Updated 3/17/2025
On this St. Patrick’s Day I’m reminded of how close in time it is to the ancient Hebrew holiday of
Purim.
In 2022, both holidays were on the same day, but this year Purim is one week after. But still, I find it interesting that these holidays coincide with Irish American Month and Woman’s History Month. If you know the story of Purim in the Book of Esther, one of the heroes of the story is
Esther, a young Jewish woman who helped save her people from genocide when they were exiled in ancient Persia. This was many millennia before Woman’s History Day, Week, and Month were instituted in the last century
[1.1], so Purim is obviously a great historical event for women, but I will talk
more about Purim next week
(see Purim in The Lord's Holidays for more about Purim).
If you’d like to see more similarities with St. Patrick’s Day and Purim, see my 2022 article.
For Irish American Month, St. Patrick’s Day is well known to be in
March, having been celebrated at least since the 1600’s when the church
made it a feast day[1.2]. The first recorded St. Patrick’s
Day parade, though, was far from the center of Christianity in Europe
and even decades before the church made it a commemoration of St.
Patrick in 1631. The parade was in St. Augustine, Florida, recorded in
1601 during the Spanish conquest of the New World, long before the
United States became a country[1.2].
That record of the first St. Patrick’s Day parade appears to
be authentic record, but contrary to this credible information, I saw in
recent years, all of a sudden everywhere people are saying Ireland’s
patron saint was named Maewyn Succat at birth. Why have even respected
journals and newspapers been saying Patrick was born as Maewyn Succat?
The sudden rise in popularity of Maewyn Succat was strange,
and knowing how fast misinformation spreads with overeager writers and
commentators in our age, I had to question if Saint Patricius (the name
Patrick gave for himself in his autobiographical Confessio (Confession),
originally written in Latin) was ever named Maewyn Succat. Nowhere in
Patrick’s surviving texts does he say his name was Maewyn Succat, so
where did that come from?
None of the most popular articles I saw gave citation for the
origin of Maewyn Succat, but I saw other curious people found sources
saying Maewyn was a Welsh Gaelic name and Succat means “god of war.”
Maewyn being possibly Welsh Gaelic could match Patrick’s origins on the
west coast of ancient Britain in the Roman City of Bannavem Tiburniae
(also called Banna Venta Berniae), where his home was according to
Patrick’s own words in his Confessio. Though its location is not
certain, it was likely on the west coast because he was kidnapped by
Irish pirates and enslaved in Ireland for about six years.
But Maewyn Succat is still a strange name for a Roman citizen even if Latin was not his first language[1.3]. He did say in his Confessio that
he needed to translate his words "into a strange language," which was
Latin. He gave his father’s name as Calpurnius, which was Roman Latin,
and Palladius was the name recorded by the church of Patrick’s
contemporary cleric, who was also called Patricius (Patrick)[1.6],
and Patrick gave his own name as Patricius, which means “father,
nobleman, or patrician (an original citizen of the families of Rome; of
high birth or rank; person of breeding and cultivation)“[1.4, 1.5].
Maewyn is also almost always a girl’s name, so wherever
Maewyn came from, I could not find any historical record connecting it
to Patrick. Succat or Succath, though, I did find historical writings
associating the name to Patrick.
It was stated in the writings of Irish Bishop Tírechán who was alive in the 7th Century[1.7], about 200 years after the time of St. Patrick. Tírechán wrote a kind of biography of Patrick called the Collectanae
which stated he got the details of Patrick’s life from his mentor,
Bishop Altán, either by word of mouth or Altán’s writings. However, it
is not clear where Altán got his information from because Patrick was
not alive during Altán’s lifetime. Patrick is said to have died in 493
at the latest and 457 at the earliest, while Altán died in 657[1.8], about 100 years after Patrick.
Furthermore, Tírechán’s Collectanae, is only found in the Book of Armagh which is a compilation of many writings that is dated to the 9th Century[1.9]. The Collectanae itself is dated from 668 to 684[1.11], and in the Collectanae, we find the following text translated from Latin[1.12]:
"I
have found four names for Patrick written in a book in the hands of
Ultán, bishop of Connor: the saint (was named) Magonus, that is: famous,
Succetus, that is: god of war; Patricius, that is: father of the
citizens; Cothirthiacus, because he served four houses of druids”
Here
Tírechán said Patrick had four names, but there is no mention of the
name Maewyn. Some people think Magonus is the Latin form of Maewyn, but I
found no evidence for that. The name Succetus, though, is thought to be
Succat, which does have historical links in the 1896 book, St. Patrick and the early Church of Ireland[1.13]. It quotes Keating’s History of Ireland,
which notes a hymn states about Patrick, “’Succat his name at the
beginning.' Succat in old British means 'the god of war,' or 'strong
in war.'”
The hymn was likely based off a very old hymn about Patrick
that is dated sometime before 520 AD, written by Fiacc, a bishop of
Leinster, who said he met Patrick personally and that his family was
converted by Patrick[1.10]. This is plausible because Fiacc lived at the same time as Patrick. Fiacc’s hymn reads, “Succat was his name, it is said.”
How much of these historical records can we trust?
First
of all, I noted that Tírechán who wrote the Collectanae about Patrick was a St. Patrick cult zealot[1.7]
and likely part of an Irish church movement at the time to make Patrick
a legendary hero figure for Ireland. They greatly embellished Patrick’s
life and works, which includes making up fiction about St. Patrick, or
at the least, they tried to pass off gossip and myths about Patrick as
true history. And with the questionable source of Ultán from whom
Tírechán said Patrick traveled throughout Gaul (now northern France and
Germany), Italy, and the Tyrrhene Sea on the west coast of Italy, even
spending 30 years on an island there, it must be highly scrutinized when
Patrick never mentioned these things in his writings.
However, Patrick did say in his Confessio that he
longed to visit the brethren in Gaul and go back to his home in Britain,
but also said, “God knows that I dearly desire this, but I am tied by
the Spirit who protests to me that He would bear witness against me if I
were to do this. He would hold me responsible in the future if I did
this and I am afraid of undoing the work that I have started [in
Ireland]. It is not I but Christ the Lord who ordered me to come to
these people and stay with them for the rest of my life.”
Knowing how pious and God-fearing Patrick was, I would have to say he NEVER
left Ireland when he went back to minister there, especially when he
said in his own words that Christ ordered him to stay in Ireland for the
rest of his life. This puts the church’s earliest documents about
Patrick into the category of terribly embellished history, if not
complete fiction, something which the Irish would say is full of horse’s
hoof (a spoof or exaggerated story). Later biographies and poetic works
about Patrick also fall into that category, so I would throw them all
out as fiction.
The only credible piece for Patrick’s alternate name is from
Fiacc’s poem which stated Patrick was called Succat (some references use
Succath
[1.13]), even though I think it strange for a
multigenerational Christian family to name their child “god of war,”
(Patrick said in his
Confessio that his father was a deacon and
his grandfather was a priest). But then, Patrick's contemporary priest
was named Palladius, which means “of or belonging to Pallas, another
name for the goddess Athena.” It seems that in the 5th Century people
didn’t think much about what their names meant, or at least the
brethren, even high church officials, did not know what their names
meant or did not care that they represented idolatry to God
(for more about the importance of meaning in names, see Did the church get Eve all wrong?, Mary, Blessed... and Rebellious? and The Names of Esther).
In the end, I would have to say that St. Patrick might have
been called Succat before he became Patricius in Ireland (Pádraig in
Irish Gaelic), but he was never called Maewyn, and also not likely
called Magonus meaning famous, nor Cothirthiacus because he worked for
druids. Patrick presented himself as humble and very pious in his Confessio
writing, so I doubt he would ever call himself “Famous” or link his
name to pagan druids. It is more likely these names were given to him by
cultists after he died.
In fact, since the church never canonized Patrick as a saint,
I'm sure he would not have wanted a St. Patrick’s Day at all or be
commemorated for his work with God. Not being officially canonized means
the church was never able to authenticate miracles made in his name,
meaning they found no witnesses. For a long time I felt Patrick was
never canonized because it was his wish to never take away from God’s
glory with his own name or be idolized or worshipped like other saints
were, so he asked God to never let his name be used to make miracles.
The worshipping of saints makes people sin in idolatry, but
unfortunately, that never stopped the church from idolizing the saints.
In any case, I will keep referring to Patrick as Pádraig or Patrick, and
only mention Succat as a footnote.
May you all do the same and not run wildly with misinformation, insufficiently researched, or poorly analyzed material as is so common today, even among the
most learned and highly regarded (even National Geographic Magazine has an article claiming that St. Patrick's name was Maewyn Succat).
Running blissfully blind with so much misconstrued information, pure
fiction, or plain lies as if they were truth severely hurts the
well-being of those who believe in them. It may seem trivial to start
calling St. Patrick, Maewyn, or say that he also roamed ancient France
and Italy, but what appears harmless, actually belongs in the province
of lies, deceit, and false teachings - areas in which the devil and many
sins reign - so it very much hurts people and our communities to just
run with everything you hear or think is true. As I've said elsewhere,
you can never outrun the bad consequences of sin. Wisdom and discernment
be on you all in the name of Mashiach Yeshua. Amen.
References
...
[1.1] "An Introduction to Women’s History Month". The National WWII Museum. 2023 Mar. 1. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/introduction-womens-history-month>
[1.2] "Who was Saint Patrick and why does he have a day?". National Geographic. 2019 Feb. 1. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/article/saint-patricks-day>
[1.3] Simon Rodway. "Was St Patrick Welsh? An expert reviews the evidence ". The Conversation. 2018 Mar. 14. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://theconversation.com/was-st-patrick-welsh-an-expert-reviews-the-evidence-90793>
[1.4] "Patrick". Behind the name. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://www.behindthename.com/name/patrick>
[1.5] "patrician". Merriam Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/patrician>
[1.6] "Saint Patrick". Wikipedia. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Patrick>
[1.7] "Tírechán". Wikipedia. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T%C3%ADrech%C3%A1n>
[1.8] "Ultan of Ardbraccan". Wikipedia. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultan_of_Ardbraccan>
[1.9] "Book of Armagh". Wikipedia. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Armagh>
[1.10] "St. Patrick was not named "Maewyn Succat". Unam Santam Catholicam. 2018 Mar. 17. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<http://unamsanctamcatholicam.blogspot.com/2018/03/st-patrick-was-not-named-maewyn-succat.html>
[1.11] "Tírechán's Collection records diverse baptisms, ordinations, ecclesiastical foundations and miracles of Patrick". University of Oxford. 2018 Aug. 17. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://portal.sds.ox.ac.uk/articles/online_resource/...>
[1.12] "Tírechán's text in English". Royal Irish Academy. 2011. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://www.confessio.ie/more/tirechan_english>
[1.13] William Maxwell Blackburn. "St. Patrick and the early Church of Ireland". St. Patrick and the early Church of Ireland. 1896. Retrieved 2024 Mar. 17.
<https://archive.org/stream/stpatrickandthee00blacuoft/stpatrickandthee00blacuoft_djvu.txt>