Feidelmid m. Fiachrach Cassáin m. Collai Fochríth, who lived about 370 AD, and Senach would have been in about the 7th generation of descent from him. His father was Maeldalua. Senach was born c. 550 in Cluain hui meicc Gricci (the meadow of the descendants of Grici) which was in the parish of Kilmore, Barony of Oneilland West and County of Armagh.


Education

Senach was nicknamed the "''Rough Smith''" so he may have been a metalworker in a monastery.


Bishop of Armagh

On the death of Eochu macDiarmaid, the Bishop of Armagh, in January 598, Senach was appointed as the 14th
coarb A coarb, from the Old Irish ''comarbae'' (Modern Irish ''comharba'', Latin: ''hērēs''), meaning "heir" or "successor", was a distinctive office of the medieval church among the Gaels of Ireland and Scotland. In this period coarb appears intercha ...
in succession to
Saint Patrick Saint Patrick ( la, Patricius; ga, Pádraig ; cy, Padrig) was a fifth-century Romano-British Christian missionary and bishop in Ireland. Known as the "Apostle of Ireland", he is the primary patron saint of Ireland, the other patron saints be ...
. The Annals of the Four Masters for 457 AD state "''Ard Mhacha was founded by Saint Patrick, it having been granted to him by Daire, son of Finnchadh, son of Eoghan, son of Niallan''." So Senach’s appointment was probably due to the influence of his family as the original grantors of the land and several Bishops of Armagh came from this same family. Senach reigned as Bishop for 12 years. Thomas Walsh states, without giving the specific source, that "''Senach is mentioned by several annalists as a learned man, and is said to have written valuable tracts on the Scriptures and the works of the Fathers, which are now lost''.""The History of the Irish Hierarchy", by Rev. Thomas Walsh (1854), p. 31


Death

St. Senach died on 11 April 610 AD. The Annals of Ireland give the following obituaries: * Annals of the Four Masters 609 – "Seanach, Abbot of Ard-Macha, died; he was of Cluain-Ua-nGrici." * Annals of Ulster 610 – "Senach from Cluain Uaingrighe, abbot of Ard Macha, rested."


Feast day

After his death Senach was venerated as a saint and his feast was celebrated on 11 April, the day of his death. The Calendars of the Saints have the following entries: * Martyrology of Gorman 11 April – "Senóir, son of Mael da-Lua, primate of Armagh." * Martyrology of Oengus 11 April – "The archbishop of Ireland, i.e. Senóir son of Máel da lua on the 11th of April rested in peace, ut quidam dixit: :"Son of Máel da-lua, of the industrious study, his death to Ireland is terrible; :"in guerdon of his just deeds from long ago he found heaven on the eleventh of April." * Martyrology of Tallaght 11 April – "Senior mac Maeldalua" * Bollandists Acta Sanctorum, Tomus II, Aprilis xi. Among the pretermitted saints, p. 2. – "Senior, the son of Moeldavan, and Primate of Armagh" * Martyrology of Donegal 11 April – "Senoir, son of Maeldalua, primate of Ard Macha."


Battle of Moira

The
Battle of Moira The Battle of Moira, also known as the Battle of Magh Rath, was fought in the summer of 637 by the High King of Ireland, Domnall mac Áedo, Domnall II, against his foster son Congal Cáech, King of Ulaid, supported by his ally Domnall Brecc, Kin ...
was fought in 637 AD and in an old text called "''The Battle of Magh Rath''", Senach appears in the following account of the wounding of
Cenn Fáelad mac Ailella Cenn Fáelad mac Ailella (alias Cennfaeladh) (died 679) was an early medieval Irish scholar renowned for having his memory markedly improve and possibly becoming eidetic after suffering a head wound in battle. Ancestry He was a member of the Ce ...
: However, this is a late anachronism as Senach died in 610, which was 27 years before the battle. The Bishop of Armagh at the time of the battle of Moira was
Tómméne Saint Tómméne (also called Thoman, Thomanus, Thomenus, Thomian, Thomianus, Thomienus, Toimen, Toimene, Tóiméne, Tomiano, Tómíne, Tomini, Tomméin, Tommene, Tommine, Tomyn, Comméne, Comyn, Terenannus) b. c.580 - d.10 January 661, was the Bis ...
.


References

{{authority control 550s births 610 deaths Bishops of Armagh 7th-century Irish bishops