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‘Making St Brigit real in the early middle ages’ by Elva Johnston

Brigit has been treated differently to Irish male saints, becoming a secondary character in her own biographies, reductively overshadowed by a barely attested goddess.

A new article by Elva Johnston has been published, open access, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy

Brigit of Kildare is the first Irish saint to be celebrated in detail by Irish writers. Her cult enjoyed great depth and popularity. Nevertheless, Brigit’s very existence has been doubted; she has been recast as a pre-Christian goddess despite an overwhelming disparity in evidence. This paper reframes our approaches to the origins of her cult through examining how the earliest writers understood her and made her real for their audiences, real through shaping her sanctity, her historicity and her family relationships. They placed Brigit along a gender continuum where sanctity intersected biology. Yet, Brigit has been treated differently to Irish male saints, becoming a secondary character in her own biographies, reductively overshadowed by a barely attested goddess. It is time for a revitalised appreciation of Brigit as an actual woman, depicted by her first hagiographers as pushing against the grain of an elitist and patriarchal society.

Read the full article here

Elva Johnston lectures in medieval Irish history at University College Dublin.

Image is from Catalogue of Irish Manuscripts in University College Dublin A 7. Reproduced by kind permission of UCD-OFM Partnership.

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