Died 653; in some places his feast is celebrated on March 25. The Irish
Saint Caimin was half-brother to King Guaire of Connaught and
Cumian Fada (f.d. November 12),
and himself a distinguished scholar. But he
retired from the vanities of the world to live asa hermit on
Inish-Keltra (Caltra) in Lough Derg near Galway. Although
Saint Columba of Terryglass (f.d. December 12)
had founded a monastery on the island a
century earlier, Saint Caimin is the reason the people call it "Holy
Island" after many disciples were drawn there because of his reputation
for holiness. Later in life he founded a monastery and church, named
Tempul-Cammin, on the island of the Seven Churches.
The monastery on Inish-Keltra thrived through 1010 (when its last
recorded abbot died) despite its being in the direct path of the Danish
invaders. The abbey was plundered c. 836 and again in 922. Brian Boru
restored the church c. 1009. Now, however, only ruins recall the
grandeur of Inish-Keltra's past: the 80-foot tall round tower, early
grave markers, and ivy-covered church ruins.
Saint Caimin was a fellow-worker with
Saint Senan (f.d. April 29).
A
fragment of the
Psalter of Saint Caimin,
claimed by some to have been
copied by his own hand, still exists in the Franciscan library at
Killiney, County Dublin. He is also credited with authorship of the
Commentary on the Hebrew Text of the Psalms
(
Benedictines,
D'Arcy,
Healy,
Husenbeth,
Montague,
Muirhead,
Neeson).