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Cynog ap Brychan facts for kids

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Saint Cynog or Canog of Wales
Born c. 434 AD
Wales
Died 5th century AD
Wales
Venerated in Catholic Church
Feast 7 October
Attributes A young man with gingery hair, a Celtic tonsure and a torc holding a palm
Patronage Kilmacanogue, County Wicklow
SaintCynog1
Drawing of a church stained-glass window depicting Saint Cynog.

Cynog son of Brychan (Welsh: Cynog ap Brychan; born c. 434), also known as Saint Cynog or Canog (Old Welsh: Kennauc), was an early Welsh saint and martyr. His shrine is at Merthyr Cynog in Wales and his feast day is observed on 7 or 9 October. In Ireland he is known as St. Mocheanog

Life

Cynog was reputedly the son of St. Brychan, a powerful Welsh prince of the British Dark Ages. .....

As a young man he enjoyed hunting. He later became a hermit priest and a travelling missionary who founded various churches in Wales, Ireland and Brittany before settling back in Wales as a hermit. St. Cynog by his prayers is said to have banished a tribe of giant cannibals or ormests who lived in the mountains and terrorised a local community in Wales. He was also a cheerful doer of the humblest tasks which earned him the enmity of some jealous monks.

He was murdered on the mountain called the Van (Bannau Brycheiniog) while living with a community of hermits who became jealous of his holiness and resentful of his admonitions against their slothfulness. He was regarded as a martyr and his relics are housed at Merthyr Cynog.

His Torc Relic

In 1188, Gerald of Wales wrote that there still existed a certain relic purported to be a royal torc that had once been worn by Cynog, presumably as an item of royal regalia. Gerald encountered this relic while travelling through Brycheiniog.

The detailed description, which, though not easy to interpret, points, in the opinion of Sir T. D. Kendrick, to its probably being Welsh or Irish work of the Viking period, i.e. the 10th or the 11th century.

Veneration

He is chiefly commemorated in Brycheiniog, where Defynnog, Ystradgynlais, Penderyn, Battle, Llangynog, and Merthyr Cynog, are all named after him, the last being reputed his place of burial.

Veneration in Ireland

Saint Cynog is believed to have spent time in Ireland where he was known as Mochonog or Mocheanog (literally meaning mo-chean-og - 'my young Canoc'). He founded an ancient church at Kilmacanogue in County Wicklow. Some sources claim that he was a disciple of St. Patrick and that he baptised the children of Lir. A national school in Bray has been named in his honour According to tradition his brother was St. Mochorog or Mo-Goroc who was also active in Wicklow and founded churches at Kilmacurragh, Delgany and Enniskerry.

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