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SéGéNE MAC FIACHNAí

(Redirected from Ségéne of Iona)
'Ségéne of Iona' was the fifth abbot of Iona (623-652). Ségéne was of the Cenél Conaill, the same kindred as Columba, and he was the nephew of a previous abbot, Lasrén. It was during Ségéne's long abbacy that the famous controversy regarding the dating of Easter first made itself properly felt. Ségéne is known to have vigorously defended the Gaelic dating, and put his name to a letter written by the Gaelic clergy to Pope Severinus in 638. Ségéne also established the first Gaelic missionaries amongst the English, sending Corman and then Áedan, the latter of whom, with the help of King Oswald of Northumbria (who himself had spent time in exile at Iona), established a daughter house and bishopric at Lindisfarne. It is not known if Ségéne ever met Columba, but he was a vital collector/transmitter of stories about the saint. He died on August 12th, 652.

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Bibliography

Bibliography



★ Sharpe, Richard, ''Adomnán of Iona: Life of St. Columba'', (London, 1995)

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