Posted on 07/09/2020 6:04:34 PM PDT by marshmallow
While the Irish island of Little Skellig was long thought to have been inhabited by nothing but a variety of seabirds, a new archaeological discovery demonstrates that monastics once labored in asceticism on the inaccessible crag.
The archaeologist Michael Gibbons and a group of climbers recently located the remains of an early Christian church located on a narrow precipice overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, reports Afloat.
Gibbons estimates that the church dates to the late 7th-early 8th century, when there was already a functioning monastery on nearby Skellig Michael.
He described the location, 8 miles west of the Iveragh Peninsula in County Kerry, Ireland, as the ultimate monastic site.
(Excerpt) Read more at orthochristian.com ...
Those Irish and Scottish Islands used to be far more active than now. My Mother’s clan’s home is Colonsay. Back in the 1700s it had a population of over a thousand.
Now it is just over a hundred.
More likely a hermitage.
Looks like a great place for asceticism.
How do you know that?
I go back as far as my great grandpop from Naples and that’s it :)
In 1970 I was competing in the Grandfather Mountain Highland Games. I saw a tent/awning with the name McDuffie on it.
I stopped by and told them my Mother was a McDuffie. They invited me in, offered me whiskey which I declined. The guy who seemed in charge took Mother’s address and wrote her. She wrote back with her family info.
He already suspected who she was but confirmed everything. I still keep up with the clan.
Jedi Temple, right?
What games??
Wow
You’re from the highlands :)
Freedom!!! :)
No, it was in North Carolina and I am from Florida. My home county was in fact settled by Highland Scots tho.
As late as 1980, Walton County still had over 50% Scottish surnames.
Wow. That’s great to know
What a colorful history America has as far as immigrants go.
Though some groups were much more successful here than others
Have a good one
It looks like a difficult place to grow hops and barley. I’ll find a different monastery to join.
I was hoping the island would more like Craggy Island, which I know is fictional, but I like the Father Ted reference.
Probably a great place to do nothing but copy manuscripts!
It was the Irish that saved Christianity after the western Roman Empire fell.
St. Patrick was originally Romano-British, which is to say Welsh.
Yes. Agreed
So it was. Erin go bragh!
Clan MacDowell here!
So, they were kilt off?......................
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