An Irish ascetic who withdrew to a cave by the lakes of Glendalough and there, amid the wild creatures who befriended him, gathered a great monastery that became a beacon of prayer and learning.
Feast Day
June 3
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Our Venerable Father Kevin, Hermit and Abbot of Glendalough
Life
Kevin of Glendalough (Irish Cóemgen, a name understood to mean "fair-begotten" or "of noble birth") was a sixth-century Irish hermit and monastic founder traditionally said to have been born in 498 in Leinster to parents named Coemlog and Coemell. Ordained after a period of formation, he withdrew to the secluded valley of Glendalough, where he lived for years as a hermit in a small rock cave by the upper lake before a growing community gathered around him.
The monastic settlement that formed at Glendalough became one of Ireland's most renowned centres of prayer and learning, eventually comprising seven churches and drawing saints and scholars to the valley. Kevin is remembered both for his austere ascetic life and for a body of traditional accounts depicting his gentleness toward wild creatures. He reposed on 3 June 618 and is venerated among the pre-schism Western saints, with his feast kept on that day.
Timeline 5 moments
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c. 498Birth in LeinsterBy tradition Kevin was born in 498 in Leinster, the son of Coemlog and Coemell, and described as being of noble birth. His name, Cóemgen, is understood to mean "fair-begotten."
early lifeFormation and ordinationKevin received monastic and clerical formation and was ordained; one tradition names Bishop Lugidus as the bishop who ordained him.
early 6th c.Hermitage at GlendaloughHe withdrew to Glendalough and lived as a hermit in a small cave overlooking the upper lake, later called St. Kevin's Bed, given over to prayer and severe asceticism.
c. 540A community gathersBy about 540 his reputation had spread, and a settlement known as Kevin's Cell formed near the lakeshore as disciples came to him.
3 June 618ReposeKevin reposed on 3 June 618 after long presiding over the monastery; his feast is kept on this day.
Contributions & Legacy
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Glendalough and Its Legacy
From Kevin's solitary cell at the lakes, Glendalough grew into a celebrated monastic settlement that became, in the words of the tradition, a seminary of saints and scholars. The site eventually comprised seven churches and endured as a major centre of Irish monastic life long after Kevin's death.
The early sources connect Kevin to other figures of the sixth-century Irish church; he is traditionally said to have visited abbots including Columba and Comgall. He is regarded as a patron of Dublin and of Glendalough.
Asceticism and Traditional Accounts
Kevin's life is associated with a strict ascetic regime. He is said to have subsisted on herbs and fish and, by tradition, to have stood up to his neck in the cold water of the Upper Lake while at prayer.
A cycle of traditional accounts depicts his gentleness toward animals: an otter is said to have retrieved his book of psalms from the water, and his best-known legend tells of a blackbird that built its nest and laid eggs in his outstretched hand during Lent, which he is said to have held motionless until the young had hatched. These are devotional traditions rather than independently documented events; the blackbird story in particular has been widely depicted in later art and literature.