Mount Melleray Abbey Explained

Mount Melleray Abbey
Founder:Sir Richard Keane
Established:1833
Diocese:Waterford and Lismore
Status:Active
Location:Mount Melleray, near Cappoquin, County Waterford, Ireland
Coordinates:52.1875°N -7.8575°W
Map Type:Ireland
Public Access:Yes

Mount Melleray Abbey (Irish: Mainistir Cnoc Mheilearaí) is a Trappist monastery in Ireland, founded in 1833. It is situated on the slopes of the Knockmealdown Mountains, near Cappoquin, Diocese of Waterford.

It is famous in literature due to Seán Ó Ríordáin's poem Irish: Cnoc Mellerí in Irish: Eireaball Spideoige (1952).[1] James Joyce mentions Mount Melleray in "The Dead", the final short story of his 1914 collection Dubliners. The monks are noted for their exceptional hospitality and piety.[2]

History

The Cistercian order itself dates back to the 12th century and the Trappists to the mid-17th century.

Following the suppression of monasteries in France after the French Revolution, some dispossessed Trappist monks had arrived in England in 1794 and established a monastic community in Lulworth, Dorset.[3] The monks returned to France in 1817 to re-establish the ancient Melleray Abbey in Brittany, following the restoration of the Bourbons. Within ten years, the restored monastery had two hundred members, of whom up to seventy were Irish.[4] During the July Revolution of 1830, the monks were again persecuted and Waterford-born Vincent Ryan was sent by Antoine, Abbot of Melleray, to found an abbey in Ireland.[4]

Ryan initially rented a property in Rathmore, County Kerry.[4] Sixty-four Cisterican monks landed at Cobh from France on 1 December 1831.[4] The land in Rathmore proved unsuitable for housing the monastery and Ryan looked to County Waterford, where Richard Keane of Cappoquin had offered a tract of 600 acres of barren mountain land.[5]

The monastery was founded on 30 May 1832 at Scrahan, Cappoquin. In the work of reclaiming the soil, the brethren were assisted by the local people. A number of "work pilgrimages" were undertaken by members of nearby parishes, the first by the parish of Modeligo.[6]

On the feast of St Bernard, 1833, the foundation stone of the new monastery was blessed by William Abraham, Bishop of Waterford and Lismore. It was called Mount Melleray in memory of the motherhouse.[7] In 1835 the monastery was created an abbey, and Ryan, unanimously elected, received the abbatial blessing from Abraham, this being the first abbatial blessing in Ireland since the Protestant Reformation. It was from Mount Melleray that a small colony of monks was dispatched to found the English Mount Saint Bernard Abbey in 1835. Daniel O'Connell supported the endeavor, and visited the abbey in 1838.

Ryan vigorously undertook the work of completing the abbey, but died 9 December 1845. His successor, Joseph Ryan, resigned after two years. Bruno Fitzpatrick succeeded as abbot in September 1848. In 1849, he founded New Melleray Abbey, near Dubuque, Iowa, U.S.A., and, in 1878, Mount Saint Joseph Abbey, Roscrea, County Tipperary, Ireland. He also founded the Ecclesiastical Seminary of Mount Melleray. Originating in a small school formed by Ryan in 1843, it was developed by Fitzpatrick and his successors.

During his July 1849 visit to neighbouring Dromana House, Scottish essayist Thomas Carlyle paid a visit to Mount Melleray and described the abbey in some detail, noting particularly the huge vats of "stir-about" or porridge the monks prepared for a large number of famine refugees that waited for food at the entrance to the monastery: "Entrance; squalid hordes of beggars, sit waiting" and "nasty tubs of cold stirabout (coarsest I ever saw) for beggars"(p. 90). He notes that the monastery "must have accumulated several thousand pounds of property in these seventeen ... years, in spite of its continual charities to beggars" (p. 92). Reminiscences of My Irish Journey in 1849. Thomas Carlyle, 1882.

In 1900 five stones with Ogham letters carved into them, which were found in 1857 (The Kilgrovan Stones) were transferred to the Abbey by Patrick Power.[8]

Fitzpatrick died 4 December 1893, and was succeeded by Carthage Delaney, who was blessed 15 January 1894, and presided over Mount Melleray for thirteen years. His successor was Marius O'Phelan, solemnly blessed by Sheahan, Bishop of Waterford, 15 August 1908. O'Phelan resumed building on the abbey, buying the great cut limestone blocks from Mitchelstown Castle (28 miles west), which had been burnt by the local IRA on 12 August 1922. In 1925, the owners of Mitchelstown castle dismantled the ruins and the stones were transported from Mitchelstown by steam lorry, two consignments a day for at least five years. As the Abbey was being laid out, O'Phelan died and his successor, Celsus O'Connell, continued to the monumental task. He opted for a more prominent site directly over the mortal remains of 180 of his fellow Cistercians. The monks ended up with far more stones than they needed and these were eventually stacked in fields around the monastery.

In 1954 six monks (eight more in 1955) went to found a small Trappist abbey in a remote, rural area of New Zealand, the Southern Star Abbey.[9]

Eamon Fitzgerald, abbot of Mount Melleray, was elected abbot general of the order in September 2008.

Abbots

Boarding school

Since its early days, Mount Melleray educated both clerical and lay students. In 1972 it was announced that the boarding school was to close and it closed in 1974. In June 2019 the Mount Mellery College Past Pupils held its reunion in Melleray.

In 1977 the Catholic Boy Scouts of Ireland held its jubilee celebrations at Mount Melleray and in 1979 the former boarding school was acquired by the organisation, now part of Scouting Ireland, and developed it into the Mount Melleray National Scout and Activity Centre.[14]

Past pupils of Mount Melleray College

See also

References

Attribution

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Art in the form of artefact. The Irish Times.
  2. Web site: Text of the story . www2.hn.psu.edu . PDF. 2020-04-29.
  3. Web site: Archived copy . 2019-10-12.
  4. Book: Moloney . Stephen . The History of Mount Melleray Abbey . 1952 . Paramount Printing House . Cork . 5, 6 . 2020-10-18.
  5. Book: Moloney . Stephen . The History of Mount Melleray Abbey . 1952 . Paramount Printing House . Cork . 9 . 2020-10-18.
  6. Book: Moloney . Stephen . The History of Mount Melleray Abbey . 1952 . Paramount Printing House . Cork . 15 . 2020-10-18.
  7. https://www.ocso.org/monastery/mount-melleray/ Mount Melleray
  8. http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/exhibition/waterford/sport_cultural.html Sport Cultural Waterford
  9. Matthews, Richard (1995) James K. Baxter and Kopua, Journal of New Zealand Literature: JNZL, No. 13, pp. 257-265
  10. https://www.isos.dias.ie/master.html?https://www.isos.dias.ie/libraries/MMA/english/maurus.html Fr. Marius O Phelan
  11. https://www.irishtimes.com/news/a-humble-unconventional-abbot-who-chose-exile-in-africa-1.1147646 A humble, unconventional abbot, who chose exile in Africa
  12. Web site: Mount Melleray Abbot first Irishman to head Cistercians . independent.ie. John . Cooney . Irish Independent . 9 September 2008.
  13. https://www.mountmellerayabbey.org/news/story/new-abbot-elected New Abbot Elected
  14. Web site: Mount Melleray National Scout and Activity Centre . Scouting Ireland . scouts.ie.
  15. http://www.boltonabbey.ie/ Bolton Abbey
  16. https://mellifontabbey.ie/ Mellifont Abbey