
Dear Spin A Web Team,
I am delighted to learn that you are doing a web-site on Clonmacnois. I wish your
project every success.
Clonmacnois is certainly one of Ireland's most important monastic sites, and indeed
one of the most important monastic sites of Europe. Monks from Clonmacnois, would
have set out for continental Europe as evangelisers, while many monks and clerics and
others would have come from continental Europe to Clonmacnois for study at its
famous monastic school. In addition, Clomacnois was an important centre of artistic
creation, with many of its beautiful works of art stored in the National Museum and
some of its beautiful illuminated manuscripts dispersed in various places in Europe.
The fame of Clonmacnois as a place of learning is reflected in a ninth century poem
translated from the Irish by Frank O'Connor (see Kings Lords and Commons, Gillen
Macmillan, 1959). The student in question came from Swords but his words could be
applied from many far-flung places in Ireland, Britain and Europe:
"Whence are you, learning's son?"
"From Clonmacnois I come.
My course of studies done,
I'm off to Swords again".
"How are things keeping there?"
"Oh, things are shaping fare -
foxes around churchyards bare
Gnawing the guts of men'.
The reference in the second verse is to a recent Viking raid, which had left
Clonmacnois, not for the first or last time, in ruins and desolation.
Viking raids on Clonmacnois and other monasteries in Ireland were frequent and
destructive. People lived in fear of these raids, watching the seas anxiously in case
another flotilla of raiding Vikings might be on the main. Another poem translated by
Frank O'Connor from the Irish tells of "The Viking Terror":
"Since tonight the wind in high, The sea's white mane of fury
I need not fear the hoards of Hell Coursing the Irish channel"
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