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The Holy Island of St Columba

Uploaded by The Rambler Man on Oct 14, 2014
Region: United Kingdom

Route type: Other
Distance: 8.64km, 5.37 miles.   (1)

About trip

Minimum Time: 3hrs 30mins Ascent: 650ft Difficulty Level: 3 - Hard Paths: Tracks, sandy paths, some rugged rock and heather Landscape: Bare gneiss rock and Atlantic Ocean Dog Friendliness: Keep on lead near sheep Parking: Ferry terminal at Fionnphort on Mull Public Toilets: Beside Martyr's Bay Bar Description: In the early summer of AD 563, a middle-aged cleric crossed over from Ireland with 12 companions and the intention of setting up a monastic community on the remote and windswept island of Iona. Flight of the Dove.Columba (in Gaelic, Colum Cille, ‘the Dove of the Church’) did not intend to bring Christianity to a new country, indeed he had left his native Ireland under a cloud. It had started with a dispute over copyright: Columba had secretly copied a psalter owned by St Finnian of Clonard, and Finnian had claimed ownership of the copy. The dispute became more complicated when a young prince accidentally killed an opponent during a game of Irish hockey and claimed sanctuary with Columba. A battle followed, for which Columba felt responsible. In penance for these events he accepted ‘white martyrdom’, perpetual exile. Irish Poetry.At the centre of Columba’s settlement on Iona was a church of oak logs and thatch and, around it, huts for the individual monks. Columba himself slept on the bedrock with a stone for a pillow. Larger huts of wattle were used as the dining hall, guest house, library and writing room. The monks’ lives consisted of prayer, simple farming and study, and here Columba composed poetry in Latin and Irish. Celtic Calendar Calculations. Columba’s Celtic Christianity spread from Iona across Scotland, and led to the Northumbrian foundation of Lindisfarne, with its rich tradition of illustrated documents such as the Lindisfarne Gospel. Here it came into contact with the Roman-style Christianity of continental Europe, brought to England by Augustine in ad 597. While the outward dispute was on the correct hairstyle for monks and the way to calculate the date of Easter, it seems that the Celtic Christianity was more personal and mystical, the Roman more authoritarian. The Roman version eventually dominated, but the Celtic was never suppressed. Columba, never officially canonised as a saint, is venerated in Scotland and Ireland to this day. Iona Today. Columba’s church vanished beneath a later Benedictine abbey, itself heavily restored in the 19th century. But the spirit of Columba still dominates the island. From the low hill called Dun I, on the day of his death, he blessed the island and community. The monks grew kale and oats at the machars (coastal lowlands) of Bay at the Back of the Ocean (Camus Cuil an t-Saimh), over what is today the golf course. At the southern tip of the island is Coracle Bay, traditionally named as the saint’s landing place. ‘That man is little to be envied, whose patriotism would not gain force upon the plain of Marathon, or whose piety would not grow warmer among the ruins of Iona,’ said the renowned English writer and critic Samuel Johnson, who visited the island in 1773. Today’s Iona Foundation is ecumenical - tied to no single denomination of Christianity - and has restored the buildings within a tradition of simple craftsmanship and prayer. The grave of John Smith, Labour leader in the 1990s, lies in the north-east extension of the burial ground. While you're there: From Iona, or Fionnphort at the Mull end of the ferry, you can take a boat trip to Staffa to visit the legendary Fingal’s Cave and its weird basalt formations. What to look out for: The shingle at Coracle Bay has cairns built by penitential monks. Over the years they have been renewed by visitors. Here you’ll find greenish-white lumps of Iona marble among the grey gneiss. A long mound in the grass above the beach is supposed to indicate the dimensions of Columba’s boat - 100ft (30m) long. Where to eat and drink: On the island, you can try the Martyr’s Bay Restaurant, which offers fresh local seafood (March-November; dogs on the patio only). For a quick snack there’s the Heritage Tea Room within the confines of the abbey. Directions: Ferries cross to Iona about every hour. Once on the island, take the tarred road on the left, passing Martyr’s Bay. After a second larger bay, rejoin the road as it bends right. Follow the road across the island to a gate on to the Iona golf course (dogs on leads). 2 Take the sandy track ahead, then bear left past a small cairn to the shore. Turn left along the shore to a large beach. At its end, bear left up a narrow valley. After 100yds (91m) you pass a small concrete hut to join a stony track. It passes a fenced reservoir and drops to the corner of Loch Staoineig. Walk along to the left of the lochan on a path, improved in places, that runs gently down to Coracle Bay. You cross to the left of an area that shows the furrows of lazybed cultivation - fields drained to improve crop yields - and reach the shore just to the left of a rocky knoll. 3 Take the route ahead following an indistinct path. If your ferry to the mainland leaves in 2 hours time or earlier, return by the outward route and leave exploring the marble quarries for another visit. Otherwise, return inland for 200yds (183m) and bear right into a little grassy valley. After 100yds (91m), go through a broken wall and then bear slightly left, past another inlet on the right. Cross heather to the eastern shoreline of the island. Bear left, above the small sea cliff, for 0.25 mile (400m). Turn sharp right into a little valley descending into the remnants of the marble quarry 4 Turn inland, back up the valley to its head. Pass the low walls of two ruined cottages and continue in the same direction for about 200yds (183m) to a fence corner. Keep the fence on your left, picking a way through heather.Dun I with its cairn appears ahead - aim directly for it to reach the edge of fields, where a fence runs across ahead. Turn right along it to a small iron gate. 5 This leads to a track that passes Ruanaich farm to the tarred road of the outward walk. Cross on to a farm track, which bends to the right at Maol. It reaches Baile Mor (Iona village) at the ruined nunnery. Just ahead is the abbey with its squat square tower, or turn right directly to return to the ferry pier.

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