| St 
                Columba (Colum Cille)
 Of all the 
                Dark Age Scottish saints, Columba is the most spectacular star. 
                In 563 AD Columba left Ireland and settled with the Gaels of Dál 
                Riata, where he was granted the Island of Iona to found his monastery. For 
                the Gaelic warrior kings, Columba was a useful asset. His monastery 
                provided education for their sons, he was a close advisor to the 
                king, and he served as a diplomat to the kings neighbours 
                in Pictland and Ireland. Columbas blessing was treasured 
                by kings - a powerful symbol of their authority, and, in return 
                for Columbas support, the Gaels gave the monastery land 
                and protection. Columba died 
                in 597, but his monasterys influence continued to grow, 
                Iona 
                            faced competition from other Irish monastic missions, 
                            however, and their religious power was not absolute. 
                            St Mael Rhuba at Applecross or St Donnan, who was 
                            martyred on the Isle of Eigg, were also contenders 
                            as early spiritual leaders of the Church.leading to the foundation of new monasteries in Ireland and as 
                far away as
 Lindisfarne in Northumbria. In Pictland, Columban monks began 
                to spread the
 word of Christianity in the seventh century.
 
 Columba himself would have remained an enigmatic and 
                            little-known figure were it not for Adomnán, 
                            the ninth Abbot of Iona, and his book, the Vita 
                            Colum Cille
 (Life of Columba), which ensured that the saint's 
                            reputation eclipsed that of the other Scottish saints 
                            and spread Ionas fame across Christendom.
 
 Pilgrimage to Iona increased: kings wished to be buried 
                            near to Columba, and
 a network of Celtic high crosses and processional 
                            routes developed
 around his shrine. At its zenith Iona produced The 
                            Book of Kells, a
 masterpiece of Dark Age European art. Shortly after however, 
                        in 794 AD, the Vikings descended on Iona, and, within 
                        50 years, they had extinguished the light which had been 
                        Iona. Columbas relics were finally removed in 849 
                        AD and divided between Alba and Ireland.
 
  The Monymusk Reliquary, from around 750 AD, probably 
                        contained a relic of St Columba. It became a powerful 
                        symbol of nationhood, and was carried before the Scots 
                        army as it marched into war.
 
 This reliquary is thought to be the Brechbennoch which 
                        was carried by the Scots at the Battle of Bannockburn 
                        in 1314.
 
 
 
 
 
 
                             
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